Recounting the story behind the item, Maguire said Austrian
pianist Anton Halm had asked for a lock of hair to give to his
wife as a keepsake but Beethoven's servant had instead sent the
hair of a goat, infuriating the composer.
"And he then gave (Halm), in a piece of paper, a lock of hair
that he had just himself cut from the back of his head, a
substantial lock. And he said this one at least you can be sure
is genuine," Maguire said.
Halm later gave the lock to a pupil, Julius Epstein, who was
professor of piano at the Vienna Conservatory. Its authenticity
was also confirmed by Alexander Wheelock Thayer, author of the
first scholarly biography of Beethoven, Maguire added.
Sotheby's has in the past auctioned a smaller lock of
Beethoven's hair, taken on his death bed a year later, in 1827,
as well as the hair of fellow composers Frederic Chopin and
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and of British naval hero Horatio
Nelson.
"This one (to be auctioned on Tuesday) is unusual in that it has
a very substantial early story and also it is quite a
substantial lock," said Maguire, adding that other locks sold
under auction had mostly been reduced to a few strands of hair.
(Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Hanna Rantala;
Editing by Gareth Jones)
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