Ohio museum to show art by Stones’ Ronnie Wood

Ronnie Wood onstage with the Rolling Stones, Candlestick Park, San Francisco, Nov. 21, 2006. Photo by Catharine Anderson, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License.
Ronnie Wood onstage with the Rolling Stones, Candlestick Park, San Francisco, Nov. 21, 2006. Photo by Catharine Anderson, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License.
Ronnie Wood onstage with the Rolling Stones, Candlestick Park, San Francisco, Nov. 21, 2006. Photo by Catharine Anderson, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License.

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) – Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood is coming to the U.S. with a different kind of solo show, spotlighting his paintings and other art.

The Butler Institute of American Art told The Vindicator newspaper that the exhibition opening is the first for Wood at a major American museum.

The 63-year-old British musician plans to be at the Ohio museum for a reception on the show’s opening day, Sept. 21.

Butler chief curator and director Louis Zona describes Wood’s art style as lively and appealing. The museum notes that the rocker picked up a paint brush at the age of 12, before he started playing guitar.

The exhibition includes 30 of Wood’s paintings, 22 pen-and-pencil drawings and seven mixed-media works.

The exhibit runs through Nov. 21.

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Online: http://www.butlerart.com/

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-07-28-10 0939EDT

 

Newly donated FDR papers unveiled at National Archives

FDR “chit” regarding the promotion of Colonel George C. Marshall to Brigadier General, circa 1936. Marshall’s promotion had been encouraged by the hero of World War I, the highly respected Gen. John J. Pershing. Three years later, the President named Marshall to be the Chief of Staff of the Army, and he was one of FDR’s most trusted and indispensable military advisers during World War II. Images accompanying this article are courtesy of The National Archives.

FDR “chit” regarding the promotion of Colonel George C. Marshall to Brigadier General, circa 1936. Marshall’s promotion had been encouraged by the hero of World War I, the highly respected Gen. John J. Pershing. Three years later, the President named Marshall to be the Chief of Staff of the Army, and he was one of FDR’s most trusted and indispensable military advisers during World War II. Images accompanying this article are courtesy of The National Archives.
FDR “chit” regarding the promotion of Colonel George C. Marshall to Brigadier General, circa 1936. Marshall’s promotion had been encouraged by the hero of World War I, the highly respected Gen. John J. Pershing. Three years later, the President named Marshall to be the Chief of Staff of the Army, and he was one of FDR’s most trusted and indispensable military advisers during World War II. Images accompanying this article are courtesy of The National Archives.

WASHINGTON (AP) _ A handwritten letter from fascist Italian dictator Benito Mussolini congratulating President Franklin D. Roosevelt on his inauguration, and a note from a woman who had a brief affair with Roosevelt were shown to the public for the first time Wednesday at the National Archives.

The 5,000 documents and gifts collected by Roosevelt’s secretaries include a note from Lucy Mercer Rutherfurd, who had an affair with Roosevelt that forever changed his marriage to Eleanor Roosevelt when she discovered the infidelity in 1918.

Rutherfurd wrote Roosevelt’s personal secretary, Grace Tully, a week before his death in 1945 to arrange a visit with a portrait painter and photographer. The “Unfinished Portrait” was in progress when he collapsed and died.

The meetings with Rutherfurd were kept secret from Eleanor Roosevelt until after her husband’s death, and the letter is evidence Tully was involved in communications between Rutherfurd and Roosevelt.

The 14 boxes of items had been sealed with duct tape for years, and were considered the last great privately-held collection of papers for Roosevelt’s presidential library in Hyde Park, N.Y.

Anne Roosevelt, the president’s granddaughter, said Tully and another personal secretary, Marguerite “Missy” LeHand, were devoted to Roosevelt.

“Their understanding of what to save and what to collect was important,” she said. “We are grateful to them for being pack rats.”

It took an act of Congress to get the documents to the National Archives, though, after an ownership dispute. The Sun-Times Media Group Inc., formerly Hollinger International Inc., bought the collection in 2001 for $8 million. In 2004, Hollinger put the items for sale at Christie’s auction house, but the National Archives claimed ownership to some of the times, saying they were presidential materials. The company eventually agreed to donate the items in exchange for a tax credit.

