Georgia archaeologists find Civil War POW camp

The red dot at the 3 o'clock position on this map of Georgia indicates the location of Camp Lawton, which is actually part of Magnolia Springs State Park. Map drawn by Alexrk2, GNU Free Documentation License.
The red dot at the 3 o'clock position on this map of Georgia indicates the location of Camp Lawton, which is actually part of Magnolia Springs State Park. Map drawn by Alexrk2, GNU Free Documentation License.
The red dot at the 3 o’clock position on this map of Georgia indicates the location of Camp Lawton, which is actually part of Magnolia Springs State Park. Map drawn by Alexrk2, GNU Free Documentation License.

SAVANNAH, GA (AP) – Preserved for nearly 150 years, perhaps by its own obscurity, a short-lived Confederate prison camp began yielding treasures from the Civil War almost as soon as archeologists began searching for it in southeastern Georgia.

They found a corroded bronze buckle used to fasten tourniquets during amputations, a makeshift tobacco pipe with teeth marks in the stem, and a picture frame folded and kept after the daguerreotype it held was lost.

Georgia officials say the discoveries, announced Wednesday, were made by a 36-year-old graduate student at Georgia Southern University who set out to find Camp Lawton for his thesis project in archaeology.

He stunned experienced pros by not only pinpointing the site, but also unearthing rare artifacts from a prison camp known as little more than a historical footnote on the path of Gen. William T. Sherman’s devasting march from Atlanta to Savannah.

“What makes Camp Lawton so unique is it’s one of those little frozen moments in time, and you don’t get those very often,” said Dave Crass, Georgia’s state archaeologist. “Most professional archaeologists who ever thought about Camp Lawton came to the implicit conclusion that, because people weren’t there very long, there wouldn’t be much to find.”

Camp Lawton imprisoned more than 10,000 Union troops after it opened in October 1864 to replace the infamously hellish war prison at Andersonville. But it lasted barely six weeks before Sherman’s army arrived in November and burned it.

The camp’s brief existence made it a low priority among scholars. While known to be in or near Magnolia Springs State Park outside Millen, 50 miles south of Augusta, the camp’s exact location was never verified.

That task last year fell to Georgia Southern student Kevin Chapman. The state Department of Natural Resources offered Chapman a chance to pursue his master’s thesis by searching the park grounds for evidence of the 15-foot pine posts that formed Camp Lawton’s stockade walls.

The work started in December. By February, Chapman, his professor and about a dozen other students had dug up stains in the dirt left by rotting wood and forming a straight line — remnants of the stockade wall.

About 1/4 mile away, on adjacent land owned by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, they used a metal detector to find something else: a pre-Civil War penny about the size of a half-dollar. They were surprised nobody had beaten them to it.

“We thought, holy cow, in order for us to find an artifact like this, this site has to be undisturbed,” Chapman said. “To find a Civil War site that hasn’t been looted is extremely rare.”

Other artifacts soon followed. The tourniquet buckle was stamped with the name of a New York company that manufactured surgical equipment in the 1860s. The clay pipe bore the name of its maker in Glasgow, Scotland.

There was a literal half-penny — a coin cut in half to buy things costing less than 1 cent — and three other coins including a German-made game token stamped with George Washington’s profile.

“It illustrates a lot about the life of the prisoners,” said John Derden, a history professor at East Georgia College who spent years researching Camp Lawton for an upcoming book. “The significance of Camp Lawton is it really presents in microcosm almost every aspect of the Civil War POW experience, both good and bad.”

“Of course, Andersonville was a hellhole and is more important. But Andersonville is pretty archaeologically sterile.”

In 1864, the Andersonville camp in southwest Georgia was overcrowded with more than 30,000 war prisoners. Thousands died from a lack of food and medicine.

The Confederate army built Camp Lawton to handle the masses Andersonville couldn’t. It sprawled over 42 acres — about 1/4 mile on each side, nearly twice Andersonville’s size.

Confederate Gen. John H. Winder noted Camp Lawton could easily hold at least 32,000 prisoners. “It is, I presume, the largest prison in the world,” he wrote.

Prisoners arriving in October 1864 had no living quarters. They built crude huts with scraps of pine left over from construction of the stockade. Records show that Camp Lawton held 10,229 Union troops by early November. Despite the camp’s brief existence, at least 685 prisoners died there.

Derden’s research uncovered personal accounts by Camp Lawton’s prisoners recounting how they set up a black market to sell tools and molasses candy, killed alligators for food and bribed doctors for passage on trains carrying away the sick.

