Henri Jayer Vosne-Romanée Magnums top Bonhams London Fine Wine Sale

Vosne-Romanée, Cros-Parantoux 1996, Henri Jayer (6 magnums)

Fine and Rare Wines

4 Jul 2019

London, New Bond Street

Vosne-Romanée, Cros-Parantoux 1996, Henri Jayer (6 magnums)

Six magnums of Henri Jayer’s Vosne-Romanée, Cros-Parantoux 1996 topped Bonhams Fine & Rare Wine sale in London on Thursday 4 July. They sold for £97,600 having been estimated at £85,000-100,000.

The sale was particularly strong in both Burgundy and Bordeaux. Other highlights include:

– A dozen bottles of Pétrus 1989 Pomerol. Sold for £39,040 (£32,000-40,000)

– Two bottles of Echézeaux 1990, Henri Jayer. Sold for £10,370. (£6,000-8,000)

– Seven bottles of Pétrus 1986 Pomerol. Sold for £10,004. (£8,000-9,000)

– A bottle of Vosne-Romanée, Cros-Parantoux 1985, Henry Jayer. Sold for £9,150. (£7,000-8,000).

– 11 bottles of Château La Mission Haut-Brion 1982 Pessac-Léognan Cru Classé. Sold for £7,930. (£5,000-6,000)

Happy Birthday, David Webb! Visionary Jewelry Designer and Asheville Native

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With his bold, inventive, and luxurious jewelry designs, David Webb remains one of America’s most important jewelers. Born on July 2nd, 1925, in Asheville, North Carolina, Webb grew up in an Arts and Crafts home designed by Richard Sharp Smith, a supervising architect at Biltmore House. Webb’s Asheville home, including the rear cottage which became his first workshop, is now the Carolina Bed and Breakfast, owned by innkeepers Diana Thornton and Kevin Gero. As the keeper of the former Webb home and a jewelry designer herself, Thornton is delighted to advance the legacy of one of Asheville’s most extraordinary sons.

David Webb stepped into the artistic world of jewelry design after a WPA Federal Art Project and a class at the Penland School of Craft in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. He apprenticed with a silversmith at Hursey & Company, Jewelers, in downtown Asheville. In 1942, Webb traded native stones for precious ones, heading to New York City. With an inventiveness of design and a remarkable quality to his work, David Webb found the beginnings of success. By 1948, Webb opened a boutique on 57th Avenue, just off of 5th Avenue in Manhattan.

Once Webb’s Studio, now a cottage at Carolina Bed & Breakfast

Best known for his carved, enameled animal-inspired bracelets, Maltese cross brooches, and intricate and impressive work in precious stones, Webb carved out an extraordinary body of work in his brief life. Webb’s jewelry designs were at once, clever, whimsical, and eminently chic. His intricately sculpted designs were often set in platinum and yellow gold, and featured diamonds, onyx, turquoise, coral, as well as precious stones of rich and dramatic hues. Webb’s influences derived from Faberge, Cellini, as well as classical themes from ancient civilizations and motifs from the international Art Deco style.

Webb’s jewelry appealed widely, capturing the imagination of luminaries and society women across the world. Among the well-noted was Jackie Kennedy, who commissioned Webb to create official gifts of State on behalf of the Kennedy White House. The Duke of Windsor also purchased a bracelet as a gift for his wife, Wallis Simpson. David Webb designs appealed to America’s Hollywood ‘royalty’ too, from Elizabeth Taylor to Beyonce.

Today, David Webb boutiques can be found on Madison Avenue in New York City and Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Hills.

18kt Gold, Platinum and Diamond Bracelet
Sold at Auction for $6,000 in July 2016
Retro 18kt Diamond Bracelet 
Sold at Auction For $10,800 in November 2018
18kt Ruby and Enamel Cufflinks 
Sold at Auction for $2,280 in November 2017

Western Art Collector

Roxanne Hofmann Mowery points out the family’s favorite house cat to visitors entering their home. Stalking Panther is a large bronze sculpture by Alexander Phimister Proctor (1860-1950). The sculpture is from her parents’ collection and has its own unusual story. Proctor was a friend of Major John Pitcher, superintendent of what was then Yellowstone Park. Under pressure to reduce the park’s cougar population, Pitcher rescued one of the cats and named him “Yellowstone Pete.” Proctor modeled animals from life but found Yellowstone Pete too uncooperative. He had him shipped to the Bronx Zoo where he was still uncooperative. After taking him to his farm near Bedford, New York, Proctor was able to complete his sculpture.

Roxanne relates that she comes from a family that collected paintings and sculpture. Her father collected 15th- to 19th-century European art but after visiting Arizona he became fascinated with the art of the American West. He began collecting in that field in the 1960s.

She is a partner in Trailside Galleries in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, as well as the Jackson Hole Art Auction. Work at Trailside was only her second job in the gallery business. She became a partner in 2005 and since 2007 her focus has been the art auction. Trailside has represented contemporary artists of the American West for more than 50 years, representing some of the finest artists in the field and nurturing their careers.