A 2009 bankruptcy filing by the Sun-Times Media Group could have scuttled the whole deal, said Roosevelt library director Cynthia Koch. The multimillion dollar collection could have been divided up and sold off.

New York Sen. Charles Schumer and Rep. Louise Slaughter sponsored bills to smooth the way for the donation with a full tax deduction. Schumer said it will ensure the papers are preserved.

“It has a magical feeling to hold a paper that Roosevelt himself had and to put yourself in his place as he made decisions about some of the most vexing problems our country ever faced,” he said.

The donation became official June 30 after President Barack Obama signed the bill into law.

In the past month, archivist Robert Clark has sorted and organized about a third of the collection.

“For the first time, you see the inner workings of FDR’s inner office and how Missy and Grace interacted with the president – but also how they interacted with all those people around Roosevelt,” Clark said.

A month after World War II broke out in Europe, U.S. Ambassador Joseph Kennedy wrote a personal note to LeHand. He described his view of the war, along with some personal reflections.

“It is lonesome as the devil here without the family and at the same time the delivery of mail is very bad, and chances are from now on it is going to be worse,” Kennedy wrote.

The Roosevelt library plans to make the papers available to the public for research by Nov. 15 and will post them all online in January.

Much is still unknown about Roosevelt, so the collection will prove valuable, said U.S. Archivist David Ferriero.

“They help fill gaps in the record of a presidency that changed America,” he said. “Roosevelt did not keep a diary, did not sit for extensive interviews with historians, did not live to write his memoirs, and he never completely confided in anyone, not even his wife.”

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Online: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-07-28-10 1512EDT


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Letter from Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy to FDR’s primary personal secretary Marguerite “Missy” LeHand, Oct, 3, 1939. A month after the outbreak of World War II in Europe, Kennedy wrote this letter to LeHand, who was also a personal friend, describing his views on the war, the social scene in London following the outbreak, and the loneliness of serving abroad without his family. Images accompanying this article are  courtesy of The National Archives.
Letter from Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy to FDR’s primary personal secretary Marguerite “Missy” LeHand, Oct, 3, 1939. A month after the outbreak of World War II in Europe, Kennedy wrote this letter to LeHand, who was also a personal friend, describing his views on the war, the social scene in London following the outbreak, and the loneliness of serving abroad without his family. Images accompanying this article are courtesy of The National Archives.

Virginia shop to display 1909 Honus Wagner baseball card

This example of the extremely rare Honus Wagner baseball card, issued by the American Tobacco Co. around 1909, is held in the permanent collection of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.

This example of the extremely rare Honus Wagner baseball card, issued by the American Tobacco Co. around 1909, is held in the permanent collection of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.
This example of the extremely rare Honus Wagner baseball card, issued by the American Tobacco Co. around 1909, is held in the permanent collection of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.
CHESAPEAKE, Va. (AP) – A Chesapeake coin shop is displaying what experts say is one of the most famous baseball cards in American history, the Honus Wagner T206.

The 1909 card is one of about 100 still in existence and is being displayed at Dominion Coin this week. Shop owner Ray Ciccone is serving as the agent for the card’s owner, a Baltimore convent that was bequeathed the card as part of a collection previously owned by the brother of one of the convent’s nuns.

Ciccone says the card isn’t in the same pristine condition as one that has fetched more than $2 million. He’ll display the card in his shop until he has to deliver it to a Texas auction house early next week. This one is valued at about $150,000.

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Information from: Daily Press, http://www.dailypress.com

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-07-28-10 1140EDT

 

Paintings top draw at Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches, Aug. 9

Harold Newton (1934-1994), considered the original Florida Highwayman, painted ‘Royal Poinciana Along the Indian River’ on Upson Board. The 24-inch by 32-inch work has a $3,000-$5,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.

Harold Newton (1934-1994), considered the original Florida Highwayman, painted ‘Royal Poinciana Along the Indian River’ on Upson Board. The 24-inch by 32-inch work has a $3,000-$5,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.

