Eva Jospin: The Call of the Forest in Contemporary Times

Eva Jospin, a key figure in the art world, arrives at auction with one of her iconic works: a monumental forest of cardboard, her material of choice.

Eva Jospin (born 1975), Forest, 2014, collage of cut and reworked cardboard mounted on a wooden frame of five numbered panels, 2.80 x 4.50 m/9.18 x 14.76 feet.
Starting price: €40,000
Eva Jospin (born 1975), Forest, 2014, collage of cut and reworked cardboard mounted on a wooden frame of five numbered panels, 2.80 x 4.50 m/9.18 x 14.76 feet.
Starting price: €40,000

The visual artist seems to be everywhere at once with a packed schedule. This summer, she unveiled Chambre de soie (“Silk Room”), a monumental 350m2 embroidery in the Orangery at the Palace of Versailles, followed by the inauguration of a work in Ruinart’s new sculpture garden in Reims after the champagne-maker gave her carte blanche last year for its limited edition. The “Selva” exhibition is open until November 24 at the Fortuny Musem in parallel with the 60th Venice Biennale of Contemporary Art. In 2023, she won the “Femmes de la culture” award and was made an Officière de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. Lastly, this autumn she arrives on the art market with a monumental forest, a special commission received in 2013 from property developer Ogic for its Boulogne-Billancourt headquarters. Ms. Jospin’s appearance at an auction will undoubtedly cause quite a stir, as it is still a rare event. La Gazette’s website lists only three results and Artnet’s just four. On June 28, Thierry de Maigret sold a forest at Drouot acquired in 2014 from the Suzanne Tarasieve Gallery in Paris. Although relatively small — 148 x 100 cm/58.26 x 39.37 in — it fetched €92,736. How high will bidders go this time?

An Ode to Slowness by Eva Jospin

On a visit to her studio, Ms. Jospin told us how good she felt there, as if swept along by a wave of creative energy. With help from an all-female team and machines that are usually associated with men — jigsaws, millers and cutters — she breathes life into a lowly, commonplace material that has been forgotten in the history of art: cardboard. She likes “the fact that it’s not a respected material. You can rip it up, start all over again and at the same time use a constraint to invent.” Cheap, plentiful, easily available and already recycled, there is nothing special about it. But in the 20th century, codes were broken and the door was opened to all shapes and materials. So cardboard, which is made from trees — there are rarely coincidences — was turned into monumental landscapes, caves from the depths of time, reinterpreted follies and deep forests. Ms. Jospin’s repetitive work is a kind of ode to slowness carried out in successive, built-up layers to create three-dimensional forms. The cardboard is cut up, trimmed and glued until trunks, branches, leaves and finally a whole lifelike forest emerges with corrugated edges forming a texture similar to tree bark and a color recalling wood. The only thing left is to take a walk inside the dense creation. The artist says her work is an invitation to shift the gaze: “It has not one side, but many.” There is never a human or animal presence in her creations. It is the viewer who silently wanders through them.

Into the Woods

For over a decade, Ms. Jospin has turned her fabulous, dreamlike worlds into Palladian architecture, such as the amazing 2016 Panorama in the Louvre’s Cour Carrée echoing the museum’s exhibition “Hubert Robert, A Visionary Painter” while building 18th-century-inspired follies or a majestic cenotaph in Montmajour Abbey’s minimalist volumes during the summer of 2020. She has assembled her dark forests, cut with tremendous precision, since 2009 and thinks she will never tire of them. They are what thrust her to the forefront of the art world. Many remember her installation for the Beaupassage access bottleneck on boulevard Raspail in Paris. Since then, the forest has been a central, if not recurring theme in her work. Ms. Jospin makes no claims to being an environmental artist. In her view, art should spark debate without being the main agent of change. However, the forest theme allows her to question our relationship with nature. She draws inspiration not only from her past, but also from the ideas conjured up by forests, which are safe havens, mysteries and the setting for many of our childhood fairy tales. Mixing mythical forests with those found in literature, she takes us into a world conducive to meditation, the search for knowledge and escape from the stress of everyday life, creating a fragile “ecosystem” that must not be touched other than with the eye.

Eva Jospin
in 5 dates

2002
Graduates from Beaux-Arts de Paris

2010
The Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature acquires a forest. First purchase by an institution.

2016
Panorama, an immersive installation in the Cour Carrée of the Louvre.

2016-2017
In residence at the Villa Médicis.

2024
Invited by the Palace of Versailles to exhibit Chambre de soie (105 m long) in the Orangerie.

Design and contemporary art

Sunday 01 December 2024 – 14:30 (CET) – Live

1 ter, boulevard de la République – 92210 Saint-Cloud

Le Floc’h

Info and sales conditions

Catalogue

Exquisite Christmas, Halloween and other holiday antiques bring color and fun to Bertoia’s special December 13 auction

Featured: Christmas belsnickles, Dresdens & other ornaments, Halloween candy containers and veggie people, Easter chicks, patriotic antiques, and spectacular Noah’s Ark with rare flocked animals

Erzgebirge Large Ark W/ Flocked Animals
Erzgebirge Large Ark W/ Flocked Animals

VINELAND, N.J. – Wishes will be granted for many collectors on December 13th when the Bertoia family opens its auction-gallery doors to a stunning array of holiday antiques, from museum-quality German Christmas treasures to whimsical jack-o’-lanterns and endearing Easter bunnies. While the original plan had been to incorporate holiday antiques into Bertoia’s November 22-23 Annual Fall Auction, the abundance of exceptional holiday consignments entrusted to Bertoia’s for that sale made it abundantly clear that the specialty category should have its own dedicated event. As a result, a Friday, December 13 date was chosen for a separate auction exclusively devoted to premium-quality holiday antiques. 

Once they view the bounteous selection of holiday collectibles that awaits them, auction guests will agree that too much of a good thing can be wonderful. The display rooms and showcases will be decked out in antique Christmas finery, with a fantastic assortment of German hand-painted belsnickles, figural candy containers, Santas in sleighs, charming Dresdens, shimmering glass ornaments, feather trees, games and playthings.

A Victorian-era classic, Schoenhut’s larger version of their “Christmas Morning” moving picture combines all of the visual imagery associated with an old-fashioned family Christmas. Its mechanical action causes each of the characters around the candlelit tree to engage in various activities. A little boy plays his new drum, while his older brother rides a rocking horse and their sister cuddles her doll. Grandpa rocks the baby on his knee while Mother tends to tree ornaments, and even Santa plays a cameo role, popping up to peek through the window. Sized 7.75 inches by 13.5 inches and in excellent condition, this wonderful Christmas antique by a revered Philadelphia toy manufacturer is estimated at $6,000-$9,000.

Nearly two dozen Christmas candy containers will cross the auction block, led by a gigantic blue-coat Santa with a fur beard. Standing 30 inches tall, the figure is laden with accessories, holding a feather tree in one hand, toting a basket of Christmas gifts attached to his belt, and more. In excellent condition, this piece was previously purchased in the saleroom at a Golden Glow of Christmas Past convention. Its auction estimate is $5,000-$8,000.