“When I was a young adult,” her husband Bruce recounts, “I aspired to own nice pieces. My taste is eclectic, ranging from Asian art to impressionism and contemporary. Shortly after my spouse passed away I thought of selling some of what we had collected but didn’t know how to go about it. I telephoned Trailside and was directed to Roxanne. She came by my home to see the collection and told me she had lost her husband. We found that we were of like minds.” Two years ago, the collectors were married.

“When Roxanne moved into my home the challenge was how would all the art fit together. Amazingly, it fits perfectly,” Bruce says. “Perhaps the outliers are my Japanese prints and Chinese ancestral portraits. Everything in this home has a story. With Roxanne bringing her collection, I get to learn new stories.”

One of the stories involves the traditional winter solstice Shalako dances at Zuni Pueblo closed to non-Native people since 1990. Roxanne had been able to attend the ceremony before it was closed through arrangement by her late husband, Greg Hofmann, who owned a trading post, Turquoise Village, on the Zuni reservation. Many of the Indian artifacts in Roxanne’s home were purchased by him directly from Indian artisans. In fact, Zuni artist Duane Dishta (1946-2011) was commissioned to paint the Shalako ceremony which hangs in a guest bedroom in the collectors’ home.

Through her work, Roxanne met and came to know the great wildlife artist Bob Kuhn (1920-2007). They had been talking about a commission for paintings of a bear and a coyote but Kuhn died before they could be done. She was later able to acquire paintings of both subjects which now hang in the master bedroom.

Also in the master bedroom is a large painting on board by David Bierk (1944- 2002) from Bruce’s collection. “In his paintings,” Bruce explains, “Bierk reinterpreted masterworks and combined them in large paintings that removed them from their museum context causing the viewer to reimagine them. He also made the frames from nontraditional materials not associated with classic paintings.” This piece combines a figural painting by Amedeo Modigliani and a floral still life by Henri Fantin-Latour. A larger Bierk commands the couple’s dining room.

Also in the dining room is a small painting by William Acheff. Blue Corn Basket hangs above an Elizabeth Naranjo carved blackware jar from Santa Clara Pueblo, which is displayed on a hand-made, stretched-hide Native American drum. The setting is only one example of the collectors’ careful consideration of the placement their art. “We’re careful in what we’ve chosen to buy and what to display. Our guests recognize that special treatment.”

In the living room there are fine examples of Acoma and Zuni Pueblo pottery. In an adjacent hallway are three Native American corn baskets acquired at an auction of the Andy Warhol Estate.

In the entrance to the kitchen are two paintings from her family collection that show the breadth of her father’s interests. In an archway is, Publico, a painting by the French Barbizon painter Charles-Émile Jacque (1813-1894) known for his paintings of farm animals. In the kitchen is Indian Encampment at Mount Rainier by Meyer Straus (1831-1905), a theater scene painter who turned to easel painting and made sketching trips to Yosemite, Marin County, the Monterey Peninsula and Oregon.

Roxanne relishes the fact that her work has brought her into contact with and has resulted in relationships with some of the great painters of the American West. “It’s thrilling to watch their careers grow and to share in them.” Speaking of John Clymer (1907-1989), she recalls, “It was an education just to be around him and listen to him speak. It was a rare opportunity to learn about the American West from him. Similarly, in a contemporary vein, I first met Martin Grelle in the mid-1980’s and admired his early work immediately. It has been my good fortune to associate with him and watch him become one of the leading Western artists of today.”

She continues, “It’s special not only to sell and to place their work in collections but to collect it as well. I always have a hard time keeping my hand down when I’m bidding at auction for other people. A piece will attract me because it tells a story or sometimes reminds me of a place I’ve been. I also admire the style.”

Bruce refers to the stories but also of the joy of living with the art. “Apart from the paintings in Roxanne’s collection I personally find fascinating the Indian pottery her late husband collected. I keep looking and trying to understand how it was created, who created it and what it represents in Indian culture.”

Roxanne shares in Bruce’s joy. “I always tell people to research and learn as much as they can, to go to museums and galleries. But the bottom line is you should buy what brings joy to you. I can’t imagine not living with art.”

Alderfer Auction Expands its Appraisal Services in the Main Line with the Hire of Allyson Babcock

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Alderfer Auction Expands its Appraisal Services in the Main Line with the Hire of Allyson Constant Babcock

The Pennsylvania based Alderfer Auction today announced the hiring of Allyson Constant Babcock as Appraiser and Sales Associate. Babcock has more than 8 years in the Auction and Appraisal industry.

Babcock will be offering appraisal services to individuals, attorneys, insurance professionals, trust companies, financial planners, museums and historical societies on the Main Line and surrounding areas. Ms. Babcock produces professional appraisals for the purposes of insurance, estate tax, equitable distribution, and personal interest.

“There is an organic demand for appraisal services from attorneys to individuals. Babcock’s product expertise, auction industry experience and appraisal certifications not only satisfy our customer’s expectations, but also the geographical expansion goals of the Company,” states CEO and owner, Sherry Russell.

