Pook & Pook’s Variety sale – recommended for the well-dressed home

Victorian gilt over-mantel mirror, 59 1/2 inches by 59 inches. Estimate $800-$1,200. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com and Pook & Pook.

Victorian gilt over-mantel mirror, 59 1/2 inches by 59 inches. Estimate $800-$1,200. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com and Pook & Pook.
Victorian gilt over-mantel mirror, 59 1/2 inches by 59 inches. Estimate $800-$1,200. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com and Pook & Pook.
DOWNINGTOWN, Pa. – Although Pook & Pook is widely known for having handled some of the finest collections of Americana and folk art ever to cross the auction block, some collectors still say it’s the company’s Variety sales they enjoy most. Within these wonderfully varied offerings – the next event is coming up on Friday, May 22 – you’ll find American and Continental country and formal furniture, paintings and drawings by listed artists, and every type of decorative accessory imaginable. Internet live bidding in Pook & Pook’s sales is provided by LiveAuctioneers.com.

The May 22 auction will feature more than 800 lots, including a sizable selection of American and European furniture. A Federal-style secretary, table and sideboard are entered with a $2,000-$3,000 estimate, while a set of 8 early-20th-century Federal-style mahogany dining chairs represents stylish yet affordable seating with its estimated group price of $500-$1,000.
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Brunk’s sale of Griffin Collection puts spotlight on Georgia antiques

Meaders family corner cupboard. Image courtesy Brunk Auctions.

Meaders family corner cupboard. Image courtesy Brunk Auctions.
Meaders family corner cupboard. Image courtesy Brunk Auctions.
ASHEVILLE, N.C. – The marriage of Florence Phillips and Bill Griffin “was built on kindred interests in nature and relics from the past” – expressive words from Florence Griffin’s 2008 obituary. The Griffins were devoted to each other and to the history of Georgia, their native state. Between 1945 and the 1980s this remarkable couple accumulated an exceptional collection of Southern furniture, silver, pottery, books, watercolors and prints. The sale of one of the finest collections ever offered by Brunk Auctions will be conducted on May 30, with Internet live bidding provided by LiveAuctioneers.com.

The Griffins “traveled the state tirelessly and enjoyed becoming friends with farmers, potters, dealers and pickers, looking for the often neglected artifacts of early Georgia and the South,” wrote William Griffin, Jr. in the frontispiece for the 185-page catalog. His father, William “Bill” Griffin Sr., who died in 2002, took meticulous notes on the family history of most everything they found.
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Ohio museum asks for help in identifying mystery portraits

Philena Clark, circa-1844 oil-on-canvas American portrait by unknown artist. Courtesy Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio: Museum Purchase, Howald Fund.

Philena Clark, circa-1844 oil-on-canvas American portrait by unknown artist. Courtesy Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio: Museum Purchase, Howald Fund.
Philena Clark, circa-1844 oil-on-canvas American portrait by unknown artist. Courtesy Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio: Museum Purchase, Howald Fund.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) – Just off the main lobby of the Columbus Museum of Art hangs a double mystery – part whodunit, part whatever-happened-to.

The clues are few: four portraits of individual members of a Morrow County family painted in 1844, sold to the museum by an antiques dealer in 1942 and put away and left untouched for 65 years.

“Meet the Clarks” is a display that asks the public for a hand.

The museum wants help in learning more about the poker-faced subjects and their descendants as well as the unidentified artist who probably ventured by buggy into rural Ohio to make a buck by appealing to the vanities of the newly rich.
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dmg world media selling North American art, antiques businesses

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – International trade show producer dmg world media has announced the sale of its California Gift Show (CGS) to Merchandise Mart Properties Inc. (MMPI), and its intention to divest itself of various North American art and antiques-related companies currently in its ownership. Concurrently, dmg has announced the retirement of its chief operating officer, Michael Franks.

At the moment dmg is considering offers to sell its Knightstown, Indiana-based publishing operation, which produces Antique Week, Auction Exchange, and Farm World; plus the Naples, Florida-based Original Miami Beach Antique Show and its associated  fairs in Las Vegas, New York and Washington, in separate transactions. The company expects to announce the completion of these sales by this summer.
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London Eye: May 2009

Oliver Barratt, '40 Ways In, 2009,' on display at Woburn Abbey, Bedfordshire, until July 31. Image Auction Central News.

Specialist art theft detectives reported this week that a 2-ton Henry Moore bronze Reclining Figure worth £3 million, stolen in December 2005 from the Henry Moore Foundation, was likely melted down at an Essex scrap merchants and the metal sold for a mere £1,500. The theft prompted a tightening of security at the Henry Moore Foundation’s 72-acre estate in Hertfordshire where numerous examples of Moore’s work remain on open air display.