When Santa isn’t airborne in a sleigh over the North Pole, he can be seen crossing the tundra on a reindeer. That image is perfectly captured in a German candy container depicting Santa in a long red coat riding an antlered friend. The glass-eyed reindeer is every bit as charming and suitably-outfitted as his master, showing off a “jeweled” bridle and collar. Its body separates at the upper torso for candy retrieval. Graded in Excellent condition, this holiday duo is expected to sell for $2,500-$4,500.

Large and unusual, a 9-inch-long Santa-head lantern is very nicely molded and has an expressive face with ice-blue eyes and a partially-open mouth revealing “teeth. Its estimate is $1,500-$2,500. Another very attractive interpretation of Santa is captured in a large die-cut showing the holiday gift-giver with two children, holding a walking stick and standing on a snow mound. Measuring nearly 3ft tall and in VG to Excellent condition, this exceptional die-cut is capable of being suspended or displayed as a standee. Estimate: $2,000-$3,000

Some of the most outstanding of all Christmas artistry is seen in late-19th-century games. One of the premier manufacturers of that period was McLoughlin Bros. Bertoia’s December 13 auction features their circa-1899 production known as “Game Of Tobogganing At Christmas.” Reflecting its title, the imagery on the game box lid shows children rushing down a snowy hill on their toboggans while others collaborate to build a snowman. The set includes the game board, two spinners and two tokens. In VG to Excellent condition, it is entered with a $2,000-$4,000 estimate.

One of the auction’s top lots is a stunning Erzgebirge gondola-style Grande Noah’s Ark that was hand-constructed sometime between 1850 and 1860. It has a beautiful hand-painted frieze, pegged construction and carved lines on its hull to simulate curved planks. What makes it extra special is its assortment of 230 very rare hand-carved and flocked animals, birds and figures. It is one of only two such arks known to Bertoia’s with that many flocked animals, the other being on display at the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum in Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia. In excellent condition, this ultimate “Sunday toy” carries a $10,000-$15,000 auction estimate.

Skittles sets are always welcome at auctions of holiday antiques because there are so many crossover collectors who appreciate German artistry in its various forms. It will be hard for them to resist Lot 424, a skittles set consisting of a recumbent glass-eyed German shepherd with crossed paws, pricked ears and an alert expression. The handsome 22-inch-long canine safeguards a set of original hand-painted ninepins formed as figures of various animals and a clown. Measuring 22 inches long and in Excellent condition, it is estimated at $3,000-$5,000.

The Halloween portion of the sale rivals any seen in past auctions conducted by Bertoia’s, and that’s quite an exciting prospect. Prepare to be treated, not tricked, by witches of various sizes, jack-o’-lanterns, devil heads, veggie people, noisemakers, richly-pictorial ephemera and so much more. Also, look for Easter bunnies, Thanksgiving turkeys and other holiday characters to take their turn in the spotlight. 

A whimsical large-scale pumpkin vegetable man doubles as a candy container and lantern. Standing 11 inches high, it has a cabbage body, carrot legs and potato shoes. The head is capable of illuminating, as it is equipped with its original wire candle holder, while the body serves as a receptacle for sweets. The piece is in Excellent to Pristine condition and comes with provenance directly connected to the Bertoia family. It was formerly part of the Jeanne and Bill Bertoia collection and, because it has been so carefully preserved over the years, the Halloween rarity looks exactly as it did when first discovered in a house many decades ago. Estimate: $5,000-$8,000

Also worthy of mention is a Halloween candy container comprised of cloth-dressed witch, complete with pointed hat and broom, riding atop a black cat. The glass-eyed feline has a spring tail and its head is removable for access to candy. Standing 9.5 inches high and in Excellent condition, it comes to auction with a $3,000-$5,000.

Bertoia’s December 13 Holiday Exclusive Auction will take place at the company’s gallery located at 2141 DeMarco Drive, Vineland, NJ 08360, starting at 10 a.m. ET. Bid absentee, by phone, or live online through Bertoia Live or LiveAuctioneers. An open preview will be held daily during normal business hours the week prior to the sale. Preview privately by appointment only. For additional information on any item in the auction or to arrange for a private preview, please call +1 856-692-1881 or email [email protected]. Visit Bertoia’s website and online catalog to view all of the goodies awaiting collectors at their fun-filled pre-Christmas auction: Visit Bertoia’s website and online catalog to view all of the goodies in this fun-filled pre-Christmas auction: www.bertoiaauctions.com

Michael Bertoia welcomes the opportunity to discuss the consignment of antique and vintage toys, trains, banks or holiday collectibles to future auctions, whether it is a single high-quality item or an entire collection. All enquiries are kept strictly confidential, and there is never an obligation to consign. Call +1 856-692-1881 or email [email protected].

TimeLine’s Nov. 26-Dec. 1 Antiquities Auction offers astounding trove of cultural artifacts dating from Bronze Age through Pre-Columbian era

Awe-inspiring six-day event features impeccably-curated and well-provenanced art objects, ancient coins, jewelry and historical arms and armor

Egyptian Bronze Head of a Pharaoh with Inlaid Eyes
Egyptian Bronze Head of a Pharaoh with Inlaid Eyes

HARWICH, U.K. – Britain’s TimeLine Auctions, the world’s foremost auctioneers of ancient art and antiquities, takes pride in announcing details of one of their largest-ever sales, a six-day event opening on Tuesday, November 26 and concluding on Sunday, December 1. This exciting auction welcomes the holiday season with an unprecedented, fully-curated array of rare and historically important objects, each notable for its quality and distinguished provenance. Bidders may participate worldwide through several bidding methods, including live at the gallery, by phone, absentee, or live online through a choice of several platforms. In addition to the generously illustrated online catalog, expertly-narrated, high-quality videos of many auction lots may be viewed on TimeLine Auctions’ website

The mysterious traditions of Ancient Egypt are recalled in one of the auction’s premier lots, a bronze head of a pharaoh dating to the Third Intermediate Period, 21st-22nd Dynasty, circa 1069-900 BC. Crafted as a hollow-form mask with a reeded headdress, the face has later gold inlays on its inlaid eyes and eyebrows, as do the chin straps of the subject’s plaited “false beard.” Standing 10 5/8 inches inclusive of its stand, this mesmerizing artwork has a long trail of ownership that can be traced back to the 1960s, when it was part of a French family collection. In 2003, it appeared at an exhibition sale at Rennes Encheres (Bretagne); and 10 years later at Mansour Gallery in London. Most recently, it was held in successive UK private collections. It comes to auction with an academic report by Egyptologist Paul Whelan and is estimated at £40,000-£60,000 ($50,510-$75,770).

An early Dynastic (IIIB, 2400-2340 BC) terracotta administrative cuneiform tablet is pillow-shaped and serves to record the owners or shepherds tending 146 sheep. The densely cuneiform text is etched into the tablet’s two broad faces and one edge, rendering a striking appearance. This fascinating relic was acquired from Laemmie Gallery in Los Angeles in the early 1970s and remained in the same hands until its 2011 auction at Bonhams, London. Later, it was part of a private central European collection. It now comes to auction at TimeLine with an £18,000-£24,000 ($22,730-$30,310) estimate.