Allyson Constant Babcock grew up in Orient, NY, the easternmost town of Long Island’s North Fork. It was in this historic small town that her love of history and antiques began. From a young age, Allyson was submersed in the decorative arts world, training her “eye” for fine antiques and art by attending shows and visiting shops and galleries across New England and throughout New York. Her father, Douglas Constant was an antiques dealer, collector and appraiser for over 40 years.  Throughout his career as proprietor of Douglas Constant, Inc., he imparted much of his knowledge to Allyson.  Ms. Babcock’s areas of expertise include American Furniture & Decorative Arts, American Fine Art, and general residential contents.

Allyson Constant Babcock holds a double bachelor degree from Brown University in American Civilization (Material Culture) and Organizational Behavior & Management. She also obtained a certificate in Appraisal Studies by completing the Appraisal Institute of America’s CASP program (Comprehensive Appraisal Studies Program). Ms. Babcock is an associate member of the Appraisers Association of America. She is currently applying to become an accredited member. Her appraisals conform to the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice. USPAP has now become recognized throughout the United States as the generally accepted standard of appraisal practice for all appraisal disciplines.

Prior to venturing into the business of appraising, Ms. Babcock worked for the Alderfer Auction Company in Hatfield, Pennsylvania. Here, Allyson learned the day-to-day operations of an auction house and became the lead cataloguer for their quarterly fine and decorative arts auctions where she researched and catalogued thousands of items for estate auctions.

Babcock resides on the western mainline in Malvern with her husband and two boys (ages 16 and 13).  They are involved in the community volunteering for the Great Valley School District, Great Valley Crew Club, and Boy Scouts of America, Troop 76.  They enjoy spending summer weekends at their home on the Eastern Shore of Maryland on the Sassafras River. 

Alderfer Auction services Montgomery, Bucks, Berks and Chester counties, as well as the tri-state area. Alderfer Auction provides, Auction, Appraisal, Transitions & Downsizing and Real Estate Services that work with individuals, families, financial advisors, accountants, banks, estate, elder law attorneys and insurance companies. For more information, visit www.alderferauction.com, call 215.393.3000 or visit Alderfer Auction at 501 Fairgrounds Rd., Hatfield, PA.

2019 Spring Season in Review

Early Printed, Medical, Scientific & Travel Books

A Season Of Firsts.

The 2019 spring auction season at Swann Galleries delivered an impressive range of sales, rife with auction premiers and record prices. We started our season off in January with an auction of Fine Illustrated Books & Graphics, which set a record for Sonia Delaunay’s Ses Peintures, Ses Objects, Ses Tissues Simultanés, Ses Modes, at $13,750. Our March sale of 19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings offered Property from the Ismar Litmann Family Collection of German Expressionism and European Avant-Garde. Later that month our popular African Americana sale boasted the record price for any copy of a Green Book, at $27,500, while our African-American Fine Art sale in April brought 12 record prices for key market players.

Vernacular photography was the clear favorite in our February and April photographs & photobooks auctions with eighteenth- and twentieth-century images of India and South America commanding top prices. To follow that up, in May our Old Master Through Modern Art sale brought our first dedicated selection of Latin American Art, which established a record for any print by Diego Rivera, and our 19th & 20th Century Literature saw appearances by rare James Bond titles. Finally, we held our first ever Pride Sale in June, which delivered the top price for a photograph by Peter Hujar, at $106,250. 

Here’s a look at some of our favorite highlights from the season, and a few records:

American Art

Abstract rendering of people walking in a city by Attilio Salemme.
Attilio Salemme, Rivalry, oil on canvas, 1945. Sold June 13 for $21,250, a record for the artist.
A watercolor scene of cowbys roping and lassoing horses.
Victor Pierson, group of 10 Mexican cowboy and horse riding scenes, watercolors, circa 1870. Sold June 13 for $7,500, a record for the artist.

African-American Fine Art

A painting on fabric of a young African American couple dancing by Emma Amos.
Emma Amos, Let Me off Uptown, oil & photo transfer on canvas with metallic paint, glitter, collage and African fabric boarders, 1999-2000. Sold on April 4 for $125,000, a record for the artist.
A painting of a man looking out onto a desert landscape by Kermit Oliver.
Kermit Oliver, Dusk, acrylic on board, 1972. Sold on April 4 for $112,000, a record for the artist.
A sculpture by Sonya Clark with rows of purple, yellow and red string that forms a full picture of squares.
Sonya Clark, Albers #1, cotton thread & combs, 2013. Sold on April 4 for $9,100, an auction debut for the artist.

Autographs

An autograph letter from Mohawk Chief Joseph Brant.
Joseph Brant, Mohawk Chief, ALS, writing with news after pledging support to King George III against the American rebels, 1776. Sold on March 21 for $35,000, a record for a letter from Brant.

Books

Early Printed, Medical, Scientific & Travel Books

Double-page spread in an illuminated prayer book in Latin and French with illustration from the bible.
Illuminated Prayer Book in Latin and French on vellum, with 35 miniatures, France, 1530s-40s. Sold on March 7 for $42,500.
Single page illustration of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza.
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, El Ingenioso Hildalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha … Nueva Edición, first Ibarra edition, Madrid, 1780. Sold on March 7 for $11,875.

