The final gavel at Christie’s New York this weekend marked the conclusion of a landmark auction from The Jim Irsay Collection, cementing the late Indianapolis Colts owner’s legacy not just in football but as one of America’s most eclectic collectors.
The multiday event generated over $93 million in sales, far surpassing initial estimates and highlighting the immense demand for rare music, pop culture, and historical artifacts curated by Irsay over decades.
Irsay died in May 2025 at the age of 65, and in the months that followed, his family made the difficult decision to begin selling the bulk of the more than 300 pieces he had amassed over decades. Christie’s had initially estimated that the lots offered in March would bring in around $40 million, but bidding enthusiasm pushed the final tally to nearly $93 million.
“The Irsay sale did justice to the brilliance of the collector, and of the monumental pieces he brought together, iconic objects that tell the story of our culture and our times,” Christie’s Americas president Julien Pradels said in a statement, a remark that many industry observers saw as fair recognition of a truly singular private collection.
Standout sales reflect eclectic breadth of collection
The range of objects that drew fierce bidding reflected not just Irsay‘s deep love of music but also his interest in American history, popular culture, and sport. Among the most notable results were several world record prices that underscored just how rare and desirable many of these items were.
Leading the list was David Gilmour‘s “Black Strat,” a legendary Fender Stratocaster used on classic Pink Floyd albums that sold for a price in excess of $14 million, making it the most expensive guitar ever sold at auction. That sale alone captivated the auction world and was a reminder of how Irsay‘s choices often combined musical significance with deep fan interest.
Literature also played a surprising role in the auction’s success. Jack Kerouac‘s original typescript of On the Road, with its distinctive scroll of continuous pages, fetched more than $12 million, a record for a literary manuscript.
Other musical highlights included Jerry Garcia‘s custom-built “Tiger” guitar, which brought in more than $11 million, and Kurt Cobain‘s 1969 Fender Mustang, the instrument featured in the seminal Smells Like Teen Spirit video, which sold for nearly $7 million.
The auction wasn’t limited to music, either. Collectors also paid top dollar for historical sports memorabilia, such as the saddle used by jockey Ron Turcotte when he rode Secretariat to the 1973 Triple Crown, which sold for more than $1.5 million. Other items included a Jackie Robinson bat from the 1953 season and rare historical artifacts tied to figures like Muhammad Ali.
Bidders weren’t shy about spending for cultural artifacts either: Sylvester Stallone‘s original notebook containing pages of the Rocky script changed hands for more than $500,000.
Beyond its headline figures, the auction also prompted reflection on the nature of private collecting and public history. Since 2021, Irsay had shared much of his collection in a traveling exhibit that toured museums and cultural institutions around the country, bringing free displays of important pieces to audiences who might never have seen them otherwise.
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