Many of the most highly-prized relics of Ancient Rome will convey with an academic report from the renowned authority Dr Raffaele D’Amato. One such item is an extraordinarily beautiful life-size 2nd-3rd century AD Eastern Roman carved limestone bust depicts a Palmyrene lady of obvious wealth. Her wavy hair is enclosed by a loosely draped headdress held onto a low turban by a diadem with a high-relief ornament. Additionally, she wears attractive drop earrings and a necklace of graduated beads. The sculpture measures 19¾ inches (50cm,) inclusive of its custom stand, and weighs 29.95kg (66lbs). Since at least 1971, it was held in a private UK collection. In 2001, it was acquired from Rupert Wace Ancient Art in London and subsequently joined the collection of M R Davis of Bristol, England. The bust will be offered with a £10,000-£14,000 ($12,630-$17,680) estimate. 

Also accompanied by a report from Dr D’Amato, a late Roman bronze oil lamp with a gryphon-form handle and stand dates to the 5th-7th century AD. It has a carinated body with an elongated nozzle emerging from a lotus flower on which sits a dolphin. It is further embellished with dove decorations and a Chi Rho symbol on both sides of its body. Its path of ownership can be traced to the German art market and subsequent private ownership in Europe from the 1970s to the early 2000s. Upon its later acquisition and ownership by descent, it passed to a UK private collection. The auction estimate is £30,000-£40,000 ($37,880-$50,510).

A large Roman bronze chariot fitting with an imago clipeata of a priest of Mithras was created in the late 3rd to early 4th century AD and presents as a facing bust of a mature man with a neatly trimmed beard and deep-set eyes. He wears a short-sleeved tunic and conical cap and holds an egg, the symbol of eternal time, in his left hand. The piece was previously with the famed J J Klejman, NYC, 1963; Gallery Six, NYC, 1991; and Christie’s, New York (December 11, 2014 auction, Lot #156, estimate: $50,000-$70,000). It is mounted on a custom-made display stand (total height: 9 5/8in or 24.5cm) and will transfer to the winning bidder with a report from Dr D’Amato. Estimate: £25,000-£35,000 ($31,570-$44,200) 

A life-size Roman club from a statue of Hercules, 1st-2nd century AD, is formed as a hollow bronze shank with a domed end, detailed with a series of regularly-placed knop projections on piriform pads. Mounted on a custom display stand, it measures 21 5/8in (55cm). Its contemporary line of provenance begins with a North American collection in the 1990s, followed by European and British private ownership, most recently the collection of a London gentleman beginning in the 2000s. Backed by an academic report prepared by Dr D’Amato, it is expected to achieve a winning bid of £15,000-£20,000 ($18,940-$25,260). 

The auction includes several exceptional artworks featuring female subjects. A stunning 14th century Byzantine fresco panel depicts three women, perhaps queens or wise virgins, wearing jeweled crowns and clothing richly decorated with precious stones and pearls. The painting is possibly a representation of the Last Judgment as mentioned in the Apocalypse (Chapter IV, Verse 4), or the wise virgins of the parable of Matthew, Chapter 25. The panel measures 15¾ inches by 15¾ inches (40cm x 40cm) and weighs 5.08kg (11lbs 3oz). A D’Amato report accompanies this auction lot which is estimated at £25,000-£35,000 ($31,570-$44,200). 

A large and fittingly dramatic 2nd century AD Roman marble relief depicts a female tragedy theatre mask modeled in the half-round, with strongly delineated features and a sorrowful face with open mouth. Colossal heads of its type are consistent with components of great architecture seen in the temples and theatres of Roman Asia Minor. The auction example weighs a hefty 66lbs and might have served as a capital at the top of a column. This remarkable survivor comes with an academic report from Dr. D’Amato and is estimated at £8,000-£10,000 ($10,100-$12,630). 

An outstanding example of Byzantine artistry, a 6th-7th century AD marble table top features a dished central panel bordered with 17 carved socket roundels, each having a figural or emblematic ornament, such as a peacock, lamb, goat, etc. It is further enhanced with depictions of ivy and other botanical details. The piece has a steel-reinforced backing and has been fitted with professionally-made lift-on wall brackets to enable its display. It measures 40 inches (102cm) in diameter and weighs 87kg (192lbs). Acquired in London in the early 2000s, it was later part of a North American collection, then passed into the hands of a London gentleman, also in the 2000s. With an academic report by Dr D’Amato, it is entered in the auction with a £25,000-£35,000 ($31,570-$44,200) estimate.

Deemed an “object of cultural” interest by the British Secretary of State’s Expert Adviser and officially recorded as such, the “Kingsworthy” Anglo-Saxon gilt-bronze Woden’s-head applique was created in the form of a hirsute male head with a horned helmet or mask. Its discoid eyes are accented by garnet (?) cloison inserts. This marvelous antiquity was discovered in Kingsworthy, Winchester, Hampshire, UK, in 2017, and has been widely published. TimeLine Auctions is pleased to include it as a featured highlight of the November 26 session and has assigned it a £12,000-£17,000 ($15,150-$21,470) estimate.

TimeLine’s Nov. 26-Dec. 1, 2024 auction will be held live at the company’s head office located at The Court House, 363 Main Rd., Harwich, Essex CO12 4DN, UK. All lots featured in TimeLine’s printed catalog will be auctioned during the Nov. 26 opening session. Internet bidders may pre-register online. Goods may be previewed in person at the gallery by prior arrangement only. Auction start time: 7am US Eastern time/12pm (midday) GMT. All remote forms of bidding will be available, including absentee, by phone (please book phone line 48 hours ahead of time) or live via the Internet through TimeLine’s bidding platform or LiveAuctioneers. TimeLine Auctions accepts payments in GBP and ships worldwide. Questions: call +44 7494 866514 or email Aaron Hammond at [email protected]. Website: https://timelineauctions.com

Holiday Treats For Gifts (Or Self!) – Estate Jewelry Comes To Turner Auctions + Appraisals On December 7

Over 155 Lots Feature Jewelry Items with Precious Metals & Gemstones

A pair of diamond and 18k white gold earrings
A pair of diamond and 18k white gold earrings

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA, November 19, 2024 – Turner Auctions + Appraisals is pleased to present Estate Jewelry on Saturday, December 7, 2024, at 10:30 am PST. Featuring over 155 lots from several estates, these jewelry items are ideal for holiday gift-giving to others (or to treat oneself!). Jewelry offerings include necklaces, rings, bracelets, pendants, brooches, earrings, and stickpins. Most are 14k, 18k or white gold; silver, including sterling or blackened; or platinum; most are set with gemstones such as diamond, emerald, ruby, sapphire, amethyst, peridot, pearl, tourmaline, garnet, turquoise, moonstone, aquamarine, lapis lazuli, and/or rock crystal. Some pieces are antique or vintage. Noted makers include Buccellati, Tiffany, Schiaparelli, Jomaz, and Alfred Philippe. An array of Mexican silver jewelry is also included in the sale.

Among the other items in the auction are several jewelry sets; an Egyptian faience bead necklace; accessories and watch fob chains for men; silver cocktail picks and chatelaines; a silver link belt; an extensive selection of antique or vintage shoe buckles; and numerous groupings of gem-set, antique, vintage or costume jewelry, including charm bracelets.

