QUASIMODO NOBEL PRIZE MEDAL SOLD FOR 125,000 EUROS

Salvatore Quasimodo’s Nobel Prize Medal has been sold for 125,000 euros (buyer’s fees included) today at Bolaffi Auctions in Turin. The lot, which can not be exported outside the Italian territory, because of a procedure of cultural interest by the Italian Ministry, was purchased by an Italian numismatics dealer from Florence. Part of the proceeds of the sale will be awarded by Bolaffi Auctions to finance a scholarship in Milan for the most deserving student of the high school attended by Quasimodo in Sicily. Filippo Bolaffi, Ceo of Bolaffi Group, states: “Today’s result is quite significant for the Italian market but it could have been much higher without the procedure by the Italian government that cut off all the possible foreign bidders”.

Football Memorabilia Auction: 100% Of Lots Sold, 140.000 Euros Total Revenue


AC Milan’s charter top lot, sold for 93.750 euros to a Milan lawyer Gigi Riva’s shirt goes back home: sold to Cagliari Football Club

100% of lots sold and 140.000 euros (including commissions) is the total result of Aste Bolaffi’s Football Memorabilia auction that took place today in Milan. The top lot of the sale, which featured 19 lots, was AC Milan’s charter that a prominent lawyer from Milan, Giuseppe La Scala, bought from the floor for 93.750 euros. He justified his purchase stating that this was a necessary gesture from the team’s supporters to preserve the club’s memory, given the absence of AC Milan’s representatives at the auction.
The second top lot was the Cagliari n.11 shirt that belonged to Gigi Riva that he wore in 1970, on the day that the team from Sardinia won its historic “scudetto”; the emblematic shirt takes a return trip back home, being purchased by an executive member of the team for 16.250 euros.
Juventus football club’s Number 1 shirt, worn by its goalkeeper Dino Zoff, fetched 6.500 euros and was purchased through the internet Charity platform “Charitystars.com” on behalf of a client.

The “Googly” Eyed Doll Has it for $22,800 at Alderfer Auction Sale

Blog photo googly-2

The “Googly” Eyed Doll Has it for $22,800 at Alderfer Auction Sale
Second Highest Selling Doll Auction in Alderfer Auction History

Emotions ran high on April 3rd, 2019 as the last doll sold for $22,800 at the Alderfer Auction highly anticipated Doll Auction. The buyer raised his bidder number passionately competing against online, phone and live bidders. He waited decades for this German “Googly” Eyed doll to come up for sale. s

This “Googly” Eyed dolled, named Virginia (“Ginny” for short), is an Oscar Hitt German character doll with stunning blue side glance eyes, a closed mouth and brown mohair wig. She was comprised of a bisque head, flange neck and pin joints. Ginny came dressed for the occasion with her five-piece cloth body adorned with antique cotton clothing. Ginny “somehow knew” to be prettily dressed for this special day of new ownership. 

Other items from this sought-after collection from a well-known Lehigh Valley, PA dealer, were a pair of girl and boy Maggie Bessie dolls with a price tag of $13,200. The European dolls took front and center stage leading with lot 3426, a 17” female Van Rozen Doll France Depose, selling for $7,800. Following the trend was the 17” 6EJ, Emile Jumeau, lot 3423, which sold for $5,100. Lot 3409, a 14” 02033 BSW “Wendy” Doll Character sold for $5,400. A Lenci doll with original owner’s Lenci Child’s Dress sold for $3,300 and the unique antique early Steiff blue mohair cat sold for $660. The American Artist, Dorothy Heizer, brought in a winning amount of $3,900 for her 10” “Dorothy Heizer” cloth sculpture doll, lot 3347.

This was not only the 2nd highest selling doll auction in Alderfer Auction history, but also, an auction that satisfied collectors who yearned to complete their collections after years of waiting.  

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.

Originals From May 1968 For Sale At Auction

On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the most influential revolutionary essay of 1968, Balclis is holding an online auction and an exhibition of 50 original posters from May 1968 belonging to that movement, as well as film posters and 20th Century advertising classics.

