Auction Talk Germany: April 2009

Water has an undeniable allure. We gravitate toward the tranquil lapping of rivers, lakes and oceans as an escape from our landlocked lives. We imagine strolling the beach footage of our waterfront home or retiring to a tiny cottage by the sea.

But what would it be like to live directly on the water? And not just in a seasonal yacht or houseboat, but in a spacious, sleekly designed, year-round home?

“Since I was a kid, I always dreamed of living on the water, designing a house that would sit directly on the water,” German architect Martin André Förster told Auction Central News.

At the beginning of the 1990s, Förster’s design for a floating events platform was built. He toyed with the idea of placing a house on such a platform, further developing this concept until 2001, when he designed the first “Floating Home.”

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Terry Kovel cast in new role as TV auctioneer

Terry Kovel will be the antiques and collectibles auctioneer for WVIZ's annual fund-raiser. Image courtesy Kovels.
Terry Kovel will be the antiques and collectibles auctioneer for WVIZ's annual fund-raiser. Image courtesy Kovels.
Terry Kovel will be the antiques and collectibles auctioneer for WVIZ’s annual fund-raiser. Image courtesy Kovels.

CLEVELAND – Antiques and collectibles expert Terry Kovel, whose popular Kovels – Antiques and Collecting column is a regular feature on Auction Central News, will be the guest auctioneer for WVIZ’s annual fund-raising auction April 23-23. For the first time the auction will be streaming live online to Kovels.com, the popular Web site for collectors. To watch the auction live and to bid online visit Kovels.com and link to the WVIZ website. Kovel is a longtime supporter of WVIZ, Cleveland’s Public TV station.

More than 4,000 items donated by listeners and businesses will be sold on air to the highest bidder – no reserves. Viewers are invited to call the station with bids or to bid online. The bidding phone number will be shown on the screen. So far, donations include a pair of 1950s Baker Furniture end tables, a satsuma bowl, a Meeks Victorian chair, a Jenny Lind bed, a French provincial 1960s dining room set, Meissen figurines, an early pair of Sheffield candelabra, a Lenci doll, Tootsietoy dollhouse furniture in the original box, paintings, comic books and baseball cards. More items are arriving every day.

Kovel will be auctioning antiques every evening, from Thursday, April 23, through Sunday, April 26. The auction starts at 3 p.m. Thursday and Friday, and at noon Saturday and Sunday. Watch it all or just the antiques, art and collectibles segments. There are always bargains and great surprises.

Viewers can preview auction items or register to bid online now. Go to the WVIZ Web site, WVIZ.org, or call the auction office at 216-916-6154. Donations will be accepted until April 23. When a donated item is auctioned, the donor’s name will be read on the live TV auction.

Terry Kovel, with her husband, Ralph, has written more than 98 books about collecting, including the best-selling annual price book, Kovels’ Antiques and Collectibles Price Guide. Terry publishes a subscription newsletter and writes a syndicated newspaper column that appears in more than 150 newspapers and digital publications. She and Ralph starred in the weekly HGTV program, Flea Market Finds with the Kovels. The Kovels website, Kovels.com, offers 700,000 free prices and other information for collectors, including books, special reports, a weekly e-mailed letter to collectors, and an archive of other informative material. Since Ralph’s death in 2008, the Kovel brand has been continued by Terry Kovel and her daughter, Kim Kovel. This fall they will go on a lecture tour to promote the 2010 edition of Kovels’ Antiques and Collectibles Price Guide.

Familiar tune: Boston library may pare collections

Boston Public Library. Daniel Schwen Image, used under Creative Commons Attribution Sharealike 2.5, via Wikipedia.
Boston Public Library. Daniel Schwen Image, used under Creative Commons Attribution Sharealike 2.5, via Wikipedia.
Boston Public Library. Daniel Schwen Image, used under Creative Commons Attribution Sharealike 2.5, via Wikipedia.

BOSTON (AP) – Boston Public Library officials are thinking of selling or giving away some items from the venerable institution’s extensive collection, but say budget cuts have nothing to do with the decision.

Rather, the library just has no need for them.

The collections committee has discussed parting with a Crehore piano, a series of Audubon prints, and a collection of Tichnor glass printing plates.

Even though the library is cutting $4 million from its $48 million budget, committee chairman Brian Clancy says decision making is not influenced by the economy.