Harold Newton (1934-1994), considered the original Florida Highwayman, painted ‘Royal Poinciana Along the Indian River’ on Upson Board. The 24-inch by 32-inch work has a $3,000-$5,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Fine art and Asian antiques – including an extensive collection of Rose Medallion – headline the Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches’ sale Monday, Aug. 9. Artwork ranges from Paris School paintings to the best of the Florida Highwaymen. LiveAuctioneers will provide Internet live bidding for the auction, which begins at noon Eastern.

The largest work known to have been painted Jean Jansem (French, born 1920) is titled LeMarey Eurs, which is 55 18 inches by 78 2/3 inches. The original owner purchased the painting from Wally Findlay Galleries in New York in 1969.

“It’s the largest known painting to exist from the artist,” said Leslie Baker, auction gallery manager at Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches. “It was consigned by a renowned collector who does not wish to be identified.”

The Rose Medallion collection consists of nearly 50 lots consigned by a resident of Boynton Beach, Fla.

“The Rose Medallion is second to none. He spent a lifetime putting the collection together. There are tureens, platters, vases and umbrella stands,” said Baker. “The gentleman has been a client of mine since the 1980s and he bought some of these pieces here.”

Nearly a dozen pieces of limited edition Picasso pottery have been consigned from a home in Delray Beach, Fla. Estimates range from $4,000 to $6,000 for each of the nine plates and chargers, $5,000 to $7,000 for a pitcher and $2,000 to $2,500 for a plaque.

A Picasso linocut in black and orange titled Toros Valluaris, signed in the plate 24-6-58, is expected to sell for $10,000-$15,000. The image measures 25 3/8 inches by 20 1/4 inches.

The same collector has also consigned a Marc Chagall lithograph titled Les Maries dan L’Atelier, which depicts an artist painting a newlywed couple in his studio. The signed and numbered lithograph, #621, measures 30 inches by 22 1/2 inches. It carries a $6,000-$8,000 estimate.

The Highwaymen painting in the auction is by Harold Newton, considered the founding member and most prolific of the artist group that painted Florida landscapes and sold them to tourists by the side of the road. Titled Royal Poinciana Along the Indian River, the oil on board painting measures 24 inches by 32 inches and has a $3,000-$5,000 estimate. Newton died in 1994 at age 59 after suffering a stroke.

“It’s a breathtaking painting,” commented Baker, noting it is in its original frame.

Some of the heftiest estimates are assigned to the collection of carved jade items from a North Palm Beach collector. Included are 19th- and 20-century imperial seals, brush washers, plaques and vases. Many of the pieces are highly desirable white jade.

“The pieces were finely chosen and in excellent condition,” said Baker.

Antique furniture, glass and silver will round out the 369-lot auction.

For details contact Baker at 561-805-7115.

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.


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


Jean Jansem’s ‘Le Marey Eurs’ is believed to be the largest work ever painted by the French artist. The oil on canvas measures 55 1/8 inches by 78 3/4 inches. The circa 1964 work has a $20,000-$30,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.
Jean Jansem’s ‘Le Marey Eurs’ is believed to be the largest work ever painted by the French artist. The oil on canvas measures 55 1/8 inches by 78 3/4 inches. The circa 1964 work has a $20,000-$30,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.
One of the most unusual pieces in the Rose Medallion collection is this 19th-century umbrella stand. The fluted cylindrical vessel is painted with alternating figural and floral panels. It has an $800-$1,200 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.
One of the most unusual pieces in the Rose Medallion collection is this 19th-century umbrella stand. The fluted cylindrical vessel is painted with alternating figural and floral panels. It has an $800-$1,200 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.
The large green jade seal of Empress Xiaomu is expected to sell for $30,000-$40,000. Adorned with a pair of dragons, the seal measures 5 1/8 inches by 5 1/8 inches. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.
The large green jade seal of Empress Xiaomu is expected to sell for $30,000-$40,000. Adorned with a pair of dragons, the seal measures 5 1/8 inches by 5 1/8 inches. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.
Eleven pieces of Picasso pottery are offered in the auction including this ‘Yan Soleil’ pitcher. The 10 5/8-inch-tall vessel is numbered 264/300 and bears the Edition Picasso and Madoura Pottery stamp. It has a $5,000-$7,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.
Eleven pieces of Picasso pottery are offered in the auction including this ‘Yan Soleil’ pitcher. The 10 5/8-inch-tall vessel is numbered 264/300 and bears the Edition Picasso and Madoura Pottery stamp. It has a $5,000-$7,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches.