A few months after the Moore theft a three-figure bronze work entitled The Watchers by Lynn Chadwick, valued at around £600,000, was stolen from the grounds of Roehampton University in south-west London. Such high-profile cases focused attention on the risks of displaying sculpture outdoors, forcing many public and private collectors to review their security arrangements.

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Fargo museum seeks flood photos

This photograph documents another natural disaster that hit Fargo, N.D. - the devastating tornado of June 20, 1957. In this picture, the tornado is headed toward Hector International Airport. Photo by Dr. T. Theodore Fujita.
This photograph documents another natural disaster that hit Fargo, N.D. - the devastating tornado of June 20, 1957. In this picture, the tornado is headed toward Hector International Airport. Photo by Dr. T. Theodore Fujita.
This photograph documents another natural disaster that hit Fargo, N.D. – the devastating tornado of June 20, 1957. In this picture, the tornado is headed toward Hector International Airport. Photo by Dr. T. Theodore Fujita.

FARGO, N.D. (AP) – The Plains Art Museum in Fargo is seeking photos for an exhibit about the spring floods in eastern North Dakota and western Minnesota.

The museum plans to open the exhibit Monday and continually add to it until it ends Aug. 30.

The exhibit will include a guest book in which visitors can write about their flood experiences.

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

AP-WS-05-16-09 1328EDT

Hundreds of candy containers to sell at Old Barn Auction May 30; Sweet!

Otto Messmer's comic character Felix the Cat will be one of the stars at Old Barn Auction's candy container auction. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
Otto Messmer's comic character Felix the Cat will be one of the stars at Old Barn Auction's candy container auction. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
Otto Messmer’s comic character Felix the Cat will be one of the stars at Old Barn Auction’s candy container auction. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.

FINDLAY, Ohio – A scarce Felix the Cat glass candy container is sharing top billing as Old Barn Auction prepares to sell more than 700 lots of antique candy containers on Saturday, May 30. The auction house has become the leader in selling these novelty items, which were produced from the 1870s through the first half of the 20th century. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding.

The star of comic strips and cartoons during the 1920s, Felix stands on a clear glass pedestal with the tin lid as its base. The famous feline, which has 90 percent of its paint and the original lid, is expected to sell for more than $1,000, said Jan Sorgenfrei, owner of Old Barn Auction.

Sorgenfrei said that a rare whip candy container may sell for between $2,000 and $3,000. The handle of the whip is the glass candy container, while the fiber whip extends from the lid about 36 inches. This lot includes an extra glass handle.

Included will be three lots of Flossie Fisher tin lithograph furniture candy containers: a china cabinet and two chairs. Old Barn Auction has sold numerous Flossie Fisher pieces in recent years, but always at strong prices, said Sorgenfrei.

Holiday collectors will find numerous lots of Halloween and Easter candy containers available for bid. “There’s a lot of crossover interest in these pieces,” said Sorgenfrei.

Members of the Candy Container Collectors of America will gather that weekend for a meeting in Findlay and will be in attendance at the auction.

Previews will be held daily at Old Barn Auction, 10040 U.S. Route 224 on the west side of Findlay. A pizza party will be held at the auction house the evening before the auction. For information call 419-422-8531.  

View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.

View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet as the sale is taking place by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.

 

Click here to view Old Barn Auction’s complete catalog.


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


The fiber whip extends about 3 feet from the glass handle of this rare candy container. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
The fiber whip extends about 3 feet from the glass handle of this rare candy container. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
Though the wings, landing gear and flag have been replaced, this Liberty airplane with original candy is a desirable container. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
Though the wings, landing gear and flag have been replaced, this Liberty airplane with original candy is a desirable container. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
Collectors call this scarce candy container Rabbit Pushing Chick in Shell Cart. The paint is original. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
Collectors call this scarce candy container Rabbit Pushing Chick in Shell Cart. The paint is original. Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
One of two Crowing Roosters in the sale, this one retains 95 percent of its original paint.<br />Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.
One of two Crowing Roosters in the sale, this one retains 95 percent of its original paint.<br />Image courtesy Old Barn Auction.

Relics found on New Orleans plantation site date to 1700s

New Orleans' historic Garden District abounds with beautiful architecture and historic residences like this one, the Buckner Mansion on Jackson Street. Image by Infrogmation, sourced through Wikimedia Commons.
New Orleans' historic Garden District abounds with beautiful architecture and historic residences like this one, the Buckner Mansion on Jackson Street. Image by Infrogmation, sourced through Wikimedia Commons.
New Orleans’ historic Garden District abounds with beautiful architecture and historic residences like this one, the Buckner Mansion on Jackson Street. Image by Infrogmation, sourced through Wikimedia Commons.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – A hole nearly 5 feet deep behind a restaurant in the Lower Garden District is the latest sign of owner David Baird’s continuing efforts to learn the history of the building he bought in 2003.

