Items from Freddie Mercury's private collection are up for auction

Some are without reserve

Freddie Mercury's iconic crown
Author: Scott ColothanPublished 4th Sep 2023
Last updated 6th Sep 2023

Queen legend Freddie Mercury’s largely never-seen-before private collection was on display in London over the summer, and much of it is now available to buy via an auction at Sotheby’s.

Featuring more than 1,500 items including stage costumes, handwritten lyrics, fine and decorative arts, Japanese art, precious objects and a trove of personal belongings, the extensive collection comes from Freddie’s beloved London home, Garden Lodge in Kensington.

In the 32 years since Freddie Mercury’s untimely death, Garden Lodge has remained almost entirely as Mercury left it, complete with the many works of art he acquired. Freddie bought Garden Lodge with his long-term friend Mary Austin, and he left the property to Mary in his will.

The contents of Garden Lodge went on display at a 16,000 square foot space at Sotheby’s in London called Freddie Mercury: A World of His Own, and the items are on now sale.

Freddie Mercury and Mary Austin's London home, Garden Lodge

The main exhibition took place from 4th August to 5th September 2023 following smaller touring exhibitions at Sotheby’s in New York, Los Angeles, and Hong Kong. The lots will go under the hammer at six separate auctions in early September.

Standout items include Freddie Mercury’s handwritten manuscript working lyrics to Queen’s ‘We Are The Champions’ (estimate £200,000–300,000), Freddie’s iconic crown and accompanying cloak (estimate £60,000–80,000), and the legend’s 1975 Martin D-35 Acoustic Guitar (estimate £30,000–50,000).

Elsewhere, there’s an 1880 painting by James Jacques Tissot called Type of Beauty (estimate £400,000–600,000), a Fabergé gem-set (estimate £30,000–50,000) and the singer’s favourite waistcoat (£5,000–7,000).

Mary Austin will be donating a portion of the proceeds of the sale to both the Mercury Phoenix Trust and to the foundation of one of Freddie’s greatest friends, the Elton John Aids Foundation.

Freddie Mercury: A World of His Own exhibition and auction highlights:

Freddie Mercury’s favourite waistcoat

Worn in his final video 'These Are The Days Of Our Lives', 1991. The silk panels of red, green and purple are each hand painted with one of Freddie's cats, Delilah, Goliath, Oscar, Lily, Romeo and Miko.
Estimate £5,000–7,000

Freddie Mercury’s crown and accompanying cloak

The items are made from fake fur, red velvet and rhinestones, made by his friend and costume designer Diana Moseley, thought to be loosely modelled on the coronation crown of the United Kingdom. Indelibly linked to Mercury, they were worn for the finale rendition of "God Save The Queen" during his last tour with Queen, 'The Magic Tour', which ended with their very last live show together, at Knebworth in 1986.
Estimate £60,000–80,000

Freddie Mercury’s crown

A close-up of the grown, which is up for auction alongside Freddie's cloak.

A lavish ceremonial military-style jacket created for Freddie Mercury’s legendary 39th Birthday Party Drag Ball, Munich, 5 September, 1985.

An ornate jacket of black silk and velvet with large extravagantly fringed silver-metal epaulettes and imitation medals, in the style of "Sergeant Pepper", the fashion popular when Mercury ran his Kensington Market stall. Mercury had his decadent, raucous 39th birthday party filmed for the video of his solo single 'Living On My Own'. Banned by the BBC at the time, the video was not released in its entirety until 1993.
Estimate £10,000–15,000

Freddie Mercury with Jane Seymour

Freddie also wore the jacket to Fashion Aid at the Royal Albert Hall, where he appeared as a flamboyant groom at a mock wedding to Jane Seymour.

Pink star-shaped glasses.

Freddie Mercury appeared wearing a similar dark pair in the video for 'We Will Rock You' in 1977.
Estimate £2,000–4,000

Freddie Mercury’s 1975 Martin D-35 Acoustic Guitar

In its original case, photographed here in his dressing room at Garden Lodge. While best known as a pianist, Mercury was a proficient guitarist too. It is believed this guitar was used to write and record the hit single 'Crazy Little Thing Called Love' in Munich in 1979, the only Queen hit known to have been written and recorded by Mercury on guitar.
Estimate £30,000–50,000

Freddie Mercury’s 1980s vintage bakelite cream rotary telephone,

Freddie Mercury kept the telephone at his bedside.
Estimate £2,000–4,000

Freddie Mercury’s 1980s vintage bakelite cream rotary telephone,

The telephone at Garden Lodge.