Early Americana came to life at Jeffrey S. Evans’ June 26 auction

Pennsylvania paint-decorated Dutch cupboard, $17,250. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.
Pennsylvania paint-decorated Dutch cupboard, $17,250. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.
Pennsylvania paint-decorated Dutch cupboard, $17,250. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.

MOUNT CRAWFORD, Va. – On Saturday, June 26, 2010 Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates conducted its semiannual catalogued auction of Americana, Fine Antiques & Decorative Arts. Internet live bidding was provided by LiveAuctioneers.com.

The 567-lot auction included material formerly in the collection of Dr. E. R. Eller (curator, Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh, from 1949-1969), deaccessioned material from a Virginia institution, as well as fresh offerings from the Hilda Fried estate of New York City, and  numerous Shenandoah Valley estates and several private Virginia collections.

The sale’s star lot was a two-piece Pennsylvania paint-decorated poplar Dutch cupboard from the Eller collection that retained its original two-tone grain painted surface. In excellent condition with no replacements or major repairs, the cupboard sold to a telephone bidder for $17,250. All prices quoted in this report include a 15% buyer’s premium.

Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates is one of the few auction houses that offer an in-house packing and shipping service, carefully preparing all but excessively large objects for transport across the country and around the world, but the packing crew undoubtedly breathed a collective sigh of relief when a floor bidder won lot 409, a pair of French palace urns marked for manufacturer Samson Porcelain Works. Each Chinese-style covered urn, with extensive chinoiserie polychrome decoration and gilt highlights, measured 19 inches in diameter and 30 inches high.  Despite a rim chip and light hairline to one urn, this monumental pair achieved an astounding $13,800.

Wasting no time in climbing to $10,925 was a circa 1825, signed “Jacob Eby/Manheim” Pennsylvania mahogany and cherry tall-case clock that stood 102 inches high. It had its original weights, pendulum and winding key and was adorned by an American sailing ship on its moon phase dial.

An 89-inch-tall Shenandoah Valley of Virginia Federal inlaid cherry tall-case clock, which was in “very good as-found condition,” brought $7,475; and a 91-inch Pennsylvania Queen Anne walnut tall-case clock sans weights and in unknown working order, realized $5,750.

Two Maryland pieces each achieved $6,900: an oil-on-canvas portrait painting and a cast-iron stove plate. In its original frame, the colorful circa 1840 painting was attributed to John Beale Bordley II, who beautifully captured the innocence of four Burroughs children and a family kitten. According to the provenance note, the portrait had been purchased from a descendant of the Burroughs family of Croom, Maryland (Prince George’s County). The extremely rare Rock Forge Furnace (Washington County, Maryland) stove plate decorated with columned arches, tulips, stars and hearts, was inscribed “D:S Hughes,” “Fornace,” and “1771.”  Recently discovered in Charlottesville, Va., the stove plate was in outstanding condition.

Four folk art watercolors on paper from the Eller consignment resulted in impressive prices. All were colorful, primitive-style depictions of rural life by Hattie Klapp Brunner (1889-1982), an artist commonly referred to as “The Pennsylvania Grandma Moses.”  A winter scene featured a covered bridge in snow, $1,265; while the other three were richly hued autumn views with subjects that included a train traveling through a small town ($1,725), a red covered bridge ($2,875) and a quaint country auction ($3,220). Other notable artwork included an oil on canvas titled Herder with Sheep by William J. Hyett (Pittsburgh, 1876-1952) that was signed by the artist and dated 1910 ($2,415), and an unframed oil on board titled Valley Falls, Alleghany Co., VA on verso and signed “G. Emmolt / 1877” ($1,955).