Chapman and the professor overseeing his work, Sue Moore, say they’ve excavated just a tiny fraction of the camp’s interior.

“People say, ‘How long are you going to keep doing this?'” Moore said. “A short answer is years and years, because there is so much we hope to discover there.”

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

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Summertime rides cruise in to Austin Auction’s Aug. 22 sale

The 1926 Model T Roadster sports later leather upholstery, whitewall tires and two-tone paint. It has had only two owners. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.

The 1926 Model T Roadster sports later leather upholstery, whitewall tires and two-tone paint. It has had only two owners. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.
The 1926 Model T Roadster sports later leather upholstery, whitewall tires and two-tone paint. It has had only two owners. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.
AUSTIN, Texas – Two antique vehicles – a 1926 Model T Ford roadster and an early 1900s vis-à-vis carriage – are expected to get good mileage leading up their sale at Austin Auction Gallery’s Summer Auction on Sunday, Aug. 22. LiveAuctioneers will provide Internet live bidding.

“The Model T is exciting because the consignor purchased it from the original owner,” said Ross Featherston, president of Austin Auction Gallery. In running condition, this Model T has seen light use in parades. It carries a $15,000-$20,000 estimate.

The vis-à-vis carriage is thought to have been made in Nappannee, Ind., because it is marked “Menno L. Kuhne,” a well-known buggy maker there.

“It’s like many of the carriages used in the wedding trade. We’re hoping one of those venues takes an interest in it,” said Featherston.

The white carriage is 92 inches high, 112 inches long and 63 inches wide. It carries a $4,000-$6,000 estimate.

Sterling silver in the auction will include an unusual and ornate silver water pitcher by Sanborns, International Royal Danish flatware and Towle D’orleans flatware.

Fifteen lots of G. Harvey limited edition prints, mostly Western themed, will be sold. “They’re highly collectible and affordable, considering his original works bring six or seven figures,” said Featherston.

Five Bill Mack (American, b. 1949) relief sculptures of nudes have estimates of $1,000-$2,500 apiece.

Contemporary collectibles include an estate collection of more than 30 Giuseppe Armani sculptures including large and retire pieces. Llardro and Royal Doulton figures will also be sold.

Additional items in the sale are African tribal statues including two ivory pieces, decorative bronze figures, British Colonial campaign furniture, a huge wooden chandelier, Waterford crystal lamps and stemware, fine jewelry, antique swords, and Chinese scroll paintings.

Featherston noted that Chinese scroll paintings have been selling well recently. “If you’re from China you’re buying back the things you sold us in the last 100 years,” he said.

Jewelry is highlighted by a fine 14K white gold, diamond and ruby bracelet composed of 11 faceted rubies enclosed by approximately 3.85-carats of round diamonds. The bracelet has a $4,000-$6,000 estimate and is accompanied by U.S. Gemological Laboratory Gem ID card.

The auction will begin at 1 p.m. Central.

For details visit www.austinauction.com or call the gallery at 512-258-5479.

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


"Menno L. Kuhne, Nappannee, Indiana" is marked on the vis-à-vis horse-drawn carriage, which has facing passenger seats. The early 1900s carriage has a $4,000-$6,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.
"Menno L. Kuhne, Nappannee, Indiana" is marked on the vis-à-vis horse-drawn carriage, which has facing passenger seats. The early 1900s carriage has a $4,000-$6,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.

A matching Renaissance Revival sofa and armchair are attributed to John Jelliff & Co. (New Jersey, 1836-1890). The two-piece parlor set has a $2,000-$4,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.
A matching Renaissance Revival sofa and armchair are attributed to John Jelliff & Co. (New Jersey, 1836-1890). The two-piece parlor set has a $2,000-$4,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.

Eleven faceted rubies weighing approximately 27.50 carats adorn this 14K white gold bracelet, which has a $4,000-$6,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.
Eleven faceted rubies weighing approximately 27.50 carats adorn this 14K white gold bracelet, which has a $4,000-$6,000 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.

Bill Mack’s bonded bronze sculpture ‘Fascination’ is 32 inches high by 59 1/2 inches by 8 inches deep. It is an artist proof, no. 15 of 25, and has a $1,500-$2,500 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.
Bill Mack’s bonded bronze sculpture ‘Fascination’ is 32 inches high by 59 1/2 inches by 8 inches deep. It is an artist proof, no. 15 of 25, and has a $1,500-$2,500 estimate. Image courtesy of Austin Auction Gallery.