Originals from May 1968

This selection of protest posters contains a simple but effective graphic design, reflecting the concerns in the streets at that time. They were conceived and printed in the “Atelier populaire” of the École des Beaux-arts in Paris, which was occupied by the students on May 15, 1968. The atelier —a group of “active strike” supporters— was a spontaneous movement not linked to any political party.

During the revolts, more than 600 posters were created —the first print runs were lithographs, which were soon replaced by serigraphs, which allowed more prints to be made— with designs subject to debate and voting. None of them was signed, in the name of teamwork, and they included at most the stamp of the “Atelier populaire”. Most of those posters were glued at the walls in the streets of Paris, and today only a few are preserved.

Atelier populaire

The short history of the “Atelier populaire” ended at the end of June 1968, when the police expelled its occupants. Fortunately, the posters that remained there were saved by the artists Gérard Fromanger and Merri Jolivet, following a warning of an art-loving policeman, according to legend.

Aware of their artistic and historical value, the students donated a complete set of posters to the Musée des Arts et Traditions Populaires. Others are kept in the Bibliothèque Nationale in France or in the Musées royaux des beaux-arts in Belgium. Now, Balclis amazes once again with a unique collection of an essential witness of the events that took place in L’Île-de-France in 1968.

Art Antiques Culture

Art Antiques Culture Week of April 8th
Art Antiques Culture Week of April 8th

What you may have missed but want to know in Art Antiques and Culture.  James Jean’s largest solo exhibition. The five best and five worst airports in the United States. And how ancient symbols are making there way into modern interiors.

TRAVEL CHANNEL
TRAVEL CHANNEL
BBC DESIGN
BBC DESIGN
antiques, Art, Culture, Interiors
antiquesArtCultureInteriors

Great Sales from The Long Island Museum Collection of Miniature Rooms Procured by Alderfer Auction

Georgian parlor 2

Great Sales from The Long Island Museum Collection of Miniature Rooms Procured by Alderfer Auction

Featured in its Collector’s Auction March 21st, 2019, Alderfer Auction procures the Frederick Hick’s Miniature Room Collection from The Long Island Museum.

Built on the success of Alderfer Auction’s sale of the Small Sea Museum collection, representatives from the Long Island Museum contacted Alderfer Auction to help them in the deaccession process for their 15 miniature rooms. “The Long Island Museum is dedicated to inspiring people of all ages with an understanding and enjoyment of American art, history and carriages as expressed through the heritage of Long Island and its diverse communities. In keeping with this, the LIM has decided to sell the collection through Alderfer Auction.”

Representing the Palladian architecture of the first half of the 18th century, The Georgian Parlor Miniature Room Box Scene sold for $4,500.  The Colonial Bedroom Miniature Room with detailed paneled walls, scenic wallpaper, fireplace and period furnishings, sold for $4,200.

An Alderfer Auction buyer and also an International Guild of Miniature Artisans member, stated “this is the finest collection with period detail”. From the period glass in the breakfront furnishings to the grandfather clock’s real, inner clock workings, this collection earned this buyer’s admiration.

The Antique Shop Miniature Room represented a 1930s antique shop filled with Colonial antiques, Staffordshire porcelain, hook and oriental rugs, embroidery, artwork and more. It sold for $3,600.  The Georgian Living Room’s carved and molded cornice, ornate carved mantle, and two arched open corner display cupboards sold for $3,000. The 19th century Dining Room showcased Chippendale and Hepplewhite period furniture, Persian rug and a beautiful staircase with newel posts. Details were not lost with this $3,000 price tag. Also selling for the same amount was The Federal Dining Room representing the late 18th century. The double pedestal dining table, shield back chairs and Hepplewhite sideboard finely represented the Federal period furniture.

With online, live and phone bid interest, the miniature rooms were purchased from around the country including Pennsylvania, New Jersey, California, Kentucky, North Carolina and Virginia.