Two 19th-century silk on linen needlework samplers were excellent buys at $2,070 – one wrought by Mary W. Moon of Albemarle County, Va., (lot 246) and the other by Annie E. Giles who was possibly from Maryland.

A tiny, 3-inch x 2¼-inch brightly colored Pennsylvania watercolor and ink on paper fraktur drawing of a bird perched on a tulip realized $1,380; a tall price for a piece that was about the size of a credit card. While examining the bible of Henry Erb (1808-1885) of Manheim, Pa., that had been consigned for the auction by Erb family descendants, Jeff Evans discovered the circa 1830 unframed watercolor tucked away within the pages; the period pencil inscription on the back explains that it had been received as a nineteenth birthday gift.

Other items of note included an 8½-inch x 6¾-inch Italian micromosaic Grand Tour plaque from the Fried estate ($1,725), a Merrick’s Six Cord oak revolving spool cabinet, patented July 20, 1897 ($1,610), a Swiss Vacheron & Constantin 18K gold case pocket watch in excellent running condition ($1,495), and an 8-gallon, two-handled stoneware jar stamped “W. H. Lehew & Co. / Strasburg, VA – the largest Lehew jar recorded to date ($3,335).

Upcoming 2010 sales at Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates include Antique Sewing (Aug. 28 and Dec. 4), Early American Pattern Glass (Sept. 25 and 26) and Early American Glass and Lighting (Oct. 23). LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding for all of these sales. For additional information, call 540-434-3939 or e-mail info@jeffreysevans.com.

Click here to view the fully illustrated catalog for this sale, complete with prices realized.


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


Pair of large French Chinese-style palace urns, $13,800. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.
Pair of large French Chinese-style palace urns, $13,800. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.

Signed Jacob Eby mahogany and cherry tall-case clock, Pennsylvania, $10,925. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.
Signed Jacob Eby mahogany and cherry tall-case clock, Pennsylvania, $10,925. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.

William J. Hyett oil painting titled Herder with Sheep, $2,415. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.
William J. Hyett oil painting titled Herder with Sheep, $2,415. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.

Family portrait attributed to John Beale Bordley II (Maryland), $6,900. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.
Family portrait attributed to John Beale Bordley II (Maryland), $6,900. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.

Rock Forge Furnace (Washington Co., Maryland) stove plate, $6,900. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.
Rock Forge Furnace (Washington Co., Maryland) stove plate, $6,900. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates.

Clars’ Aug. 7-8 Estate auction spans Rembrandt to rock & roll

Rembrandt van Rijn's (Dutch, 1606-1669) unframed etching titled The Angel Appearing to the Shepherds is estimated at $4,000 to $6,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.
 Rembrandt van Rijn's (Dutch, 1606-1669) unframed etching titled The Angel Appearing to the Shepherds is estimated at $4,000 to $6,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.
Rembrandt van Rijn’s (Dutch, 1606-1669) unframed etching titled The Angel Appearing to the Shepherds is estimated at $4,000 to $6,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.

OAKLAND, Calif. – On Aug. 7-8, 2010, Clars Auction Gallery will host their two-day Fine Estate Sale offering more than 1,500 lots of antique and estate furnishings, exceptional decoratives and historic pieces. The sale will also feature sterling and jewelry as well as a very good selection of fine art from both American and international listed artists. Internet live bidding will be provided by LiveAuctioneers.com

The decoratives highlights will include a ceramic loving cup by Viola Frey. Frey was an internationally respected artist and leading figure in contemporary ceramics known for her intensely colored pieces. Her work has been featured in museums across the country. This loving cup measures 7¼ inches high and is estimated at $2,000 to $4,000.

A richly colored blue monumental jardinière attributed to Gladding McBean measures 25 inches high and is expected to earn $800 to $1,000. A fine selection of very desirable Fulper Pottery will no doubt attract collectors, as well.

A touch of Americana will be represented by a selection of country and primitive pieces, including a Nantucket basket signed by S. Gibbs. A selection of Native American baskets and textiles will also be offered.

