Bidding for this lot will end on Wednesday, March 25th. The auction will begin at 9:30 AM (PDT) / 12:30 PM (EDT) / 4:30 PM (GMT) and lots are sold sequentially via live auctioneer; tune in to the live streaming broadcast on auction day to follow the pace. Note other lots in the auction may close on Thursday, March 26th or Friday, March 27th.
Framed preliminary artwork for the Golden Gate Bridge matte painting hand-painted by matte painter Matthew Yuricich for Robert Wise's Star Trek: The Motion Picture. The iconic bridge appeared with futuristic tube additions in 23rd century San Francisco.
To create the film's expansive mattes, Yuricich - the recipient of a Special Academy Award® two years earlier for his groundbreaking effects work on Logan's Run - worked with his brother Richard, who served as director of photography for photographic effects on the film under Douglas Trumbull and his Future General effects house. The film's special photographic effects earned the effects team, including Richard, a nomination for an Academy Award®.
Yuricich created this ornately detailed artwork as a matte study for the final matte painting by painting over a photograph to see how the effects team would combine painting with live-action. Rendered in mixed media, it depicts the Golden Gate Bridge with futuristic passage channels and a shuttle travelling through one. It has two sheets of acetate affixed by black tape, one with hand-painted dots, and the second featuring hand-painted motion arrows, a line of light, and hand-written notes such as the shot "D-1", "8 Seconds," and "36 Frames" among others, and a second sketch of a shuttle in the sky. This lot exhibits discoloration on the board, creased corners, lifted adhesive, and frayed fibers. Dimensions: 30.5" x 20" (77.5 cm x 51 cm)
Sold without copyright; see notice in the Buyer's Guide.
Estimate: $4,000 - 8,000
Matthew "Matt" Yuricich was an American artist regarded among the foremost matte painters in the history of world cinema. Born in Ohio on January 19, 1923 to Croatian emigres, Yuricich studied Fine Arts at Miami University after serving in the US Navy during World War II. Upon completing his education, he quickly found work in the effects departments of Hollywood studios, excelling quickly as a painter on the productions of post-war classics like Call Me Madam, Forbidden Planet, and Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. Soon, Yuricich developed a personal specialty in color-matching background paintings to color-shifting film stock, essential for integrating mattes seamlessly into live-action photography. Indeed, the techniques he applied towards this task, including his signature so-called "glass shots" - in which he painted plates of glass to set in front of the camera - put him in demand with some of the most powerful directors of the era.
In 1959, Yuricich worked as a matte artist on two films that would permanently secure his place in the pantheon: For Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest, he created the illusion of a modernist Frank Lloyd Wright-style home built atop Mount Rushmore for the rip-roaring climax; then in William Wyler's equally seminal Ben-Hur, he painted mattes simulating the presence of tens of thousands of ancient audience members for the popular chase scenes. Both films were immediately hailed as visual masterpieces for their groundbreaking photographic effects.
Over the next three decades, Yuricich contributed mattes to many of the best-known and most acclaimed movies ever made, among them Mutiny on the Bounty, The Poseidon Adventure, Westworld, The Towering Inferno, Young Frankenstein, Ghostbusters, Die Hard, and Field of Dreams. In 1976, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded Yuricich, L.B. Abbott, and Glen Robinson a Special Achievement Award for their work on Logan's Run. The following year, Matt, his brother Richard, and several other effects visionaries, including Douglas Trumbull, received a competitive nomination for Best Visual Effects for Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Yuricich also emerged as a committed teacher and advocate for the field of matte painting at large while working as the chief matte artist for companies including Entertainment Effects Group (EEG), its follow-up Boss Film Corporation, and Video Image throughout the 1980s and 90s. In 2006, Miami University bequeathed its Distinguished Achievement Award to Yuricich for his accomplishments as an educator and visual effects artist. He died six years later having completed matte paintings for more than 70 film and television projects.
More than 30 years since his last produced work in film, The Matthew Yuricich Collection now looks to honor the visionary creativity of its namesake. Assembled by Propstore in direct collaboration with the Yuricich family, it features paintings from several classics of American cinema. From Logan's Run to Star Trek: The Motion Picture to Dances with Wolves, this rare set of artworks is designed to offer both legacy collectors of fine art and casual movie fans alike rare access to one of Hollywood's great masters. The Matthew Yuricich Collection is a tribute not only to the eternal magnificence of this captivating form, but to the Silver Screen on a global scale.