Alderfer Auction has successfully helped with the deaccession process for museums and historical societies all over the country.  Requests for collection evaluations can be sent to Blake MacLean at 267-638-1054 or [email protected]

Alderfer Auction has 50 years’ experience in Auction, Appraisal, Transitions & Downsizing and Real Estate Services. They work with museums, financial advisors, accountants, banks, estate, elder law attorneys, insurance companies, individuals and families. For more information, visit www.alderferauction.com, call 215.393.3000 or visit Alderfer Auction at 501 Fairgrounds Rd., Hatfield, PA.

Bucks County Gets First ‘Art Hotel’

Forty-two pieces by the New York impressionist Albert Van Neese Greene “checked in” to the Centre Bridge hotel and restaurant for an extended stay.

Art checked into Centre Bridge Inn hotel and restaurant this week.

Art hung in the lounge, made a scene at the bar, and framed the day with an evening by the fireplace.

Forty-two pieces by New York impressionist Albert Van Neese Greene are expected to lodge here in Solebury, at Bucks County’s first “art hotel,” through the summer.

Except, this is no vacation. These artworks are working the rooms from noon to 9 p.m., Wednesday to Sunday, as art mixes businesses with pleasure.

In the modern world, art surrounds us, so much so, we often fail to appreciate it, or even leave it stacked in a closet, as Paul Gratz had done with dozens of treasured paintings.

The owner of Gratz Gallery & Conservation Studio in Plumstead has been buying, conserving and selling art for nearly four decades. And, too much beauty can be a problem.

“I have a disease,” he joked. “I sell one painting, and I buy four more.”

This month, many of his works left the racks of a storage warehouse, and made a jaunt up Solebury’s River Road. Floor boards creaked as decorators bustled about the inn built by the British back in 1705.

Sounds of hammer and nails filled the halls, which some say are haunted, as Gratz, assistant Stephanie Lisle, and inn keeper Jerry Horan, picked out the perfect spot for each painting.

Van Nesse’s “Golden Maple,” took a prized position on the main staircase. The landscape of a magnificent old tree with leaves turning autumnal shades red and yellow seemed a perfect match for the natural light streaming down onto walls of wheatfield orange.

Above the fireplace, Van Neese’s “Art of Spring” shows a rural farmhouse flanked by flowering trees; their bright leaves seeming to pop off the canvas.

For a brief while, Van Nesse’s works will hang at the hotel and in the collections of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the National Gallery of Art. There’s no firm date on closing Bucks County’s first “art hotel,” Gratz said.

“The whole idea is to have fun,” he said. “Hopefully, sell a painting and bring people into the inn for dinner.

“I have a lot of paintings in inventory, and we were just looking for a great place to exhibit them,” Gratz continued. “We’ll have an opening with hors d’oeuvres and wine, and bring people into the Centre Bridge. It gives us both exposure.”

Owner Jerry Horan said art lovers are welcome to come view the artwork with no obligation of buying a meal or staying at the hotel.

Van Nesse was known for landscapes and hanging by the Delaware River in Bucks County. Living for a time in Chester County, he also was a member of the Philadelphia Sketch Club, the Society of Independent Artists and the Philadelphia Art Alliance. Other works include the “Old Swede’s Church in Winter,” the “Belgian Market,” and “Autumn on the Canal.”

For information, visit centrebridgeinn.com or gratzgallery.com.

Library | Breaking Ground, Indian Ceramics Triennale

Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran
Library | Breaking Ground, Indian Ceramics Triennale

Big thanks to the Indian Ceramics Triennal for letting Cfile.library publish their very interesting and informative catalog. This catalog is available for free in Cfile’s Online Publications.

Breaking Ground: Indian Ceramics Triennial
Jaipur: The Contemporary Clay Foundation & Jawahar Kala Kendra, 2018
22 Pages

The group exhibition Breaking Ground took place in Jaipur, the capital of India’s Rajasthan state on 31 August- 18 November, 2018. The exhibition was mean to celebrate existing ceramics traditions in India, as well as contemporary influences. The catalog now available in Cfile, highlights some of the artists represented in the show.

Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran

“Ramesh Mario Nithiyendran creates rough-edge vibrant, new age idols that are at once enticing and disquieting. He experiments with form and scale in the context of figurative sculpture to explore the politics of sex, the monument, gender, and religion.”