Fine Illustrated Books & Graphics

Illustration of four women in four different dress designs from by Sonia Delaunay.
Sonia Delaunay, Ses Peintures, Ses Objets, Ses Tissues Simultanés, Ses Modes, 20 pochoir plates, Paris, 1925. Sold on January 29 for $13,750, a record for the work.

19th & 20th Century Literature

Covers of James Bond novels: The Golden Gun, Thunderball, Goldfinger and Casino Royale by Ian Fleming.
A selection of Ian Fleming first editions offered on May 14.
The Man with the Golden Gun, first edition, first state with the golden gun on the front cover, London, 1965. Sold for $11,050.
Thunderball, first edition, first issue, with dust jacket, presentation copy inscribed by Fleming to friend, C.D. Jackson, who was posthumously revealed to be a CIA agent, London, 1961. Sold for $16,250.
Goldfinger, first edition, inscribed to Sir Henry Cotton, MBE, London, 1959. Sold for $25,000.
Casino Royale, first edition, first impression, in unrestored first state dust jacket, London, 1953. Sold for $18,750.
Gaston Leroux, The Phantom of the Opera, first American edition, first printing, in original dust jacket, New York, 1911. Sold on May 14 for $12,500.

Contemporary Art

Franz Kline black and white print with writing.
Franz Kline, Untitled, aquatint & etching, 1957-60. Sold on May 16 for $27,500, a record for any print by the artist.

Illustration Art

Caricature illustration of Paul Robeson as Othello on Broadway in 1943 by Al Hirschfeld.
Al Hirschfeld, Paul Robeson as Othello, illustration for the 1943 revival, published in The New York Times, August 9, 1942. Sold on June 4 for $68,750.
Illustration of a woman handing laundry on a clothes line by Miriam Troop.
Miriam Troop, Rain on Laundry Day, oil on canvas, cover illustration for The Saturday Evening Post, published June 15, 1940. Sold on June 4 for $40,000, an auction debut for the artist.

Maps & Atlases

Lewis Evans "General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America," 1755.
Lewis Evans, A General Map of the Middle British Colonies, proof copy, annotated, signed & dated by Evans, Philadelphia, 1755. Sold on June 6 for $125,000.

Photographs & Photobooks

Image of a young Indian boy and teen sitting on the streets of India in the 1870s.
Album with 105 photographs of street scenes in Bombay, Delhi and Agra, albumen prints, 1870s. Sold on February 21 for $30,000, a record for the album.
Two black and white photos from the 1920s of native Peruvians by Martín Chambi.
Album with 118 photographs, 16 attributed to Martín Chambi, depicting different regions of South America, silver prints, 1920s. Sold on April 18 for $58,750, a record for images by Chambi.
Image of a small Korean child by Dorothea Lange.
Dorothea Lange, Korean Child, silver print, 1958, printed 1960s. Sold on April 18 for $20,000, a record for the image.

Printed & Manuscript African Americana

Cover of "The Negro Travelers' Green Book"
Victor H. Green, The Negro Travelers’ Green Book, 1958. Sold on March 28 for $27,500, a record for any edition of the Green Book.

Printed & Manuscript Americana

Title page of the 1852 Liverpool Book of Mormon.
Joseph Smith, Book of Mormon: An Account Written by the Hand of Mormon, upon Plates taken from the Plates of Nephi, third European edition, Liverpool, 1852. Sold on April 16 for $41,600, a record for any European Book of Mormon.
Two page spread from a manuscript diary with a doodle of a landscape.
William Farrar Smith, manuscript diary of an expedition to blaze a trail from San Antonio to El Paso, February to May 1849. Sold on April 16 for $47,500.

Prints & Drawings

Property from the Ismar Littmann Family Collection of German Expressionism and European Avant-Garde.

A woodcut print of figures on the beach by Max Pechstein.
Max Pechstein, Sommer I, woodcut with hand watercolor, 1912. From the Ismar Littmann Family Collection. Sold on March 5 for $81,250, a record for the work.

Latin American Art

Black and white lithograph print of a soldier and a horse walking by Diego Rivera.
Diego Rivera, Zapata, lithograph, 1932. Sold on May 2 for $45,000, a record for any print by Rivera.

Vintage Posters

Poster of an illustration of an anthropomorphic can of motor oil made to look like a man wearing a driving hat.
Charles Loupot, Wanneroil / Huile du bon Chauffeur, 1926. Sold on May 23 for $22,500.

The Pride Sale

Black and white portrait photograph of David Wojnarowicz by Peter Hujar.
Peter Hujar, David Wohnarowicz: Manhattan-Night (III), silver print, 1985. Sold on June 20 for $106,250, a record for the artist.
A letter written and signed by Harvey Milk on "Office of the Mayor of San Francisco" stationary.
Harvey Milk, autograph letter signed, as acting Mayor of San Francisco, March 7, 1978. Sold on June 20 for $11,250, a record for an autograph by Milk.

The Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates June 21 & 22 Americana & Fine Antiques

The Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates June 21 & 22 Americana & Fine Antiques Auction was a highly successful event and produced robust prices – along with a few surprises – in multiple categories. The two-day format consisted of 1,448 lots of high-quality material, much of which was fresh to the market, and, in a number of cases, had descended directly in the families of the original owners. Bidding was intense throughout each day with thousands of registered bidders from numerous countries participating online in competition with a standing-room-only gallery crowd eager to acquire something rare and desirable.

Session I on Friday was devoted exclusively to the collection of Jack and Tommie Marsh of Columbia, South Carolina. Consisting of over 500 lots of country Americana, ship’s models, folk art, toys, and textiles purchased from East Coast dealers, the Marsh Collection was well received, providing numerous buying opportunities at all price points for seasoned and new collectors. Top lot for the Marsh Collection was a Pennsylvania painted poplar bucket bench in old blue color. An usual form with single off-set drawer, the desirable object soared past its estimate range when two determined bidders chased it all the way to $4,095 (Lot 264 – all prices include 17% buyer’s premium). Other noteworthy results from Session I include a Pennsylvania painted pine Dutch cupboard at $3,042 (Lot 260); a carved and painted Odd Fellows “Heart-in-Hand” ceremonial staff at $2,691 (Lot 135); and a charming folk art hooked rug, featuring a rabbit and “1915” date, at $2,457 (Lot 466). 

Session II on Saturday consisted of the firm’s usual diverse selection of Americana and fine antiques, highlighted by historic property descended in the Clopper-Hutton family at “The Woodlands” in Montgomery Co., Maryland. The Clopper family material included a diverse range of rare 18th- and 19th-century objects that generated tremendous presale excitement from collectors and institutions eager to acquire fresh material of the highest quality with historical provenance. Several institutional deaccessions were also featured in Session II, including a fine assortment of 18th- and 19th-century English Staffordshire ceramic figures from the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, and select textiles from the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association, Mount Vernon, Virginia. Top lot for Saturday at $87,750 (Lot 1486) was an important Carter family North Carolina inlaid walnut cellaret attributed to Micajah Wilkes, a cabinetmaker from Bertie County connected with the “WH” cabinet shop. A fine example in this well-documented group of bottle cases, the highly-coveted object drew much attention during preview and went to a determined private collector on the phone. Other noteworthy results from the Saturday session include a recently discovered Chickasaw beaded powder horn strap at $17,550 (Lot 1214); a Virginia portrait of Maria Koontz attributed to then-seventeen-year-old John Gadsby Chapman $15,210 (Lot 1286), acquired by the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation for inclusion in that institution’s fine collection of Southern portraiture; a rare Andrew Ellicott 1792 engraved Plan of Washington, D.C. at $12,870 (Lot 1197); and, one of many surprises throughout the day, an 18th-century English Staffordshire Whieldon-type 7 3/4-inch high figure of an owl at $7,020 (Lot 1782). Furniture offerings in Session II also produced strong results overall, demonstrating some signs of vigor in what can be an unpredictable segment of the market. Top performers in this category of the sale were a Stirewalt Family, Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, paint-decorated yellow pine diminutive box at $12,870 (Lot 1298); a fine Chandlee family, Winchester, Virginia, carved and figured walnut tall-case clock at $12,870 (Lot 1602); a Wythe Co., Valley of Virginia, paint-decorated poplar blanket chest at $11,070 (Lot 1482); and a Virginia / North Carolina walnut sideboard table at $9,945 (Lot 1487). 

After the sale, company president and auctioneer Jeffrey S. Evans commented, “We were very pleased with the strong interest across the board in this auction. The gallery was packed for Session II on Saturday, resulting in a level of robust, sustained bidding that produced very strong results across all categories of the sale. A key part of that success was the estate-fresh nature of much of the material offered. It was an honor to work with the Clopper family estate and the Chrisman Collection, for instance, and we certainly hope to continue to attract more like consignments as they come to market.” Evans added, “Our multi-session November 2019 Americana Auction will feature several important collections of early American glass, highlighted by an important Pittsburgh cut-glass mantel ornament bearing a sulphide bust of George Washington, an exceptional Stirewalt family paint-decorated chest, and an important collection of American needlework, so we are looking forward to another exciting sale.”

The firm is currently accepting consignments for upcoming auctions. Please email [email protected] for a free evaluation of your property. For complete auction results, a schedule of 2019 sales, or more information, visit www.jeffreysevans.com, email [email protected], or call 540.434.3939.

Strong results at Important Australian art sale

John Mawurndjul (born circa 1952) Rainbow Serpent and Water Lilies, 1997

Important Australian Art

26 Jun 2019

Sydney, Woollahra

John Mawurndjul

(born circa 1952)

Rainbow Serpent and Water Lilies, 1997

Bonhams’ June auction of Important Australian Art in Sydney on 26 June saw strong results for works by internationally renowned artists John Mawurndjul, Paddy Bedford and Ivan Namirrki.