Meijer Gardens extends run of Chihuly: A New Eden

Image of Dale Chihuly design courtesy of Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park

Image of Dale Chihuly design courtesy of Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park
Image of Dale Chihuly design courtesy of Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) – A popular glass exhibit at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park has been extended.

Officials say in a release Tuesday that Chihuly: A New Eden has been extended until the end of October. The collection has welcomed more than 200,000 visitors in the first three months and is part of an exhibition of glass artist Dale Chihuly’s sculptures.

The exhibit that celebrates the duality of art in nature was originally scheduled to close Sept. 30.

Meijer Gardens in Grand Rapids held its grand opening April 20, 1995. It took almost four years to welcome its 1 millionth visitor, and the park in May celebrated its 6 million visitor mark.

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On the Net:

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park: http://www.meijergardens.org

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

AP-CS-08-17-10 1242EDT

 

Vintage gas signs roll up premium prices at Matthews auction

The top lot of the sale was this Washington Chief Gasoline double-sided porcelain sign, which sold for $20,900. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.

The top lot of the sale was this Washington Chief Gasoline double-sided porcelain sign, which sold for $20,900. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.
The top lot of the sale was this Washington Chief Gasoline double-sided porcelain sign, which sold for $20,900. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.
DES MOINES, Iowa – An outstanding 72-inch Washington Chief Gasoline double-sided porcelain sign with full Indian headdress profile for a graphic climbed to $20,900 at an auction conducted Aug. 6 by Matthews Auctions LLC. The sale coincided with the final day of the 2010 Iowa Gas Show and featured Internet live bidding through LiveAuctioneers.com.

The Washington Chief sign was the top lot of the more than 500 lots of petroliana – gas and oil signs, globes, cans and a collection of rest room signs – that changed hands that day. Headlining the sale were three major collections, consigned by Ray and Mary Sue Seider of California, the late Ace Feeks of Oregon and Ron Ueberhein of Lincoln, Neb. Other consignments were also featured in the auction.

“Petroliana and automobilia are alive and well as collectibles, particularly gas and oil signs,” said Dan Matthews of the Nokomis, Ill.-based auction company. “Globe prices were a little depressed and oil cans just held their own, but overall the auction was a big success. In fact, it was our largest one-day sale ever,” he said, adding that Internet bidding via LiveAuctioneers.com was very brisk.

All prices quoted from the auction include a 10 percent buyer’s premium.

The second top lot of the day was a rare Ace High & Wil-Flo Motor Oil porcelain thermometer, 38 inches tall by 8 inches wide. It went for $13,200. A pair of lots flirted with the $10,000 mark but fell just short. One was a Hood Tire Man with straight bow tie single-sided tin die-cut sign, which rolled to $9,900. The other was a nice Associated Gasoline “More Miles to the Gallon” single-sided porcelain sign, which reached $9,350.

A Dodge-Plymouth double-sided porcelain neon sign sold at $7,425; a Goodrich Safety Tires single-sided porcelain sign with Mountie logo, $6,600; a Hood Tire Dealer Man with straight tie single-sided porcelain die-cut sign, $5,500; a Red Hat Motor Oil Gasoline double-sided porcelain sign, $5,225; and a St. Helens Gasoline double-sided porcelain sign, $5,280.

A Mobiloil Marine double-sided porcelain sign with Pegasus graphic, 30 inches, garnered $4,400; a Little Bear Gasoline gill single lens in a gill glass globe body changed hands for $4,675; a Clipper with airplane image 15-inch single-lens in metal globe body coasted to $4,400; and a Red Rooster Fruit & Produce single-sided porcelain sign with great graphic, 36 inches, sold for $4,950.

A Richfield Richlube Motor Oil double-sided porcelain sign with open-wheel race car graphic, 24 inches, breezed to $4,675; a Veltex Company Fletcher Oil single-sided porcelain truck door sign, 18 inches, peaked at $4,400; a United Motor Service single-sided porcelain counter-top or window neon sign hit $4,950; and a Pure Lighted identification sign with two 48-inch lenses made $3,850.

A Mobil Pegasus cookie-cutter single-sided porcelain die-cut sign, 69 inches by 92 inches, earned $4,125. The same amount was realized for a Mobil Pegasus two-piece cookie-cutter single-sided porcelain sign; a Mohawk Gasoline 15-inch single lens in a metal globe body attained $3,850; and an RPM Motor Oil “A Knockout For Winter” one-sided tin sign with Donald Duck graphic fetched $3,850.