  • Jessika Edgar, Used and Abused, 2015, 55 x in 23 in x 16 in, Ceramic and glaze, microcrystalline

“Jessika Edgar’s work is an exploration of representation through the idea of formlessness. She is interested in expanding this idea into relationship with socially constructed identity and its value while referencing contemporary popular culture and perception and influences of mass media influences that propagate consumption.”

Decorative arts, paintings, jewelry, Asian antiques, modern design and more will be in Bruneau & Co.’s March 2nd auction

Ladies’ ruby and diamond

The Antique, Fine Art & Jewelry Auction will be held online and in the firm’s gallery located at 63 Fourth Avenue in Cranston, Rhode Island at 12 noon Eastern.This is a catalog of giants. From massive paintings that once hung in French chateaus to expressionist paintings by Nierman to 3-D-shaped canvases by Santlofer, they’re all here, bigger than life.”— Travis LandryCRANSTON, RI, UNITED STATES, February 19, 2019 /EINPresswire.com/ — A vast array of furniture, decorative arts, paintings, jewelry, Asian antiques and modern design – 417 lots in all – will come up for bid at an Antique, Fine Art & Jewelry Auction slated for Saturday, March 2nd, by Bruneau & Co. Auctioneers, online and in the firm’s gallery located at 63 Fourth Avenue in Cranston. The auction has a start time of 12 noon Eastern. A live-only pre-sale auction, with a little over 150 lots and no online bidding, will start at 10 am.


Oil on canvas landscape painting of apple blossom trees by Ben Austrian (Pa./Fla., 1870-1921), a 19 inch by 16 inch (framed) naturalist work, signed and dated 1918 (est. $2,000-$3,000).

“It’s an exciting sale with a wide variety of items going up across the block,” said Bruneau & Co. president and auctioneer Kevin Bruneau. “If you’re an art buff then this is the auction for you. Over a third of the sale consists of paintings, drawings and multiples – that’s 160-plus lots.”

Travis Landry, a Bruneau & Co. specialist and auctioneer, added, “The funniest thing about this auction is it’s the catalog of giants. From massive paintings that once hung in French chateaus to crazy expressionist paintings by Nierman to unusual 3-D-shaped canvases by Santlofer, they’re all here in this auction, bigger than life. If you’re planning on coming, be sure to bring a truck.”


Monumental French impressionist landscapes by Felix Raoul Eteve (1902-1965), titled Matinee d’Automne a Villebo, 73 inches by 60 inches (framed), signed and dated (est. $2,000-$3,000).

The auction will open with 35 lots of sterling silver, gold, gold coins and jewelry, highlighted by a fine 14kt gold, diamond and sapphire necklace (est. $8,000-$12,000); and a tanzanite, diamond and platinum ring boasting a brilliant violet blue oval cut 6.29-carat tanzanite stone within an oval two-tier diamond bezel with diamond set split shoulder platinum band (est. $6,000-$9,000).


Large, abstract expressionist oil on Masonite painting by Leonardo Nierman (Mexican, b. 1932), measuring 48 inches by 72 inches, signed and titled Genesis (est. $3,000-$5,000)

Other star lots of the jewelry category will include a 14kt white gold pink sapphire and diamond ring featuring a 1.67-carat rectangular cushion cut purple-pink sapphire that’s set within a tiered diamond bezel (est. $4,000-$6,000); and a ladies’ ruby and diamond 14kt gold bracelet with 2.35 carats of round-cut diamonds surrounding eight oval-cut natural rubies (est. $3,000-$5,000).


Pair of 19th century Chinese Gu form famille rose avian vases, each 19 ½ inches tall and finely enameled, with opposing cartouche form panels with a bird among flowers (est. $1,500-$2,500).

The more than 150 lots of fine art – including paintings, drawings, watercolors and multiples – will be highlighted by an oil on canvas spring landscape painting of apple blossom trees by Ben Austrian (Pa./Fla., 1870-1921). The 19 inch by 16 inch (framed) naturalist work, signed and dated (1918), depicts a forested path along bountiful apple blossom trees (est. $2,000-$3,000).