Following his important 2018 retrospective exhibition, demand for Mawurndjul’s work has been high, and his monumental work on paper – Rainbow Serpent and Water Lilies – achieved a record auction price of $34,160 for a work by the artist on paper.

Bedford’s classic 2000 work Garnkoorlbany – Jack Flood significantly exceeded its high estimate of $25,00, achieving $37,820; and Ivan Namirrki’s very fine Lorrkon, saw spirited bidding and sold for $15,860 against an estimate of $3,000-5,000. These results confirm that the market for important, globally recognised artists in this field is vibrant.

A significant number of artefacts including a bardi shield and a fine and early throwing club (both repatriated from the United Kingdom), a large, Holt collection Lake Eyre fighting boomerang, and a fine and early Darling River region club all sold to an Australian public institution. The same institution also acquired a group of finely painted 1960s shells, sawfish bill and canvas by Groote Eylandt artist Nangabarra.

European Furniture Sold to Benefit Museums

BOSTON, MA – Skinner, Inc. will hold an auction on July 13, 2019, of European Furniture & Decorative Arts. With over 500 lots in the sale encompassing fine silver, ceramics as well as furniture and decorative arts there is an item for both discerning collectors and novice buyers. Styles range from classic Georgian silver and early oak furnishings to elegant Belle Epoque tables and mantel clocks. Explore works from the 17th to the 20th century and see how you can mix periods and styles to create individual design-schemes in your own home.

The Furniture of Paul Sormani

Paul Sormani Kingwood- and Mahogany-veneered Ormolu-mounted Dressing Table, France, c. 1900 (Lot 443, Estimate: $500-700)

Regarded as one of the most elite Parisian ébenistes of the 19th century, Sormani was born in 1817 in the Kingdom of Lombardy-Venice. Inspired by the work of the Royal maitres menuisiers et bronziers of the 18th century, he is best known for his pieces in the Louis XV and XVI style of which Skinner offers three examples in the July 13, 2019 auction. Internationally heralded after exhibiting in the exhibitions of the time, his work was described as ‘toute sa production révèle une qualité d’exécution de tout premier ordre’ (‘the whole of his production exhibits craftsmanship of the highest quality’). Upon his death in 1877, the firm came under the direction of Sourmani’s widow, Ursule-Marie-Philippine Bouvaist, and their son, Paul-Charles Sormani and was renamed “Veuve Paul Sormani & Fils.’” The firm merged wtih Thiébaut Frères in 1914, moving to 134, Boulevard Haussmann where it remained until it ceased trading in 1934.

Americans Abroad

Like their British counterparts, New Englanders have long felt the tug of continental Europe. In the 19th century, these ‘Grand Tourists’ would travel throughout Europe often purchasing furniture, paintings, and architectural models. These souvenirs would be shipped back home where they would furnish homes, serving as symbols of their owners worldliness and appreciation for European culture. Years later after being gifted to New England institutions such as the Harvard Art Museum and Clark Art Institute, these pieces are back on the market after a up for sale. Highlights include a Japanned Cabinet on Stand (Lot 375, Estimate: $5,000-10,000) and an Italian Walnut Center Table (Lot 231, Estimate: $1,500-2,500).

Japanned Cabinet on Stand, probably the West Midlands, early 19th century (Lot 375, Estimate: $5,000-10,000)

Other Highlights

Extensive Gorham “Paris” Pattern Sterling Silver Flatware Service, Rhode Island, late 19th century (Lot 77, Estimate: $10,000-20,000)

An extensive Gorham “Paris” Pattern Sterling Silver Flatware Service for 24 with serving pieces (Lot 77, Estimate: $10,000-20,000). 

George III Carved Giltwood Mirror (Lot 485, Estimate: $800-1,200).

A selection of Wedgwood including Wedgwood & Bentley such as a Pair of Wedgwood & Bentley Porphyry Vases and Covers, England, c. 1775 (Lot 189, Estimate: $4,000-6,000), Provenance: Milestone Collection sold by the Spak Collection of Wedgwood to benefit the Florida International University.

Bronze and Marble Mantel Clock, France, 19th century (Lot 456, Estimate: $2,000-3,000).

Pair of Wedgwood & Bentley Porphyry Vases and Covers, England, c. 1775 (Lot 189, Estimate: $4,000-6,000)

Victorian Sterling Silver Punch Bowl, London, 1891-92, Hunt & Roskell (Lot 21, Estimate: $5,000-10,000).

Wedgwood Solid Black Jasper “Northwood” Copy of the Portland Vase, England, c. 1880 (Lot 351, Estimate: $15,000-25,000).

Pair of Sevres-style Porcelain Bronze-mounted Portrait Vases and Covers (Lot 478, Estimate: $5,000-7,000).

Records & Results: Maps & Atlases, Natural History & Color Plate Books

Lewis Evans Reached $125k in Maps & Atlases

Lewis Evans "General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America," 1755.
Lot 63: Lewis Evans, A General Map of the Middle British Colonies, proof copy, annotated, signed & dated by Evans, Philadelphia, 1755. Sold for $125,000.