Susan Glover, acting keeper of special collections, tells The Boston Globe the library is thinking of selling the Crehore piano because “we don’t collect musical instruments.” It could fetch $10,000 at auction.

Information from: The Boston Globe, http://www.boston.com/globe

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DNA holds the answer: was Abraham Lincoln dying of cancer?

Abraham Lincoln. Detroit Publishing Co. Collection, Library of Congress.
Abraham Lincoln. Detroit Publishing Co. Collection, Library of Congress.
Abraham Lincoln. Detroit Publishing Co. Collection, Library of Congress.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) – John Sotos has a theory about why Abraham Lincoln was so tall, why he appeared to have lumps on his lips and even why he had gastrointestinal problems.

The 16th president, he contends, had a rare genetic disorder – one that would likely have left him dead of cancer within a year had he not been assassinated. And his bid to prove his theory has posed an ethical and scientific dilemma for a small Philadelphia museum in the year that marks the 200th anniversary of Lincoln’s birth.

Framed behind glass in the Grand Army of the Republic Civil War Museum and Library in northeast Philadelphia is a small piece of bloodstained pillowcase on which the head of the dying president rested after he was shot at Ford’s Theater in Washington 144 years ago.

Sotos, a cardiologist and author, is hoping a DNA test of the strip will reveal whether Lincoln was afflicted with multiple endocrine neoplasia, type 2B. The disorder, which occurs in one in every 600,000 people, would explain Lincoln’s unusual height, his relatively small and asymmetric head and bumps on his lips seen in photos, he said.

The disorder leads to thyroid or adrenal cancer, and Sotos cites Lincoln’s weight loss in office and an appearance of ill health during his final months. He said a finding that Lincoln had the genetic disorder and probably cancer could shed light on his presidency.

“I’m not interested in how Lincoln might have died. I’m interested in how he might have lived,” Sotos said.

Several months ago, Sotos petitioned the museum for permission to test the pillowcase. Gary Grove, a Civil War enthusiast who advised the museum’s board of directors, said the issue has been contentious in several meetings.

“There are strong voices both ways,” Grove said. “It has taken up a good portion of those board meetings.”

Eric Schmincke, president of the museum and its board, said members may decide at a meeting May 5. They must consider not only possible damage to the artifact but also moral issues, he said.

“You have to look at it as questioning someone that more or less can’t defend themselves,” Schmincke said.

Sotos, while declining to discuss the proposed DNA testing, pointed out that Lincoln has no living direct descendants who would be affected. “Every letter he ever wrote has been published, every letter his wife wrote that we can find has been published,” he said.

Schmincke said genetic material goes far beyond writings.

“That’s him – that’s his blood, his brain matter that’s on there,” he said. Schmincke also questioned what a positive result would mean.

“If they find it’s cancer … it’s 140-plus years later,” he said. “Would it have been different? We can only guess or surmise.”

If Lincoln was seriously ill and knew it, Sotos said, that might explain stories of his premonitions about death.

“I don’t think it was mysticism, I think that was him knowing what his body was telling him,” Sotos said. “Then if you’re a historian, I think you have to say … how does that affect how you run the war, your clemency toward soldiers who may have deserted their post, the way you reconcile with the South?”

One problem with his theory, which he acknowledges: People with MEN-2B normally die young, and Lincoln was 56 when he was shot. And the malady is only one of several ascribed to Lincoln; researchers in the 1960s suggested another genetic disorder, Marfan syndrome, to explain his height, and others say his clumsy gait could have been due to spinocerebellar ataxia.

Tests have been done on the remains of presidents to settle controversies, most famously for evidence on whether Thomas Jefferson fathered children of his slave, Sally Hemings, and to rule out arsenic poisoning in the death of Zachary Taylor.

Other museums, however, have declined to do DNA tests on Lincoln artifacts.

Grove points out that while such material could shed light on history or answer claims of descent, it could also lead to commercialization, perhaps through sales of jewelry or other items embedded with famous DNA.

And while it may be hard to say what Lincoln would have wanted, the opinion of his surviving son seems clear. After repeated moves of Lincoln’s remains, as well as an 1876 plot to rob Lincoln’s grave, Robert Lincoln had his father’s remains interred underground in 1901 in a steel cage encased in concrete in Springfield, Ill., where they remain.