Nineteenth Century American artwork is a major point of the catalog, with strong highlights that include an oil on board landscape by Edward Gay (1837-1928), an oil on canvas landscape by Joseph H. Greenwood (1857-1927) and a watercolor seascape by Alfred T. Bircher (1837-1908). 


Ladies’ ruby and diamond 14kt gold bracelet with 2.35 carats of round-cut diamonds surrounding eight oval-cut natural rubies (est. $3,000-$5,000).

European offerings will feature monumental French impressionist landscapes, by Felix Raoul Eteve (1902-1965) and Rene Fath (1850-1922). The work by Eteve, titled Matinee d’Automne a Villebo, depicts the Arcadian architecture of the Valle de Chevreuse in France. Impressive at 73 inches by 60 inches (framed), the signed and dated (1929-30) work should bring $2,000-$3,000.

The catalog will also offer a wide selection of Twentieth Century modern and contemporary artwork, highlighted by a large, abstract expressionist oil on Masonite painting by Leonardo Nierman(Mexican, b. 1932). The composition of vibrant orange, white, blue and black waves of color, 48 inches by 72 inches, is signed and titled Genesis and should gavel for $3,000-$5,000.

Other modern artwork highlights will include a collection of nine paintings by the artist and musician Paul Kostabi (Calif., b. 1962), six works by expressionist Taro Yamamoto (Calif./N.Y., 1919-1994) and a shaped canvas diptych by author and artist Jonathan Santlofer (N.Y., b. 1946).

Other noteworthy artworks will include an oil on canvas rendering of a fashionable Flamenco dancer by Jacob Binder (Mass., 1887-1984), signed and dated (‘1934’) and housed in the original 62 inch by 47 inch period carved gilt wood frame; and an early 19th century primitive folk art portrait painting of twin sisters in matching burgundy dresses, one kneeling and the other seated in a chair holding a book, restored, in a 40 ¾ inch by 33 ½ inch frame (both est. $1,000-$2,000).

The Asian category will be led by a pair of 19th century Chinese Gu form famille rose avian vases, each 19 ½ inches tall and finely enameled, with opposing cartouche form panels with a bird among flowers within a gilt honeycomb pattern over an orange ground (est. $1,500-$2,500).

Lighting lots will feature a Polaroid 114 desk lamp by Walter Dorwin Teague (Am., 1883-1960), with a brown Bakelite shade supported by a machined aluminum shaft on a Bakelite dome base (est. $800-$1,200). The underside of the base of the 13-inch-tall lamp retains its Polaroid label.

Eastwood store a center of arts, crafts and history

David Rudd and Debbie Goldwein
Gary Walts/The Post-StandardDavid Rudd and Debbie Goldwein, owners of Dalton's American Decorative Arts and Antiques, stand in their store, which is in a 1919 building that they restored themselves.
Gary Walts/The Post-Standard David Rudd and Debbie Goldwein, owners of Dalton’s American Decorative Arts and Antiques, stand in their store, which is in a 1919 building that they restored themselves.

Syracuse has an antiques gallery with a national reputation.

It’s Dalton’s American Decorative Arts and Antiques, at 1931 James St. The shop sits on the western fringes of Eastwood. It used to be a neighborhood drug store, Galloway’s.

Dalton’s (that’s owner David Rudd’s middle name) is 30 years old this year.

Dave’s partner in the business is his wife of 31 years, Debbie Goldwein. Debbie retired from a career in social work 20 years ago (the Salvation Army, United Way) to join her husband in a gallery that specializes in the work of Syracusan Gustav Stickley.

“I think we’re one of only five shops in the country that specialize in good, quality pieces,” Dave said the other day as we talked in the shop to a background of jazz music. “We’re pretty unique, at this point. I’ve always wanted the stock to be the best I can have. We buy and sell all over the country, more nationally than locally.”

That’s one of the contradictions in dealing Gustav Stickley, who ran his famous Craftsman Workshops not far away, on Burnet Avenue. The building, without its original second story, is now a plumbing supply store.