Turner Auctions + Appraisals begins its online auction on Saturday, December 7, 2024, at 10:30 am PST; sale items are available for preview and bidding now. The auction will be featured live on four platforms: LiveAuctioneers, Invaluable, Bidsquare, and Turner Auctions + Appraisals’ free mobile app, which can be downloaded from the App Store or Google Apps (“Turner Auctions”). Both are easily accessed through ‘Upcoming Auctions’ at the company’s website:  www.turnerauctionsonline.com/upcoming-auctions/.

Here below are some highlights of the upcoming online sale (please see lot details in the online catalog):

Lot 49: A Pair of Diamond and 18k White Gold Earrings. Set with six European and old European-cut diamonds, weighing from approximately 0.95 to 0.85 carat, overall I-J-K/SI, with 24 additional round diamond accents; estimated total diamond weight: 5.00 carat; weighing approximately 10.8 grams; length: 1 1/4 in. Estimate $2,000-$3,000. 

Lot 23: Two Diamond and 18k Gold Bangle Bracelets. Designed with 10 pear-shaped and round rose-cut colored diamonds, weighing in total approximately 2.60 carats; gross weight approximately 13.2 grams; inner circumferences: 7 1/2 and 8 in. Estimate $2,000-$2,500. 

Lot 18: A Diamond and 14k White Gold Engagement Ring. Centering a European-cut diamond approximately 1.15 carats, I-J-K/VS-SI, accented by one European and five single-cut diamonds; estimated total diamond weight: 1.30 carats; weighing approximately 3.4 grams; size 9 ¾. Estimate $1,500-$2,500. 

Lot 29: A Pair of Emerald, Diamond and 14k Gold Earrings. Each stud earring centering an emerald-cut emerald, with round brilliant-cut diamond frame; estimated total emerald weight: 1.35 carats, estimated total diamond weight: 0.25 carat; weighing approximately 2.5 grams. Estimate $800-$1,200. 

Lot 52: An Unmounted Aquamarine. Weighing approximately 23.89 carats (highly abraded, scratched, chipped). Estimate $800-$1,200.

Lot 80: Antonio, an Amethyst and Silver Bracelet, Mexico. The link bracelet set with ten oval amethyst cabochons; with Antonio crown maker’s mark; weighing approximately 90.5 grams; length 7 1/8 in. Estimate $500-$800. 

Lot 5: A Turquoise and 18k Gold Cross Pendant. Set with 15 round turquoise cabochons; weighing approximately 14.5 grams; length: 3 1/4 in. Estimate $300-$500.

Lot 16: An Emerald and 14k Gold Ring. Featuring a pear-shaped emerald weighing approximately 3.90 carats; 2.3 grams; size: 6 ¾. Estimate $1,000-$1,500. 

Lot 131: A Set of 12 Egyptian Faience Bead Necklaces. Lengths: 36in. Estimate $300-$500. (Photo, bottom right)

Lot 66: A Georgian Silver, Gold, Paste Necklace & Bracelet. French, in silver with hand chased gold medallion tops (good condition, void one stone). Estimate $500-$800. 

Lot 44: Jomaz, a Vintage Brooch and Clip Earring Set. Circa 1940, in gold tone, with faux coral, green stones and rhinestones; brooch length: 1 7/8 in., earrings: 1 in. Estimate $300-$500. 

Lot 2: A Pair of Amethyst, Peridot and 14k Gold Earrings. Designed with three triangular-cut peridot and four square-cut amethysts; weighing approximately 7.3 grams; length 1 1/4 in. Estimate $100-$200

Lot 32: An Emerald and 14k Gold Necklace. Centering an emerald-cut emerald weighing approximately 0.70 carat; 2.2 grams; length: 16 and 18in, adjustable. Estimate $400-$600. 

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ABOUT TURNER AUCTIONS + APPRAISALS

Based in South San Francisco, Turner Auctions + Appraisals was founded by Stephen Turner to expand and complement the capabilities of Stephen G. Turner Associates, an auction and appraisal consulting firm founded in 2004. Turner Auctions + Appraisals presents online auctions in diverse categories of personal property (www.turnerauctionsonline.com). Among them are Fine Arts, Decorative Arts, Asian Arts, Toys, Jewelry, Militaria, Ethnic Arts, and others. The company offers a range of auction and appraisal services for buyers, sellers, and collectors. Online auctions are held several times a month. Working with leading live and online auction houses on the West Coast since 1991, Turner is a professional appraiser of personal property and seasoned auctioneer. His areas of expertise include fine art, decorative arts, antiques & residential contents. The company welcomes consignments and appraisals.

For more information about the company, please contact:

Stephen Turner, President

Turner Auctions + Appraisals, 461 Littlefield Avenue, South San Francisco, CA 94080

415-964-5250 / [email protected] / www.turnerauctionsonline.com

For media inquiries or photos, please contact:  

Jill Turner, Rodin & Shelley Associates / [email protected]

Esther de Beaucé: Editor of Artists’ Jewelry with MiniMasterpiece

In a little over 10 years, she has turned her gallery into the place to be for artists’ jewelry, helping to shine a light on this little-known field of artistic expression.

© YannDelacour
© YannDelacour

In 2012, you opened MiniMasterpiece. What exactly does your work as an editor of artists’ jewelry involve?
I sell contemporary artists’ jewelry whose creation I initiate. In other words, I bring necklaces, bracelets and earrings into being by working with artists — sculptors, painters, video artists, designers and architects — and then supporting them in the development and production phases. The work of Phillip King, Wang Keping, Jean-Luc Moulène and Lee Ufan was a very long way from jewelry, and I encouraged them to explore this sphere, as Picasso, Calder, Arman and Arp did in the past. In general, each piece is produced in an edition of 8 to 10, with 2 or 4 artist’s proofs, the idea being to keep to the traditional number of 12 used with bronze sculptures. The first to accept my invitation was François Morellet, a painter and sculptor working with geometric abstraction. In 2013, Sophia Vari, another painter and sculptor, put her trust in me, though I was an “unknown” and she was very famous. We worked together for the first ten years of the gallery, also the last decade of her life.

You were a pioneer in artists’ jewelry, although at the time you never wore any…
My approach arose through a love for contemporary artists more than for jewelry. I had loved working with painters and sculptors for the art gallery I’d recently closed, because, sadly, it never really took off. Jewelry was a way to continue working with them. I had a lot to learn. I was the only one doing this at the time, but back in 1975, François Dalle, CEO of L’Oréal and owner of the Artcurial Gallery, edited jewelry by Arman, Sonia Delaunay, Giorgio De Chirico, Takis and François-Xavier Lalanne. François Hugo also edited jewelry by Picasso, Marx Ernst and Dorothea Tanning. My main influence was my mother, Diane Venet, who was married to Bernar Venet, so I spent time with Arman, César, Frank Stella and Sol LeWitt. I remember her buying and wearing really extravagant jewelry… not always easy for a little girl to live up to! She started an incredible collection of artists’ jewelry, including a Jeff Koons, a very rare Rauschenberg, a Man Ray, an extraordinary necklace by Louise Bourgeois and some Fontanas.