To learn more about Matthews Auctions visit www.matthewsauctions.com or call 217-563-8880.

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


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


Hood Tire Man single-sided tin sign with straight bow tie graphic, 36 inches by 13 inches, $9,900.
Hood Tire Man single-sided tin sign with straight bow tie graphic, 36 inches by 13 inches, $9,900.

Associated Gasoline ‘More Miles to the Gallon’ single-sided porcelain sign, $9,350. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.
Associated Gasoline ‘More Miles to the Gallon’ single-sided porcelain sign, $9,350. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.

Goodrich Safety Tires single-sided porcelain sign with Mountie logo, 63 inches by 18 inches, $6,600. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.
Goodrich Safety Tires single-sided porcelain sign with Mountie logo, 63 inches by 18 inches, $6,600. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.

Rare High & Wil-Flo Motor Oil porcelain thermometer, 38 inches by 8 inches, $13,200. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.
Rare High & Wil-Flo Motor Oil porcelain thermometer, 38 inches by 8 inches, $13,200. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.

Dodge-Plymouth double-sided porcelain neon sign, $7,425. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.
Dodge-Plymouth double-sided porcelain neon sign, $7,425. Image courtesy of Matthews Auctions LLC.

Antiques from Italian estates lead Aug. 19 Morton Kuehnert sale

Set of six Pietro Costantini dining room chairs. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.
Set of six Pietro Costantini dining room chairs. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.
Set of six Pietro Costantini dining room chairs. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.

HOUSTON – Beautiful Venetian, Victorian and Louis XV antique furniture – much of it sourced from family estates and imported from Italy – will join many interesting pieces from Houston estates in an Aug. 19 sale conducted by Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers and Appraisers. LiveAuctioneers will provide the Internet live bidding.

One of the highlights, Lot 185, consists of a lovely pair of Victorian bedroom chairs covered in velvet and satin, accented with long fringe. The duo is estimated at $200-$250. Another furnishing that’s sure to connect with interior designers is Lot 78, a Venetian console table and mirror estimated at $300-$400.

Lot 197, a small Italian painted metal bed, could serve as the focal point of any bedroom and is conservatively estimated at $200-$300. An exquisite Venetian vanity with a beveled mirror, Lot 102, is expected to fetch $150-$200.

A number of Venetian servers, sideboards and armoires set to cross the auction block validate the long-held reputation of Italian designers as leaders in their field. Two Venetian sideboards with exquisite burled walnut wood, Lots 114 and 115, carry individual estimates of $400-$500.  A matching armoire, Lot 118, could make $400-$500 on auction day.

Other sale highlights include: Lot 7, an interesting Seth Thomas mantel clock with the original label on the back, $100-$150; Lot 167, a set of six Pietro Costantini dining room chairs, $250-$300; and Lot 181, a Victorian single-end chaise, $250-$300. Lot 93, an oak barley-twist tea table, is entered in the sale with a $150-$200 estimate.  A treasure trove of paintings, stained glass and terra cotta garden pottery also will be available.

For additional information on any lot in the sale, call Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers at 713-827-7835 or e-mail inquiry@mortonkuehnert.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


Seth Thomas 8-day half-hour clock. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.
Seth Thomas 8-day half-hour clock. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.

Venetian vanity with beveled mirror. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.
Venetian vanity with beveled mirror. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.

Pair of velvet and satin Victorian bedroom chairs. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.
Pair of velvet and satin Victorian bedroom chairs. Image courtesy Morton Kuehnert Auctioneers.

International Society of Appraisers announces fall education schedule

CHICAGO – Director of Education for the International Society of Appraisers Leon Castner, ISA CAPP has announced a full and challenging fall schedule of courses for ISA member appraisers as well as non-members. Following the successful Assets 2010 Annual Conference in Toronto, the ISA continues to focus on its primary mission of education for its members.

The fall schedule begins with two classes scheduled for Sept. 28-Oct. 3 at the Hilton Garden Inn in downtown Chicago. The course offerings are Appraisal of Fine Arts, with instructors Richard Casagrande, ISA CAPP and Cathy Peters, ISA CAPP; and Appraisal of Antiques & Residential Contents, with instructors David Mapes, ISA CAPP and Karen Rabe, ISA CAPP. All are veteran ISA instructors. Both courses are new versions of the course and include several new topics. Pre-course reading and a written assignment are required for both courses.