Historic highlights will include antique and vintage firearms led by an 1889 Springfield trapdoor rifle U.S. model 1884. A charming 22-inch-high E. Goyard steamer trunk, circa 1900, will also be auctioned.

On Saturday, an extensive collection of books featuring art reference books, with many signed by the artists, will be sold. Rounding out this category will be a collection of antique Continental and U.S. maps and a delightful collection of early 20th-century Mignot and Britains lead soldiers.

Sterling offerings will include a Tiffany & Co. silver raised bowl and a S.T. Crosby silver six-piece tea service, both circa 1850. In addition, a complete Gorham sterling flatware service in the La Scala pattern designed by Peter C. Gevette will be sold.

Turning to the furniture category, an American Art Deco aviation desk by Frank Fletcher is estimated to bring $2,000 to $4,000. This piece will be complemented by a fine selection of Arts & Crafts period furniture as well as more traditional style antique pieces. Asian furniture offerings will include a stunning pair of intricately carved 19th-century hardwood export chairs.

Art offerings will span the globe including works by Rembrandt van Rijn and Jules Eugene Pages. The work on offer by Rembrandt (Dutch, 1606-1669), icon of the Dutch Golden Age and considered one of the greatest European painters and printmakers, is an unframed etching titled The Angel Appearing to the Shepherds and is expected to earn $4,000 to $6,000.

From British painters, a signed and framed oil on canvas by George Houston (1869-1947) showing a road along a rocky lakeshore is estimated at $6,000 to $8,000; and a framed charcoal drawing on paper by David Nash (b. 1945-), one of three to be offered, titled Cuts Up Cuts Down Column is estimated at $5,000 to $7,000.

Among works from American artists will be a framed oil on board titled High Noon showing the tree-studded golden hills of California in summer, by Eyvind Earle (New York/California, 1916-2000), the lead background artist and stylist for Disney’s Sleeping Beauty and other films (estimate $3,000 to $5,000).

Renowned California artist William Keith (1838-1911) will be represented by his signed framed oil on canvas illustrating cattle grazing by a river at sunset, which is estimated at $3,000 to $5,000. Other California artists in the sale include Arthur Best, Edwin M. Dawes, Richard De Treville, Carl Henrik Jonnevold, and others.

Rock & roll heavyweights will also have their day at Clars with works from Jerry Garcia and John Lennon. Garcia’s (California, 1942-1995) Sleeping Cat is a framed pen drawing on paper estimated to earn $4,000-$6,000. From John Lennon (British, 1940-1980), there will be three lithographs from his Bag One portfolio, including a framed Exchange of the Ring accompanied by a Bag One vinyl portfolio bag, also signed by Lennon – very cool indeed!

For additional information on any lot in the sale, call Clars Auction Gallery tollfree at 888-339-7600 or email info@clars.com.

View the fully illustrated catalog and sign up to bid absentee or live via the Internet at 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.


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


Designed by Viola Frey, this brightly colored ceramic loving cup is estimated to sell for $2,000 to $4,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.
Designed by Viola Frey, this brightly colored ceramic loving cup is estimated to sell for $2,000 to $4,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.

A rich blue monumental jardinière attributed to Gladding McBean measures 25 inches high and is expected to earn $800 to $1,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.
A rich blue monumental jardinière attributed to Gladding McBean measures 25 inches high and is expected to earn $800 to $1,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.

This American Art Deco aviation desk by Frank Fletcher is estimated at $2,000 to $4,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.
This American Art Deco aviation desk by Frank Fletcher is estimated at $2,000 to $4,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.

This framed charcoal drawing on paper by David Nash (British, b. 1945-) titled Cuts Up Cuts Down Column is expected to make $5,000 to $7,000.  Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.
This framed charcoal drawing on paper by David Nash (British, b. 1945-) titled Cuts Up Cuts Down Column is expected to make $5,000 to $7,000. Image courtesy Clars Auction Gallery.

Milwaukee museum to host mummies exhibit

From the Mummies of the World exhibit, the head of an Egyptian mummy from the Archives of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany.