Sophia Vari (1940-2023), “Zervodexos” ring, kingwood and 18 ct yellow gold, 2022, edition of 6 and 2 artist's proofs.
© Galerie MiniMasterpiece
Sophia Vari (1940-2023), “Zervodexos” ring, kingwood and 18 ct yellow gold, 2022, edition of 6 and 2 artist’s proofs.
© Galerie MiniMasterpiece

Is artists’ jewelry just a miniature reproduction of an art work?
Not at all. The piece must express the artist’s identity and their recognizable style, while also being a new work. We find this subtle balance in Pablo Reinoso’s brooch, made of undulating gold strips reminiscent of his “Spaghetti” benches. Françoise Pétrovitch’s “Éclats de larmes” (“Tear Splinters”) necklace evokes the little things in life and the intimacy she tirelessly explores in her paintings. Jean Grisoni’s driftwood and tortured metal chains evoke his furniture. Joana Vasconcelos’ necklace, with its XXL volume and 285 beads of different sizes, resonates with the flamboyance of her monumental accumulations. As a discipline, jewelry lets them try out techniques and confront new constraints: scale, wearability and precious metal.

Surprisingly enough, artists’ jewelry does not have the same tax status as artworks.
Yes: it’s considered an everyday consumer item, with VAT at 20%. And that’s even if the artists make it themselves, as with Calder; even if it’s a unique piece; even if it’s in solid gold. It’s all a question of wearability. In the eyes of the taxman, César’s “Compression” with a micro-bail is a pendant, not a work of art! Unlike lithographs by Picasso or Dalí, which qualify for reduced VAT for up to 30 copies. Let’s hope that the General Tax Code will change one day soon!

How important is the role of your goldsmiths in this creative process?
Most jewelry is edited in gold or silver, but no artist is capable of casting, soldering or polishing, apart from Faust Cardinali and Jean Grisoni, who produce their own jewelry. So it’s up to the goldsmiths to convert their designs and prototypes. Their role in development and production is so essential that in the 1950s, Braque nicknamed Heger de Löwenfeld “the extension of my hand”. It’s not just a question of finding technical solutions: goldsmiths must be able to really enter an artist’s world and interpret their intentions. In my case, I work with two regular goldsmiths: Lisandros Heretis has worked with the Greek sculptor Takis, and Hui-Young Jover collaborated with Claude Lalanne until her death in 2019.

Does your role as editor also involve financing production, and therefore taking risks?
Yes, it does. I look for consistency between the artist’s price index and the project’s overall cost. These days, I don’t launch as quickly as I used to into the production of a solid gold piece, as costs soon become astronomical, and it will then be difficult to sell. That’s why I very often propose silver and/or silver gilt versions. This financing makes me the co-owner of the jewel: I hold the exploitation rights, the artist has the copyright.

Françoise Pétrovitch (b. 1964), “Éclats de larmes” necklace, 925 silver gilded with 18 ct yellow gold, 2023, MiniMasterpiece edition of 12 and 2 artist's proofs.
© Galerie MiniMasterpiece
Françoise Pétrovitch (b. 1964), “Éclats de larmes” necklace, 925 silver gilded with 18 ct yellow gold, 2023, MiniMasterpiece edition of 12 and 2 artist’s proofs.
© Galerie MiniMasterpiece

In the end, your job involves doing all you can to highlight each artist’s identity…
I always welcome new pieces of jewelry with huge pleasure, and I’m more than happy to wear it these days. I champion the ideas of designers. I stage five solo shows a year: the last one featured Faust Cardinali, and the next one will focus on Wang Keping. The life of the gallery involves a lot of get-togethers, conversations and dinners, as well as my contributions to Design Miami and the special editions produced for museum stores like the Fondation Vuitton and the Centre Pompidou. Recently, a craze for this type of jewelry has emerged. The gallery’s opening was followed by some remarkable exhibitions that contributed to this. In the winter of 2012, there was “Bijoux d’artistes, une collection” at the Crédit Municipal de Paris gallery. In 2017, the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris presented “Medusa”, and in 2018 the Musée des Arts Décoratifs presented “La collection idéale de Diane Venet”. New galleries similar to mine have also opened in France and Italy. I’m delighted: the more there are, the more this market — which is still a niche market — will develop.

How has your job changed over the last ten years?
I still describe myself in the same way, as an editor of artists’ jewelry. But I sometimes step outside my role by only taking charge of distribution. This is the case with some vintage creations by Picasso and Pol Bury, and also with pieces by designers devoted exclusively to jewelry, like Marianne Anselin. Far from being facile, statuesque and empty of meaning, her pieces are akin to artists’ jewelry and resonate with my world in every way.

Worth seeing
“Wang Keping. Dans la lune” (“In the Moon”)
MiniMasterpiece gallery, Paris 75007
Until 21 December, 2024
galerieminimasterpiece.com

Wayne Edens’ peerless collection of antique fishing lures will hook new owners at Morphy’s Dec. 9 auction

Antique lures of extraordinary rarity – many of them boxed – include one of eight frogs hand-carved in 1898 by James Heddon and displayed at Heddon factory in Dowagiac, Michigan

One Of The 8 James Heddon Hand-carved Frogs
One Of The 8 James Heddon Hand-carved Frogs

DENVER, Pa. – Fishing lure enthusiasts from coast to coast will be angling for the catch of the day on Monday, December 9 at Morphy’s live gallery auction of the Wayne Edens collection. The incomparable assemblage of lures – said to be the largest, most comprehensive and historically-important collection of its type ever to come to the public marketplace – is brimming with ultra-rare gems, not the least of which is one of the eight celebrated Heddon “factory board” frogs hand-carved in 1898.

The all-original Heddon frog lure (or “bait”) was personally crafted by James Heddon, founder of the Heddon Company. It was subsequently exhibited on a display board at the Heddon plant in Dowagiac, Michigan. In 1977, Clyde A Harbin Sr, an outdoorsman, author and fishing lure archivist known as “The Bassman™,” was invited by Heddon to visit the company’s factory and declutter the display board, removing any baits that were not Heddon productions. The eight frogs were present on the board both before and after the assortment was thinned out, and were photographed many times. 

Harbin would later write a book titled Heddon Historical Footprints in which he details where each of the eight frogs ended up. Today, it is believed that one of them is held in the Bass Pro Shops corporate collection, a few others are privately owned, and yet another may be in an aquarium’s collection in Oklahoma. 

The frog lure in Wayne Edens’ collection was acquired from Dudley Murphy (1940-2022), co-founder of the National Fishing Lure Collectors Club. Murphy had obtained the lure directly from the Heddon factory. In addition to its unbroken line of provenance, Edens’ frog lure has been definitively photo-matched to one of the original eight “board” examples. It will make its first-ever auction appearance on December 9 with a $30,000-$80,000 estimate.

The revered Heddon brand is amply represented in the sale. A 7¾-inch-long Heddon 747 presents in a coveted, uncataloged special-order color of blended red and purple. Not found in any standard Heddon catalog, this lure was offered exclusively by VL&A for one year (1917) as the “Dowagiac Mascallonge Minnow.” It is one of very few known examples and is graded Excellent, placing it among the finest of very few known examples. At auction, it is expected to reach $35,000-$50,000.