“There,” Grove said, “we probably have the closest thing of someone saying, from the family point of view, ‘Hey, let’s not do this.'”
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On the Net:

Grand Army of the Republic Civil War Museum and Library: http://garmuslib.org/

The Physical Lincoln by John Sotos: http://www.physical-lincoln.com/diagnosis.html

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-04-17-09 1700EDT

Letter offers glimpse of entrepreneur Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson. lithographed and published by H. Robinson, N.Y. & Washington, D.C. Library of Congress Collection.
Thomas Jefferson. lithographed and published by H. Robinson, N.Y. & Washington, D.C. Library of Congress Collection.
Thomas Jefferson. lithographed and published by H. Robinson, N.Y. & Washington, D.C. Library of Congress Collection.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) – The University of Virginia recently acquired a letter Thomas Jefferson wrote to a friend in 1795.

In the letter, Jefferson tells Henry Remsen about a business transaction involving his Monticello nail-making enterprise. He ends with a comment about France and peace in Europe.

Jefferson had finished his stint as secretary of state and had yet to be elected president.

Director Mike Plunkett said the university’s special collections library purchased the letter at a February auction for $23,750.

The library has more than 3,600 letters and other items of the nation’s third president. Plunkett said it’s the third-largest collection of Jefferson memorabilia, behind the Library of Congress and the Massachusetts Historical Society.
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Information from: The Daily Progress, http://www.dailyprogress.com.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Iowa debates art collection’s future

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) – The University of Iowa Museum of Art was severely damaged in last summer’s flooding. Apparently, it wasn’t damaged enough.

The museum didn’t qualify for FEMA replacement assistance. Iowa president Sally Mason said that’s disappointing, and is asking donors to come forward to help pay for a new museum.

“We have no solutions at the moment. All options are on the table,” she said.

The building flooded, but was not damaged beyond repair. That’s put university officials in a quandary, as they would prefer the university’s $500 million collection not return to the original site of the museum, given its propensity to flood.

“Clearly the museum is not a place that is safe in the long term for a collection as valuable as the University of Iowa collection,” Mason said.
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Vermont’s Windham Art Gallery to close

BRATTLEBORO, Vt. (AP) – A longtime Brattleboro, Vt., art gallery is closing, another victim of the slow economy.

Members of the nonprofit Windham Art Gallery say they will close at the end of this month.

The gallery opened 20 years ago, when a group of area artists joined to create a public space where they could show their work.

The gallery gets its income from selling art work, from state and federal grants and a fundraising campaign. All were down.

The gallery will close, but organizers tell the Brattleboro Reformer the Windham Art Gallery will continue to operate as a group. Artists hope to organize traveling exhibitions in the future.
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Information from: Brattleboro Reformer

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-04-19-09 1023EDT

Auktionsgespräche: April 2009

Wasser hat eine unbestreitbare Faszination. Wir fühlen uns zum ruhigen Plätschern von Flüssen, Seen und Ozeanen hingezogen als eine Flucht aus unserem, an das Festland gebundene Leben. Wir stellen uns einen Spaziergang am Strand unseres am Wasser gelegenen Grundstückes vor oder den Ruhestand in einem kleinen Häuschen am Meer zu verbringen.

Aber wie würde es sein, direkt auf dem Wasser zu leben? Und das nicht nur saisonal auf einer Yacht oder einem Hausboot sondern das ganze Jahr über in einem geräumigen, gut gestalteten zu Hause?

“Seit ich ein Kind war, habe ich immer davon geträumt, auf dem Wasser zu leben; ein Haus zu entwerfen, welches sich direkt auf dem Wasser befindet.”, erklärt der deutsche Architekt Martin André Förster.

Zu Beginn der 1990er Jahre wurde Försters Entwurf einer schwimmende Plattform für Veranstaltungen gebaut. Er spielte mit der Idee, ein Haus auf eine solche Plattform zu setzen und entwickelte dieses Konzept weiter, bis er im Jahr 2001 das erste “Floating Home” konstruierte. Förster bekam eine Chance, im Jahr 2002 seinen Traum aus Glas und Stahl anlässlich eines Design Wettbewerbes für “schwimmende” Häuser in der Stadt Berlin auf der Spree in Realität zu zeigen. Försters Vision belegte den ersten Platz und machte das Hamburger Architekturbüro von Martin Förster und Karsten Trabitzsch zur ersten Adresse für schwimmende Architektur.

“Wir hatten Nachfragen nach Floating Homes aus der ganzen Welt: London, Singapur, St. Petersburg …” detaillierte Förster.

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