Arts and Entertainment
Friday August 15, 2008
Rare Lennon art on display

WAUKESHA, Wis. - John Lennon's widow Yoko Ono and his admirers are so protective of his legacy they don't want any of his original drawings photographed in full.

The Associated Press
John Lennon’s Self-Portrait lithograph hangs on a wall adjacent to several books.
Some are fragile and worth hundreds of thousands of dollars or more, and they don't want them to hit the Internet, where they can be counterfeited.

So for the first time the public will get to see 27 pencil and pen drawings along with five lithographs and serigraphs - all authenticated - at the Waukesha County Historical Society Museum in suburban Milwaukee.

"Coming Together Through The Art of John Lennon" runs Saturday through Sept. 1.

A retired man in his 50s - who wants to remain anonymous - loaned the art and other memorabilia, like the microphone Lennon used to record "Imagine," to the museum.

Paul Jillson, who has represented Lennon's artwork since 1988, said Lennon didn't sell his works through galleries and didn't catalog them, so for someone to have collected so many originals is a coup. Ono has 1,700 of Lennon's original drawings, he said.

The museum's executive director, Kirsten Villegas, won't release many details about the benefactor for security reasons. They refer to him as Mr. Kite, after the song "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" on the 1967 Beatles album "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."

He wants the attention on the art and microphone, worth more than $600,000.

Villegas said the collector's stash is purported to be the third-largest public collection of original Lennon drawings, with Ono holding the most.

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