A classic Fabergé gem-set, nephrite and enamel desk clock

Circa 1908-17, the Fabergé clock had pride of place in Freddie Mercury's bedroom. An exquisite piece from the legendary Russian jeweller, this was bought at Sotheby's in Switzerland, and he kept it with the marked-up auction catalogue close by.
Estimate £30,000–50,000

A tiny Tiffany & Co. silver moustache comb

Late 20th century, the moustache comb would have easily fitted inside Freddie Mercury's wallet.
Estimate £400–£600

An Art Nouveau glass vase-lamp (c. 1905), by Daum

Daum is one of the finest producers of art deco glass, and the lamp has a bespoke tasselled shade made by Freddie Mercury himself. This lamp was placed in his sitting room - a space effervescent with colourful and rare pieces.
Estimate £2,000–3,000

James Jacques Tissot, Type of Beauty (1880)

The last work of art Freddie Mercury bought. The painting, which hung in his drawing room, depicts Tissot's muse and mistress Kathleen Newton – the woman whose beauty helped him establish his artistic standing, but whose background as an Irish Catholic divorcée, whom he moved into his home, scandalised and ruined his reputation in society.
Estimate £400,000–600,000

Erté watercolour gifted by Elton John

Downstairs in Garden Lodge hung eleven watercolours by Erté, including this one gifted by his close friend, Elton John. Erté was the supremo of the Art Deco era, known for his opulent set and costume designs for the opera, and a flamboyant style perfectly befitting Mercury's own. Ballet and opera would be key influences for Mercury's music and style across his career.
Estimate £2,000–3,000

Erté watercolour prints


Sudden Shower over the Shin-Ohashi Bridge and Atake (1857) by Utagawa Hiroshige

Utagawa Hiroshige had a profound influence on the Impressionist artists. In the months prior to acquiring this work, Mary Austin had attended a Sotheby's auction in the hope of purchasing a different impression of the same print, but after being outbid, Mercury then made it his mission to find another on his next trip to Japan.
Estimate £30,000–50,000

Henri Matisse’s Masque blanc sur fond noir

In Freddie Mercury's luminescent yellow dining room, Henri Matisse's Masque blanc sur fond noir hung side by side with works by Marc Chagall and Georges Braque.
Estimate £3,000–5,000

Pablo Picasso’s portrait of his wife, Jaqueline au chapeau noir

The Pablo Picasso painting hung in Freddie Mercury's kitchen at Garden Lodge.
Estimate £50,000–70,000

'Bohemian Rhapsody' lyric sheets

Written in black and blue ballpoint pen and pencil, the early draft for 'Bohemian Rhapsody' was penned by Freddie in 1974 across 15 pages of stationery from the now defunct British Midland Airways.One page reveals that Mercury originally planned to call the song 'Mongolian Rhapsody', before crossing out Mongolian and replacing it with 'Bohemian'.
Estimate: £800,000 - £1.2 million

Speaking of the display and auction, Mary Austin said: “For many years now, I have had the joy and privilege of living surrounded by all the wonderful things that Freddie sought out and so loved.

“But the years have passed, and the time has come for me to take the difficult decision to close this very special chapter in my life. It was important to me to do this in a way that I felt Freddie would have loved, and there was nothing he loved more than an auction.

“Freddie was an incredible and intelligent collector who showed us that there is beauty and fun and conversation to be found in everything; I hope this will be an opportunity to share all the many facets of Freddie, both public and private, and for the world to understand more about, and celebrate, his unique and beautiful spirit.

Mary Austin and Freddie Mercury in 1986

Oliver Barker, Chairman of Sotheby’s Europe, commented: “Freddie Mercury’s sensational life has left us with a rich array of artistic moments that still move and astound us, a legacy that, like his music, will live on forever.

“As Sotheby’s is transformed into the stage for this remarkable collection, the focus will be as much on Freddie Mercury the showman, celebrating everything we already know about him, as on discovering his less well known private artistic passions.

“Fittingly lavish in scale, the auction will bring together the expertise of specialists from 30 different collecting categories, and see exhibitions held in four locations across three continents - all culminating in the longest, most spectacular, public exhibition in our company history. How else could we celebrate the legend that is Freddie Mercury?”

Now read:

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