Caleb Kiffer:

“There was strong bidding across the board and it’s hard not to be pleased with the general outcome of the sale,” said Kiffer of our June 6 sale of Maps & Atlases, Natural Science & Color Plate Books which saw an 84% sell-through rate. Highlights included rare cartographic publications by Lewis Evans and Petrus Plancius, as well as color plate books by John Fisk Allen and Willian Sharp.

Lewis Evans & American Cartography

The star of the auction was the May 2, 1755 draft of A General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America by Lewis Evans. The early proof of the historic map that which documented the Colonies into Ohio for the first time sold for $125,000. “Having the opportunity to bring the Lewis Evans 1755 pre-production proof copy to auction has been a highlight of my many years in this business.  It jump-started my heart the moment the consignor presented it to me and continued beating at a fast pace up until the moment it hammered. I’m calling the map an artifact, which it truly is, and having it double the estimate demonstrates its historical significance. I’m very pleased with the outcome and honored to have brought it out into the public realm here at Swann Galleries,” Kiffer said of the offering.  

Plan for the town of Baltimore by A.P. Folie from 1792.
Lot 69: A.P. Folie, Plan of the Town of Baltimore and its Environs, Philadelphia, 1792. Sold for $21,250.

A 1792 Plan of the Town of Baltimore and its Environs by Antoinne Pierre Folie ($21,250) and John Montresor’s large 1775 map of the Hudson River Valley ($8,125) concluded an overall spectacular offering of American cartography.

Decorative Cartography

Pertus Plancius' decorative map of the southern half of Africa from 1592-94.
Lot 179: Petrus Plancius, Delineatio Orarum Manicongi, Angolae, Monotapae, Terrae Natalis, Zofalea, Mozambicae, Abyssinorum, Amsterdam, 1592-94. Sold for $87,500.

Decorative cartography of note included Petrus Plancius’ 1592-94 map of Southern Africa, which featured fanciful beasts, sea monsters and a scene of giant lobsters devouring a ship ($87,500). Two works by Pieter Verbiest found success: a double-hemispheric world map from 1636 reached $25,000, as well as a 1639 representation of Spain and Portugal sold for $8,450.

Natural History & Color Plate Books

A chromolithograph image of the Great Water Lily of America by John Fisk Allen and William Sharp.
Lot 277: John Fisk Allen & William Sharp, Victoria Regia, six chromolithograph plates, Boston, 1854. Sold for $30,000.

John Fisk Allen and William Sharp’s Victoria Regia, 1854, which consisted of six chromolithographed plates of the life phases of the Great Water Lily of America, lead the selection of natural history and color plate books at $30,000. Further highlights featured George Catlin’s North American Indian Portfolio, 1844, 25 tinted lithographed plates depicting Catlin’s travels of the Great Plains in the 1830s ($27,500), and a complete run of William Curtis’ The Botanical Magazine, 1787-1827 ($7,800).

A broadside with an elaborate drawing of a clock with a map in the center by John Carte.
Lot 35: John Carte, The Frontispiece of the Cosmographical Clock Representing the Phoenomena on Thursday December 14, 1699, broadside, London, circa 1699. Sold for $15,000.

Additional material of note included John Carte’s Frontispiece of the Cosmographical Clock, the only known example representing the events of December 3, 1699, which was won for $15,000.

Modern and contemporary art with lots of graphic elements at Jeschke van Vliet in Berlin

Illuminated mysticism

Two pointed light red triangles mysteriously break their way in the deep dark blue. It is as if the glimmer of a new day is trying to drive away the night. In 1967 Lothar Quinte created his square canvas “Corona in Dark Blue”, relying on the independence of color. He himself saw the picture as a complex optical event, reduced to the essentials. “I have always sought calm in movement, the implosion of color instead of explosion, an image state – aliterary, acompositional – an invitation to sensual gaze”, he said in an interview in 1997 and was therefore a sought-after artist, especially for them Design of church windows that become a visible expression of transcendence into another world.

Lothar Quinte’s mystical “Corona in Dark Blue” is now available at the Berlin auction house Jeschke van Vliet. The serigraph in colors, published six times by Edition Rottloff in Karlsruhe, requires 4,000 euros. Quinte also has three fan pictures in blue, yellow-green and gray from 1969 for 3,000 euros each. Quinte had its origins in the informal painting of the early post-war years. The catalog, with a good 500 items, lists, for example, Fred Thieler’s spotty, gray-black mixed media from 1959 for 4,500 euros, Karl Otto Götz ‘s violet color swings on the lithograph “Somma” from 1996 for 700 euros, and Jean Fautriers untitled three-layer aquatint etching from 1962 for 300 euros. Fritz Jarchov developed his painting in the 1960s as a combination of geometric and biomorphic forms , for which the catalog lists two characteristic, untitled oil paintings for 1,500 euros each.