Nicknamed “Big Baby” by a previous owner who obtained it from the Heddon family in California, a Heddon Giant Underwater Minnow was expressly produced as a one-off special-order item for fishing in the Pacific Ocean. Measuring 13 inches long, the mammoth 8-bellyweight bait has oversize glass eyes and is finished in a rainbow paint pattern with red stripes separated by yellow. That particular motif was typically seen during the 1909-12 seasons. The auction example’s nameless props and cup rig suggest its production pre-dated 1912. In all-original condition and almost certainly a unique specimen, it carries pre-sale estimate of $30,000-$60,000.

Ultra-rare and a real show-off amongst antique baits, a Heddon special order 1309 five-hook Black Sucker boast a wonderful white saltwater color with a glitter finish, and solid amber-glass eyes. Measuring 5¾ inches long, it was created with a five-hook configuration rather than the normal three. In Excellent Minus to Excellent condition, it could land a $35,000-$45,000 winning bid.

A super-special Heddon 1904 set of “The Dowagiac Perfect Casting Baits” is housed in a handsome red-velvet partitioned box with a stunning black bass graphic on the lid’s underside. All three baits have a rare aluminum finish with brass hardware and gold-washed cups. Each is graded Excellent Minus. The set is an actual book example shown on Pages 23 and 64 of The Heddon Legacy by Bill Roberts and Rob Pavey. It comes to auction with a $25,000-$50,000 estimate.

The array of rare, early Heddon baits continues with a two-hook Rimless Cup Slopenose in its original black pictorial box. According to owners of The Heddon Museum, this 4¼-inch lure dates to the first five or six weeks of Heddon production in early 1902. It is one of fewer than a dozen known of the earliest iteration of Rimless Cup Slopenoses, presented in one of only three known examples of the introductory black box with silver printing. Estimate: $20,000-$30,000

Of the many desirable baits by companies other than Heddon, it would be hard to beat a Shakespeare No. 64 five-hook Red Musky (Muscallonge) Minnow for eye appeal. Its high forehead design dates it to around 1906-7, and it is accompanied by an extremely desirable circa-1908 pictorial box. Oversize baits of its type are rarely encountered, making it a top prize for any advanced collection. The pre-sale estimate is $20,000-$40,000.

Historically important, an Enterprise Mfg. Co. Trory Minnow marketed around 1899 is considered to be America’s first manufactured wooden minnow. The 4 1/8-inch-long bait offered by Morphy’s has blemish-free milky-white glass eyes, original wire-tied side hooks, an early gut leader, and signature squared props with upturned corners and red glass prop bearings. Bidding is expected to reach the $20,000-$30,000 range.

Wayne Edens once said that after he started collecting lures in 1988, he came to appreciate their history, beauty and engineering, and noted that each one was “a little work of art that has its own story.” The December 9 auction – the first in a series of three sales taking place in 2025 – is packed with rare fishing treasures, each with a unique story to pass along to its next owner. 

Part I of the Wayne & Lori Edens fishing lure collection will be auctioned live on Monday, December 9, 2024 at Morphy’s gallery, 2000 N. Reading Rd., Denver, PA 17517, starting at 9 a.m. Eastern Time. All remote forms of bidding will also be available, including absentee, by phone, and live via the Internet through Morphy Live. For additional information on any item in the auction or to reserve a phone line for bidding, call 877-968-8880 or email [email protected]. Visit Morphy’s online at www.morphyauctions.com.

Wiederseim Associates, Inc. Presents Luxury Timepieces and Assorted Fine Art in November Sale

This November, Wiederseim Associates, Inc. will present its ANNUAL THANKSGIVING SALE with nearly 450 lots of fine art, decorative art, furniture, collectibles, and more. It will take place live on Nov 22, 2024. Online bidding options are available through Bidsquare.

Edmund Darch Lewis Oil On Canvas
Edmund Darch Lewis Oil On Canvas

One top lot of this sale is an Edmund Darch Lewis large oil on canvas from 1887 (lot #186; estimate: USD 700 – $900). A distinctive feature of Lewis’ work was its luminosity. The vivid colors and glowing effects of his paintings earned him a place among the Hudson River School’s Luminist artists. The offered print from Lewis is a landscape with a sailboat and cows in a river scene. Despite the size of the work, there is a striking exploration of color and luminance in the scene. Additional contemporary works in the catalog include an oil on canvas of a clipper ship by American artist D. Taylor (lot #181; estimate: $600 – $900). The artist Taylor is becoming one of the leading 21st-century painters of clippers and schooners with full sails raised.

Large Black Forest Wall Clock
Large Black Forest Wall Clock

Beyond fine art, several timepieces are on offer this November, including a large 19th-century Black Forest wall clock (lot #16; estimate: $400 – $600). Intricately carved black forest clocks are often decorated with animal, bird, or other natural patterns. To produce clocks and decorative objects that were functional and aesthetically pleasing, local artisans used European larch wood that was dense, closed-grained, and dark brown. This carved wall clock displays an eagle holding prey and oak leaves, ferns, and crossed guns. A walnut wood case is framed by oak leaves richly carved with intricate designs. The solid wood clock comes with two bells to indicate time and strike. Other Black Forest watches in the sale include a cuckoo clock from the late 19th c., with stag and hunting dog figures, pine cone weights, and oak leaves (lot #202; estimate: $500 – $700). 

Hermes Enamel Bracelet
Hermes Enamel Bracelet

A Hermes enamel and gold-plated bangle bracelet will be offered as well (lot #306; estimate: $300 – $400). Hermes is known for their stylish, casual, and elegant designs. This Hermes bangle combines all three styles with printed boat decorations, in gold-plated metal and multiple hues. Also available in the auction is a 14k yellow gold bar set tennis bracelet. It contains approximately 7.84 ct round brilliant cut diamonds measuring about 3.5mm (lot #269; estimate: $3,500 – $4,000).

Other key lots in this sale include: 

  • A Georgian oak cider flagon, along with a woven straw basket, along with a French glass demijohn (lot #32; estimate: $100 – $150) 
  • A Tiffany & Co. 18kt yellow gold pocket watch with 14k yellow gold fob, chain marked 14k, lobster claw clasp (lot #268; estimate: $3,000 – $3,500) 
  • An Oval Japanese Sailors Yokohama silkwork, depicting an American Great White ship in the late 19th century (lot #150; $100 – $150).
  • A U.S. Cavalry encampment fall landscape oil on canvas print (lot #101; estimate: $100 – $150) 
  • Assorted ornaments and decorations for Christmas, including miniature balls.

Wiederseim Associates, Inc. provides appraisal services for estates, gifts, insurance, and donations, as well as family divisions. The company offers personal property consulting services to help clients find the best deals for their properties. Aside from auction sales, it also offers consignment services for museum collections, estate sales, and private collectors. The owner Mr. Theodore E. Wiederseim specializes in appraising European and American furniture, maritime items, silver, American paintings, oriental rugs, porcelain, and household goods dating from the 18th and 19th centuries.The ANNUAL THANKSGIVING SALE at Wiederseim Associates, Inc. will begin at 07:30 PM IST on Nov 22, 2024. To view the complete catalog and register to bid, visit Bidsquare. Find more auction previews on Auction Daily. 