From the Mummies of the World exhibit, the head of an Egyptian mummy from the Archives of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany.
From the Mummies of the World exhibit, the head of an Egyptian mummy from the Archives of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany.
MILWAUKEE (AP) – The largest traveling exhibition of mummies ever assembled is coming to Milwaukee later this year.

“Mummies of the World” will be at the Milwaukee Public Museum from Dec. 17 through May 30.

It features a collection of 150 real human and animal mummies and objects from South America, Europe, Asia, Oceania and Egypt.

The items include one of the oldest mummy infants ever discovered, a mummified family, a German nobleman discovered in a family crypt and Egyptian animal mummies. It will also explain how mummification occurs.

The show opened earlier this month at the California Science Center and will be touring the country for three years.

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-07-28-10 0602EDT

 

Vermont man jailed for vandalizing cow sculptures

BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) – A Vermont man is going to jail for his part in a vandalism spree that damaged six fiberglass cows installed around downtown Burlington as part of a public art project.

Twenty-one-year-old Christopher Newton and another man allegedly tried to push over two of the 4-foot tall sculptures after a night of drinking May 18. Newton, whose foot was broken when one of the 150-pound cows fell on him, was charged with felony unlawful mischief.

On Wednesday, he started a two-day jail term under an agreement with prosecutors that also calls for him to pay $1,000 or more in restitution. Organizers of the “Cows Come Home” project are now asking bartenders and store owners to serve as “cow tenders” and keep an eye out for the sculptures.

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-07-28-10 1016EDT

 

Demolition of old W.Va. pottery factory sparks dispute

14-inch tankard with Tonskawa Indian chief, circa 1900-1920, produced by Taylor, Smith, Taylor (TST) and probably part of a lemonade set. Marked with TST monogram that was in use prior to 1920. Sold by Cowan's Auctions on May 11, 2007. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Cowan's Auctions.

 14-inch tankard with Tonskawa Indian chief, circa 1900-1920, produced by Taylor, Smith, Taylor (TST) and probably part of a lemonade set. Marked with TST monogram that was in use prior to 1920. Sold by Cowan's Auctions on May 11, 2007. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Cowan's Auctions.
14-inch tankard with Tonskawa Indian chief, circa 1900-1920, produced by Taylor, Smith, Taylor (TST) and probably part of a lemonade set. Marked with TST monogram that was in use prior to 1920. Sold by Cowan’s Auctions on May 11, 2007. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and Cowan’s Auctions.
CHESTER, W.Va. (AP) – A dispute between the owner of an old pottery factory in Chester and West Virginia regulators over the facility’s demolition is heading to court.

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection and contractor Nick Masciarelli are at odds over how to remove asbestos from the former TST Pottery Factory.

A DEP spokeswoman says the agency went to court to bar Masciarelli from working on the property after he refused to remove the asbestos properly.

Masciarelli says he can’t remove the asbestos the way DEP wants him to because the buildings are crumbling and unsafe for his crews to enter.

He says a court hearing is set for Aug. 24.

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Information from: WTOV-TV, http://www.wtov9.com

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-07-28-10 0909EDT

 

Ansel Adams heirs skeptical about lost negatives claim

BEVERLY HILLS, California (AP) – It’s an antique collector’s dream: buying an old box at a garage sale and discovering it contains famous lost works worth a fortune.

That’s what Rick Norsigian said happened to him. Ten years ago, the Fresno painter stumbled upon a trove of 65 old glass negatives that he says have been authenticated as the work of famed nature photographer Ansel Adams, possibly worth $200 million.

“This is absolutely beyond what I thought,” the 64-year-old said at a news conference held at a Beverly Hills art gallery on Tuesday. “I’m very lucky.”

Norsigian’s lawyer Arnold Peter said a team of experts who studied the negatives over the past six months concluded “beyond a reasonable doubt” that the photos were Adams’ early work, and they were believed to have been destroyed in a 1937 fire at his Yosemite National Park studio.

“These photographs are really the missing link,” he said. “They really fill the void in Ansel Adams’ early career.”