The furniture maker and pioneer of the arts and crafts movement in America is less of a hero in his hometown than he is elsewhere in the country. The house where Gus lived at the end of his life, on Columbus Avenue, is vacant and neglected. It’s owned by Stickley Audi Co., the firm that rescued the old Stickley factory in Fayetteville back in 1974.

Gus Stickley died in 1942.

Dave Rudd says he fell in love with Stickley’s work, and American arts and crafts in general, back in 1978. He had attended Syracuse University and Buffalo State College and majored in sculpture and photography. Perhaps he was on his way to a career as a sculptor when he saw his first pieces of arts and crafts furniture. “I saw the furniture as sculpture,” he says. “And I was hooked.”

Debbie, meanwhile, was finishing a degree in social work when she met Dave. “I came to Syracuse from Pennsylvania, but I never went back,” she says.

Debbie went to work dealing with abused children, and Dave scouted for a place to do business. He settled on one-half of a 1919 building in a leafy neighborhood near Eastwood.

The Rudds have a daughter, Kylee, who is a mechanical engineer with an MBA from the Wharton School. Kylee’s scheduled to start a job this fall in the Campbell Soups marketing department.

For years, the store was a pharmacy run by Elbert Galloway. Elbert and his wife lived upstairs. The place also was home to a grocery and barbershop. When Dave moved in, his fellow tenant was a pharmacist, “Ef” Bodow, whose main business was filling prescriptions for nursing homes.

Dave bought the building in 1996, and Debbie eventually joined the business. They restored the building to its original look, including uncovering the tin ceiling. They rent four apartments on the second floor. The store has two bays and the feel of a living room. Dave’s comfortable with a location just out of the city’s business districts. “This is a destination for our customers,” he says.

This weekend, for example, the Rudds are hosting a gathering of 30 visitors involved in the “Farms Afield” program at The Stickley Museum at Craftsman Farms in Parsippany, N.J., for tours of Gustav’s home territory. Dave is on the board of directors of the Farms, a house, which is a museum, on 26 acres. Stickley lived there from 1910 until 1916. It is the only home of his that he designed himself.

Dalton’s inventory includes furniture by Stickley, L&JG Stickley and other furniture makers, as well as lighting, metalwork, pottery, woodblock prints, ceramics, books, paintings, photography and Navajo rugs. Dalton’s also offers restoration and conservation, upholstery, leather, and framing. They sell their own line of reproduced Onondaga Pottery, the “Tudor Rose” pattern.

They have ongoing shows of works by modern artists. The current show is block prints inspired by the Arts and Crafts Movement by Laura Wilder of Rochester. The show ends Aug. 6.

The shop has lots of objects you can touch and pick up.

“I like leaving things out,” Dave says.

He points out a vase on a table with a $20,000 price tag. Dave shows me a $600,000 Stickley masterpiece, a book cabinet. He has two Stickley blanket chests, one the prototype of the other, priced at $90,000 and $29,000. A cooper fireplace hood used to be in Syracuse’s Yates Hotel Tavern Room. He has another Stickley hood, lushly decorated, from the Milner Hotel in St. Louis.

Dave knows a lot more about the American crafts movement than he did more than 30 years ago. He’s a regular columnist for American Bungalow magazine, question-and-answer pieces. He’s president of the Arts and Crafts Society of Central New York. Debbie keeps the books.

The Rudds live in Fayetteville, in a house decorated with movement gems. One of their pieces, a Stickley taboret table, is traveling with a national exhibit, “Gustav Stickley and the American Arts and Crafts Movement.” A blanket chest owned by the Audis also is in the show. Dave says he wanted the exhibit to be staged at the Everson Museum, “but it was too expensive.”

Dave shows me the exhibit catalog, which is a book. “I think I sold 15 percent of the stuff in the show,” he says. His clients include Brad Pitt, Barbra Streisand and Steven Spielberg. He once helped the late car magnate, Walter Chrysler, furnish his home in Norfolk, Va.
Dick Case writes Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. His column will resume Aug. 9.