Alexander Calder’s1964 Mobile: Sculpture in Motion

This mature work by the American artist is exemplary of his research into movement. In this mobile, we find the color work that led him to abstraction…

Alexander Calder (1898-1976), Polychrome on Brass Wave, 1964, metal, copper, wire and paint, monogrammed “CA” on base, 35.5 x 66 x 8.9 cm/13.9 x 25.98 x 3.5 in.
Estimate: €800,000/1.2 M
© 2024 Calder Foundation, New York/adagp, Paris
Alexander Calder (1898-1976), Polychrome on Brass Wave, 1964, metal, copper, wire and paint, monogrammed “CA” on base, 35.5 x 66 x 8.9 cm/13.9 x 25.98 x 3.5 in.
Estimate: €800,000/1.2 M
© 2024 Calder Foundation, New York/adagp, Paris

In 1964, Alexander Calder had nothing left to prove. At a time when a cycle of retrospective exhibitions was being organized, starting at the Guggenheim in New York and ending at the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the artist had succeeded in gaining recognition for his work on both sides of the Atlantic. New York critic John Canaday wrote: “There is nothing unexpected here, and yet there is all the freshness of the first solo exhibition of an exceptional new talent”. Calder had already been honored with an exhibition at MoMA in 1943, but his work remained as relevant as ever. With the dual patronage of the admiring Marcel Duchamp and the sarcastic Jean Arp, who dubbed his works “mobiles” and “stabiles”, the idea of sculpture in motion gained ground. The terms have entered common parlance, imitations proliferate on the market, and a new generation of kinetic artists is inspired by his work. Calder tirelessly pursued his research, exploring the interplay of scale, and developed it further from his new studio in Saché, his adopted village in Indre-et-Loire. The most French of American artists had a new studio built there in 1962. Its size lent itself to the creation of monumental works, all the more so since Calder could count on the proximity of his foundry in Angers. From the 1930s onwards, the sculptor experimented with installing his pieces in public spaces, in relation to architecture, but without ever making this the exclusive focus of his practice. The artist, who retained a particular attachment to drawing and painting, was also developing his jewelry work, as a continuation of his early work in wire. Calder was always playing with scale, equally comfortable with small intimate pieces as with monumental works of quasi-industrial proportions. Trained as an engineer, the son of artists, his father a sculptor and his mother a painter, he accepted and cultivated the deviations that contributed to the vitality of his art. This Polychrome on Brass Wave, from 1964, is a work of smaller dimensions (35.5 x 66 x 8.9 cm) but no less representative.

Recorded in the archives of the Calder Foundation in New York, it recalls, with its restricted color palette the artist’s decisive encounter with Piet Mondrian.

Calder, A Radical Inventor

In this sculpture of sheet metal, copper, wire and paint, we find the artist’s favorite materials, which he can easily manipulate and, if need be, transposed into different dimensions — although it doesn’t seem that our work is a model. Recorded in the archives of the Calder Foundation in New York under application number A08063, it recalls, with its restricted color palette — black and white, but also blue, red and yellow — the artist’s decisive encounter with Piet Mondrian, who introduced him to abstract art. Calder’s visit to the De Stijl pioneer in 1930 has been the subject of many biographies and commentaries. Seeing the colored rectangles, which the painter intuitively moved around to compose his paintings, stand out against the white walls of the studio bathed in light, the sculptor recognized the shared affinities with his artistic practice and suggested that he make his flat projections oscillate. Although Mondrian categorically rejected this proposal, we can see the impact it had on Calder’s work, a radical inventor adored by all the French avant-garde artists, from the Cubists to the Surrealists, not forgetting the abstract artists and, later, the kinetic artists. As Elizabeth Hutton Turner reminds us in her article “Alexander Calder and Radical Invention”, from childhood he was left free to experiment. While invention manuals for young people prepared an entire generation for modernity, Calder retained a certain mindset. His first wire objects, his animals and his zoo reflect, in addition to a delight in form, a roundness and a genuine stylization of gradual challenges. In this way, he sees art as a kind of empiricism, a punctual response to real formal and almost metaphysical questions, as pointed out by Sartre: how to make something stand upright, give it movement, existence. The artist developed a kind of physics in the first sense of the word, a study of nature that would not be naturalistic, but would instead be mimetic. Observing the movement of a tree’s leaves, a peacock’s feathers or a spider’s legs are all resources for the sculptor, who gives his mobiles the ability to move according to the circulation of air or visitors, or even the action of performers and musicians. The artist left room for indecision and, until 1964, most of his titles were, like this one — meaning “polychrome on brass wave” — very prosaic. As Arnauld Pierre analyzes in his book Calder – Mouvement et réalité (ed. Hazan, 2009), the Guggenheim Museum retrospective played a major role in the artist’s awareness of his own work, which translated into a more developed use of titles to induce analogies. Perfectly traceable, sold by the Perls Gallery (New York) and then the Kornfeld Gallery in Bern, and since then in a private collection, Polychrome on Brass Wave, with its curved base, might suggest a tree taking root. A modernist tree whose every leaf is a challenge to gravity, and whose oscillation is an eulogy to grace, to use the dichotomy dear to the philosopher Simone Weil.

MODERN & CONTEMPORARY PAINTINGS

Monday 25 November 2024 – 14:00 (CET) – Live

Salle 5 – Hôtel Drouot – 75009 Paris

Digard Auction

Info and sales conditions

Catalogue

Antique Americana Items Lead Wiederseim Associates’ 2024 Thanksgiving Sale

Wiederseim Associates, Inc.’s Annual Thanksgiving Sale will offer a robust selection of antique Americana items this year, from important historical documents to furniture and collectibles. The 441-lot auction will begin on November 22, 2024 with online bidding available through Bidsquare. 

Ship’s passport signed by Washington and Jefferson. Image courtesy of Wiederseim Associates, Inc. 

Document Signed by Washington and Jefferson 

Among the top lots of this antique Americana event is a historical document signed by George Washington and Thomas Jefferson (lot #100; estimate: USD 10,000 – $15,000). This is an early ship’s passport dating back to 1793. It authorized a trade journey from Philadelphia to Amsterdam. After being signed by Washington and Jefferson, the document was also signed by the United States’ first Collector of Customs, Sharp Delaney. It was then provided to the Brig Nancy, a trade vessel. This document comes to auction in a wooden frame. 

Ship’s passports played an important role in establishing the United States’ legitimacy in the nation’s early years. They facilitated trade with other countries and required signatures from the President, Secretary of State, and Customs Collector. The timing of this particular ship’s passport is notable; by 1793, a young America faced heightened international tensions and the impending Quasi-War with France. The Brig Nancy, like other merchant ships of the era, would soon encounter attack and animosity from French privateers. 

Soloman Parke tall case clock. Image courtesy of Wiederseim Associates, Inc. 

