This file photo shows US pop star Michael Jackson
receives the Diamond Award during the World Music Awards at Earl's Court in
London, November 15, 2006. -Xinhua/Reuters
The gates of Michael Jackson's famed Neverland Ranch and one of the white
gloves first unveiled in his 1983 "Billie Jean" video are going up for auction
in a 2,000-item sale organized by the self-styled King of Pop.
Auctioneer Darren Julien said yesterday that Jackson was sorting through
thousands of personal items and his vast art collection from the abandoned
Neverland Ranch and other places.
He said the five-day auction in Beverly Hills, scheduled for April 21-25,
will be the first organized by Jackson, who has been living as a virtual recluse
since his acquittal in 2005 on child sex abuse charges.
"He has never had one (an auction)," Julien said. "We have been working
closely with him for five months and he is in complete control of this."
Julien said a similar white glove once owned by Jackson fetched US$35,000 at
an auction in 2006, while a pair of the singer's white socks went for US$15,000
in 2005.
But he declined to put an estimate on the large wrought iron gates with a
heraldic crest that led to Jackson's Neverland Ranch, near Santa Barbara in
central California.
"We have not put an estimate on the gates yet. There is a lot of history
there," Julien said.
The auction catalog alone will sell for US$100 with a limited signed edition
available for US$500. A portion of the auction proceeds will go to the charity
Musicares.
Jackson has been plagued with financial troubles in the past few years but
Julien said the auction was not a forced sale. "This is something that Michael
is doing of his own free will. He is not being forced into it," Julien said.
Highlights of the collection will go on a tour expected to include London,
Tokyo, New York, Dubai and Santiago.
The April sale at the Beverly Hilton Hotel by Julien's Auctions
(www.juliensauctions.com) will be broadcast on US television and online by the
Auction Network.