In 2004, the architectural historian of the New Orleans Historic District Landmarks Commission concluded that the building – two Creole cottages under one massive hip roof – was probably built in 1810-13. That would make it the oldest known structure on the upriver side of Canal Street, Eleanor Burke wrote.

Baird said his own research indicates that it could date back to just before the Jesuit order was expelled from the colony of Louisiana in 1763-64, and all of their lands and possession sold at public auction.

He cites the wooden pegs holding together the roof trusses and other fairly primitive construction as evidence that it dates back to colonial days.

He contacted state historic preservation officials, who put him in touch with Andrea White, director of the Greater New Orleans Archaeology Program at the University of New Orleans.

White, who has been working as an urban archaeologist for 15 years and has taken part in digs at more than a dozen other sites in New Orleans, excavated the pit in Baird’s rear yard.

As she wrapped up her work earlier this month, she pointed out the series of unusually intact strata she and her crew found as they dug down, including a layer of bricks from what was probably a mid-19th century outbuilding.

Below that they found a midden, or layer of trash such as broken ceramics, charcoal, animal bones and bone buttons, that White said could have been deposited anywhere from the late 1700s to 1850. One tantalizing find was a piece of a smoking pipe whose style suggests it could have been made anywhere from 1720 to 1820.

Finally, the diggers uncovered bands of alternating silt and clay showing how the site – which was under the Mississippi River until sometime in the mid-1700s, when the river’s course shifted – was repeatedly flooded as the river overflowed its banks.

White will do further study of the objects she found before reaching any final conclusions.

But Baird said that. in his view, the dig “is confirming a lot of things we had suspected, particularly that there was some sort of habitation here before 1800.”

When he bought the rundown building, he said, he had no knowledge of its history.

Now, the more he learns about it, the more convinced he becomes that it is a significant historical treasure.

He muses over the possibility of turning it into a museum.

“It’s bigger than me,” he said. “Bigger than the restaurant.”

His most immediate problem, however, is that since 2002, Religious Street has been a designated truck route, traveled by hundreds of heavy trucks bound for the Uptown wharves of the Port of New Orleans.

The trucks’ vibrations, he said, “are ripping this building apart.”
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Information from: The Times-Picayune, http://www.nola.com

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

AP-WS-05-16-09 0015EDT

Winchester rifle 1 of 1,000 auctioned for $93,000

GREAT FALLS, Mont. (AP) – A Belgrade couple sold a rare Winchester rifle for $93,000 at auction.

Walt and Pat Woodland sold the Winchester Model 1873 One of One Thousand to a Seattle-area collector during an online auction conducted by Shobe Auction & Realty on May 9.

Winchester records show the historic firearm was made in 1877 and shipped from the Winchester factory a year later.

The One of One Thousand rifles were fitted with barrels proven to shoot more accurately than standard barrels. The company intended to make 1,000 of the rifles, but records show that only about 133 were completed.
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Information from: Great Falls Tribune,
 http://www.greatfallstribune.com

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

AP-WS-05-15-09 1349EDT

Kovels – Antiques & Collecting: Week of May 18, 2009

This Delphite kitchen set was made to keep on the kitchen stove. The large drippings jar held grease. The set was offered online at DepressionKitchenGlass.com for $245.
This Delphite kitchen set was made to keep on the kitchen stove. The large drippings jar held grease. The set was offered online at DepressionKitchenGlass.com for $245.
This Delphite kitchen set was made to keep on the kitchen stove. The large drippings jar held grease. The set was offered online at DepressionKitchenGlass.com for $245.

Next time you go to a house or garage sale, be sure to look for glass kitchen utensils and containers from the 1930s to the 1960s. Range sets (salt and pepper shakers and jars for drippings or grease), reamers, rolling pins, measuring cups, pitchers, mixing bowls, refrigerator containers, syrup pitchers, water bottles and ladles made of glass, pottery or even plastic are likely to turn up. All are collected, but glass pieces are especially popular. Jeanette Glass Co. of Jeanette, Pa., made Jennyware, a blue or green ribbed glass. The company also made Depression glass tableware in popular patterns, including Iris and Cherry Blossom, and kitchenware in Delphite, Jadite, shell pink and other colors. Delphite, a light-blue glassware, is a collector favorite. A Delphite range set was offered recently at DepressionKitchenGlass.com for $245. Continue reading