ZERO-Kunst contributed Günther Uecker with the embossing of a nail spiral from 1972 (estimate 3,600 EUR) or Otto Piene with the serigraphy of a white, tapering circle of light on a black background from 1970 (estimate 700 EUR). Walter Leblanchas also painterly processed his three-dimensional relief-like twists and sprayed a serial arrangement of circular segments in silver and gray onto the canvas with gouache (estimate 2,000 EUR). The selection for the portfolio for the Cologne Art Market in 1968, with graphic works by 21 artists, including Lothar Quinte, Ludwig Wilding , Richard Anuszkiewicz , Rupprecht Geiger , Jesús Rafael Soto , Piero Dorazio and Georg Karl Pfahler , also relied almost entirely on abstract positions . Figurative artists like Gerhard Richter or Otmar Alt had to fight against this overwhelming powerenforce vigorously (estimate 8,000 EUR).

On the other side is Pop Art, represented in the auction mainly by Andy Warhol . The early ink watercolor of a rose blossom from the 1950s is available for 10,000 euros or the well-known “Dollar Sign” from 1982 as a unique serigraph in mud green and black in a different format to the regular edition for 22,000 euros. Alex Katz joins in with his gray lithograph “Striped Jacket” from 1981 with melancholy-looking Ada (estimate 8,000 EUR), Robert Indiana with his typical “Love Wall” made of four square serigraphs in green, red and blue from 1967 (estimate 2,000 EUR) and Ford Beckmanwith the print “Neon Clown XII” from 1994 (estimate 1,500 EUR). Gottfried Helnwein’s blue-tinted serigraph with the somewhat unredeemed and sullen-looking Andy Warhol from 1990 (estimate 1,200 EUR) stands for hyperrealism .

In 2008 , Peter Fischli and David Weiss humorously elevated the banality of everyday life to an art form on their photographic color offset triptych “Airport Paris” (estimate EUR 700). For Angela Hampel it had to be Samuel Beckett’s story “The Outcast” that inspired her to create an artist’s book with six double-page collage paintings and the handwritten text (estimate EUR 3,500). Markus LüpertzIn 2014, struggled with the shape of a lion and formed it into an elongated, slender bronze with a large head and pink paint (estimate 13,000 EUR). In 1998, Christof Kohlhöfer ironically looked for the “genius” using a mixed technique and found it in two cups on a black and white diamond pattern (estimate EUR 2,000).

Modern art has a nice selection, especially of graphic works. Franz von Stuck’s etching “Lucifer” with dead eyes from 1890/91 (estimate 800 EUR) and Frits Thaulow’s blurred color aquatint etching of six swans on a wide lake (estimate 1,200 EUR) have a symbolist touch . Carl Thiemann follows him1907 with the more extensive woodcut of a single swan. Miklós Santhó’s watercolored ink drawing of young women dancing and making music in an ancient landscape is also committed to Art Nouveau (estimate 300 EUR each). The French Marie Baudet pursued a realistic approach in her bundle of 40 drawings with beggars and poor old people. The partly washed, partly water-colored ink brush sheets “Avec les Gueux” from 1909/10, bound in a half leather binding, are expected to bring in 10,000 euros. It becomes expressionistic with the black and white angular woodcut “Landscape in the Moonlight” by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff from 1927 (estimate 4,000 EUR).

In terms of painting, Expressionism has, for example, Ludwig Meidner’s typical motif of a lonely prophet in a desert landscape as a leading and suffering figure under a heavy cloud. The oil painting from 1933 is estimated at 10,000 euros. Albert Mueller, born in 1884, is well present with drawings, pastels and paintings . Its rounded hilly landscape with a Jesus figure, two nudes and three disciples from the 1910s is religiously inspired (estimate 2,500 EUR). Alexandra Povorina s glowing color “Rote Felder” from 1926, on the other hand, manages entirely without people (estimate EUR 3,500). New objective tendencies take hold of Franz Lenk in his quiet, watercolor arable landscape with forest hill from 1963 (estimate 900 EUR) andRichard Müller in the chalk drawing of a headless standing female nude from 1929 (estimate 700 EUR).

Otto Coenen , a member of the socially critical artist group “Kölner Progressive”, reduced his style to a simple, geometrically oriented sign language. Four linocuts with ears of wheat, a nude or soccer players from the 1920s / 30s make this clear at estimates between 300 and 450 euros. After the Second World War he was a little more flexible in the watercolors of the Bonn Minster (estimate EUR 500) or two nudes (estimate EUR 1,100). Then it goes to France with Marc Chagall’s dreamy lithograph “Couple à l’oiseau” from 1959 (estimate 6,000 EUR) or Pablo Picassos anti-war paper “La Guerre” with a funny tank with human facial features (estimate 3,000 EUR).

The auction starts on June 21 at 3 p.m. Visits are possible daily from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. until June 20th. The internet catalog lists the objects at www.jvv-berlin.de.

Contact:

Jeschke van Vliet Auctions GmbH

Lehrter Strasse 57

DE-10557 Berlin

Fax: +49 (030) 22 66 77 01 99

Phone: +49 (030) 22 66 77 00

Email: [email protected]