Adams is renown for his timeless black-and-white photographs of the American West, which were produced with darkroom techniques that heightened shadows and contrasts to create mood-filled landscape portraits. He died in 1984 at 82.

His photographs today are widely reproduced on calendars, posters and in coffee-table books. His prints are coveted by collectors.

Yosemite National Park fetched $722,500 for Ansel print Clearing Winter Storm at an auction last month in New York, a record for 20th century photography.

Norsigian, who works for the Fresno Unified School District, is already planning to capitalize on his discovery. He’s set up a website to sell prints made from 17 negatives from $45 for a poster to $7,500 for a darkroom print with a certificate of authenticity. A documentary on his quest to have the negatives authenticated is in the works, as well as a touring exhibition that will debut at Fresno State University in October.

Representatives of Adams, however, said they’re not buying Norsigian’s claims.

“It’s an unfortunate fraud,” said Bill Turnage, managing director of the Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust. “It’s very distressing.”

Turnage said he’s consulting lawyers about possibly suing Norsigian for using a copyrighted name for commercial purposes. He described Norsigian as on an “obsessive quest…We’ve been dealing with him for a decade,” he said. “I can’t tell you how many times he’s called me.”

Adams’ grandson, Matthew Adams, who heads the Ansel Adams Gallery in San Francisco, said he reviewed Norsigian’s authentications last fall and thinks they’re stretches. Many photographers took pictures of the same places Adams did in that era, he said.

“There is no real hard evidence,” he said. “I’m skeptical.”

Norsigian bought the negatives from a man who said he had purchased the box from a Los Angeles salvage warehouse in the 1940s, bargaining the price down from $70 to $45. He saw they were of views of Yosemite but never suspected they might be Adams’ works until someone mentioned they resembled the famed photographer’s shots. “We got a laugh out of that,” Norsigian said.

But the idea stuck with Norsigian and he started researching the photographer, eventually concluding they were Adams’ works.

The shots are of places Adams frequented and photographed. Several shots contain people identified as Adams associates. Adams taught at the Pasadena Art Center in the early 1940s, which would account for the negatives being in Los Angeles. The negatives are the size Adams used in the 1920s and 30s and several have charred edges, possibly indicating the 1937 fire.

“You keep adding bits and pieces,” Norsigian said.

For years, he tried to get them officially verified, taking them to experts at the Smithsonian Institution, the Getty Center and others, but no one would venture to authenticate them.

Three years ago, he met Beverly Hills entertainment lawyer Peter, who assembled a team of experts to review the negatives.

The key evidence came from two handwriting experts, who identified the writing on the negative sleeves as that of Adams’ wife Virginia.

But Matthew Adams said there were inconsistencies in the handwriting and a lot of misspelled Yosemite place names. “She grew up in Yosemite. She was an intelligent, well read woman. I find it hard to believe she would misspell those names,” he said.

Peter also hired a meteorologist who studied the cloud formation, snowdrift and shadows on one image and compared it with a similar photograph by Adams, concluding they were taken at the same location on the same day.

But Matthew Adams said those evaporation clouds appear every day and the snowdrift is on mountains 20 miles (32 kilometers) away. “I suggested carbon dating of the charring and the envelopes,” he said.

Matthew Adams said it was unlikely his grandfather would have misplaced the negatives, especially after the devastating fire that destroyed 5,000 negatives – a third of his portfolio. “Ansel was very meticulous about his negatives,” he said. “He kept them in a bank vault in San Francisco after the fire.”

Beverly Hills art appraiser David W. Streets said he conservatively estimated the negatives’ value at $200 million, based on current sales of Adams’ prints and the potential for selling never-seen-before prints.

Turnage called that figure ridiculous because the value of Adams’ work is in his darkroom handcrafting of the prints, and said the negatives are next to worthless.

“Ansel interpreted the negative very heavily. He believed the negative was like a musical score. No two composers will interpret it the same way,” he said. “Each print is a work of art.”

Norsigian is not fazed by naysayers. “Prove me wrong,” he said. “This has been such a long journey. I thought I’d never get to the end. It kind of proves a construction worker-painter can be right.”

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