Soloman Parke Chippendale Tall Case Clock

The upcoming Thanksgiving Sale will also highlight antique American furniture, including a tall case clock crafted by Soloman Parke (lot #151; estimate: $700 – $900). This is a Chippendale-style clock composed of cherry wood. It features tulip-shaped carved finials, fluted quarter columns, and ogee bracket feet. The clock face is accented with a moon dial and delicate flower decorations. Wiederseim Associates, Inc. estimates that the clock was crafted around 1800.

Chippendale-style furniture reached colonial America in the mid-1700s. Furniture makers used Thomas Chippendale’s general principles– ornamental carving, articulated feet, and fine woods– while modifying the already-popular Queen Anne and early Georgian styles. A taste for Chippendale furniture persisted through the Revolutionary War period before giving way to Federal and Neoclassical forms. 

Remmey stoneware pitcher. Image courtesy of Wiederseim Associates, Inc.
Remmey stoneware pitcher. Image courtesy of Wiederseim Associates, Inc. 

Remmey Stoneware Pitcher

Another key antique Americana lot in the catalog is a Remmey stoneware pitcher bearing a cobalt blue tulip decoration (lot #145; estimate: $600 – $900). This large pitcher holds two gallons and stands over ten inches tall. The Remmey family of stoneware manufacturers was dominant in New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore through the 18th century. In addition to large pitchers, the Remmeys produced smaller products such as inkstands and cooking pans. Cobalt blue flower and foliate motifs are common Remmey stoneware items, often featuring large strokes and deep colors. The offered Remmey stoneware pitcher has a repair on the front right rim. 

John Peirce, Brightside Farm, 1965. Image courtesy of Wiederseim Associates, Inc.
John Peirce, Brightside Farm, 1965. Image courtesy of Wiederseim Associates, Inc. 

John Peirce Painting

Rounding out this Annual Thanksgiving Sale is a pastoral painting by Pennsylvania-based artist John Peirce (lot #298; estimate: $2,000 – $3,000). This more contemporary piece portrays historical Charlestown Township, Pennsylvania, located in the southeastern region of the state. Peirce’s work shows an autumn hunting scene. An orange-tinted fox flees a group of dogs, horses, and men across a field. In the background is Brightside Farm, a historic plot of land that is now a park featuring walking trails and community gardens. This painting comes to the market from the personal collection of Theodore E. Wiederseim, the auction house’s founder. 

The Annual Thanksgiving Sale at Wiederseim Associates, Inc. will begin at 9:00 AM EST on November 22, 2024. To view the complete catalog and register to bid online, visit Bidsquare. Find additional coverage of this sale on Auction Daily.

Robinhood Auctions Brings 1,000+ Works by Andy Warhol, Marc Chagall, Pablo Picasso, and More

Over 1,000 lots of fine paintings, prints, posters, and multiples will soon come to auction with Robinhood Auctions in the Contemporary and Classic Masterpieces. Scheduled for Nov 21, 2024, the sale includes work by leading contemporary and modern artists, including Andy Warhol, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, and Marc Chagall. 

Andy Warhol (1928-1987), "Dollar Sign" Framed Skateboard Triptych, Plate Signed with Letter of
Andy Warhol (1928-1987), “Dollar Sign” Framed Skateboard Triptych, Plate Signed with Letter of

One top lot of this sale is a skateboard triptych by Andy Warhol, titled Howdy Doody (lot #336; estimate: $2,112 – $2,640). The vividly colored “Dollar Sign” series by Andy Warhol depicts stylized dollars expressing the artist’s perspective on commerce and art. As if scribbled on a receipt or lifted from a sketchpad, Warhol’s “Dollar Signs” are made using several silkscreens to create a textured look. He enlarges the “$” on a dollar bill to create an archetypal sign, creating a series linking art and money. The auction will also feature several other works by Warhol, including a silkscreen version of the artist’s Flowers 11.66 from Sunday B. Morning (lot #347; estimate: $600 – $750), and a Classic Marilyn Portfolio, a suite of 10 Silkscreen prints from Sunday B Morning (lot #787; estimate: $6,684 – $8,355).

Marc Chagall- Lithograph "Le Bouquet Devant La Fenetre"
Marc Chagall- Lithograph “Le Bouquet Devant La Fenetre”

Another notable work in the catalog is a limited-edition colorful lithograph on paper of Marc Chagall’s Le Bouquet Devant La Fenetre (lot #132; estimate: $1,332 – $1,665).  This mezuzah features a silkscreen image of a window depicting the youngest of Jacob’s sons, the Tribe of Benjamin, an interpretation of 12 stained-glass windows by Marc Chagall. It comes in a 24-K gold-plated bronze housing with a full-color silkscreen.  There is a replica of the signature of Mark Chagall on the case and the silkscreen.

Pablo Picasso (1881-1973), "Carnet de Californie 15.11.55-II" Vintage Lithograph Lithograph on Paper
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973), “Carnet de Californie 15.11.55-II” Vintage Lithograph Lithograph on Paper

Several pieces by Spanish artist Pablo Picasso are on offer, including a lithograph on paper painting from the artist’s Carnet de Californie Series (lot #600; estimate: $1,416 – $1,770). Pablo Picasso permitted the publication of a sketchbook from his collection by Editions Cercle d’Art in 1959. Consequently, the original Picasso sketchbook was reproduced in a limited edition under the name Carnet de la Californie.

David Gershtein- Free Standing Sculpture "EASY RUNNER"
David Gershtein- Free Standing Sculpture “EASY RUNNER”

Beyond fine art, this sale will feature artist David Gershtein’s Easy Runner, a free-standing sculpture (lot #45; estimate: $184 – $230). The Easy Runner embodies the ideal urban figure, effortlessly running along a city’s streets, breathing lightly, unaware of the people around him. David Gerstein created a new line of walkers after years of observing and studying big city crowds. This sculpture is free-standing and laser-cut on steel. 

Additional lots of interest in this sale include: 

  • Pablo Picasso’s La Comedie Humaine 26.1.54, a framed lithograph on paper (Lot# 656; estimate: $1,692 – $2,115)
  • Salvador Dali’s Inferno 17, a color woodcut on b.f.k. rives paper (Lot# 696; estimate: $1,485 – $1,856.25)
  • Victor Vasarely’s Gyemant, a framed heliogravure print (lot #18; estimate: $312 – $390) 
  • Martin Katon’s Happy Hoopoes, an oil painting on canvas (lot #19; estimate: $1,800 – $2,250) 
  • Mr. Brainwash’s Mona Lisa (Pink), a hand-painted spray can (lot #78; estimate: $660 – $825) 

Based in North Las Vegas, U.S., Robinhood Auctions has distinguished itself as an established international auction house in its over 35-year history. The auction house offers fine art paintings, sculptures, limited editions, and collectibles. Among its clients are leading auction houses, art galleries, and collectors. Several celebrated artists are represented in its inventory, such as Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, Peter Max, and Marc Chagall, among others. The auction house’s professional staff is experienced, and knowledgeable in fine art, offering customers the best possible service with their expertise in fine art forms and mediums, along with knowledge of current trends. Your experience of bidding to the completion of your order will be professional from start to finish. 

    This Contemporary and Classic Masterpieces Sale from Robinhood Auctions will begin at 11:30 PM IST on Nov 21, 2024. To view the complete catalog and register to bid, visit Bidsquare.