The Fine Arts course emphasizes the primary categories of fine art frequently encountered by appraisers and dealers: paintings, sculpture, works on paper, photography, animation art, Russian icons and Spanish Colonial art. Major areas of focus include art history, identifying and researching fine art works, properly describing art works and a field trip to a local Museum such as the Art Institute of Chicago.

The Antiques & Residential Contents course provides information necessary to properly identify and value items falling into the broad category of antiques and residential contents. The focus is on construction and manufacturing, and discerning the difference between “good,” “better” and “best” quality. Course sections include furniture, ceramics, glass, silver, toys and dolls, and vintage fashions as well as general household contents and includes a trip to Chicago’s Merchandise Mart.

Enrollment for each course for ISA members is $1,200. Non-members are welcome to register for $1,470.

Those courses are followed in Naperville, Ill. (metro Chicago) on Oct. 4-5 by the Requalification Course, required every five years for members. It is also offered as a Distant Education course if attendance onsite is not possible. Castner is the instructor for this course, which is essential in maintaining knowledge of current ISA standards, particularly in appraisal methodology, industry regulations and report writing. This course is open only to those who have completed the ISA Core Course or who are bridging to ISA from other organizations. Enrollment is $625 with an early enrollment discount. See the Web site for details of the Distant Education version of this course.

The 15-hour National USPAP course follows on Oct. 7-8 in Naperville. This course is intended to fulfill the National Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice requirement for credentialed membership levels within a professional property appraisal organization. The course instructor will be Roger Durkin, a personal property attorney. Enrollment is $300 for members, $450 for non-members.

The final course of the year is the Core Course. The Core Course is the “nuts and bolts” approach to personal property appraising in all disciplines and is the starting point for anyone interested in becoming a personal property appraiser. The Course is an action packed seven-day marathon, held in Naperville in conjunction with Northern Illinois University, that includes hands on experience outside the classroom. The course includes everything a prospective appraiser needs in order to begin a new career including practice appraisals and written appraisals. Class activities include inventorying property, using the computer for research on Internet sites and finding comparable sales, and will include examples of good and bad appraisals. Enrollment is $1,150 for members and $1500 for non-members.

Castner’s newest expansion of the education program is the presentation of several one-hour Webinars each month. The subject rotates between specialty topics and methodology subjects, with some free informational versions included. Registration is open to anyone, and ISA membership is not required. Registration details are available on the ISA Web site.

For information about any of the professional education opportunities offered by the ISA visit their Web site at http://www.isa-appraisers.org, call Michelle Stearns at 312-981-6778, email isa@isa-appraisers.org or write to: ISA, 737 North Michigan Ave., Suite 2100, Chicago, IL 60611.

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Puzzling lava Colter Stone on display in Grand Teton

Sometime between 1931 and 1933, William Beard and his son discovered a rock carved into the shape of a man's head while clearing a field in Tetonia, Idaho, which is immediately west of the Teton Range. The name "John Colter" appears on the stone.
Sometime between 1931 and 1933, William Beard and his son discovered a rock carved into the shape of a man's head while clearing a field in Tetonia, Idaho, which is immediately west of the Teton Range. The name "John Colter" appears on the stone.
Sometime between 1931 and 1933, William Beard and his son discovered a rock carved into the shape of a man’s head while clearing a field in Tetonia, Idaho, which is immediately west of the Teton Range. The name "John Colter" appears on the stone.

MOOSE, Wyo. (AP and ACNI) – The mysterious Colter Stone is being displayed in Grand Teton National Park this week.

The lava stone resembles a human head and is engraved with the name “John Colter” and the year 1808. Some speculate the stone was the work of trapper and explorer John Colter, who was likely the first person of European descent to travel through the Grand Teton area.

Others say the stone is a hoax. The stone was discovered in Idaho in 1933.

Grand Teton National Park will remember Colter with special events Wednesday. This will be the third annual John Colter Day in Grand Teton.

The Colter Stone can be seen at the Colter Bay Visitor Center. The stone is on loan from the Teton Valley Historical Museum in Driggs, Idaho.

The story of the Colter Stone has been described this way:

Sometime between 1931 and 1933, William Beard and his son discovered a rock carved into the shape of a man’s head while clearing a field in Tetonia, Idaho, which is immediately west of the Teton Range. The rhyolite lava rock is 13 inches (33 cm) long, 8 inches (20 cm) wide and 4 inches (10 cm) thick and has the words “John Colter” carved on the right side of the face and the number “1808” on the left side. The stone was reportedly purchased from the Beards in 1933 by A.C. Lyon, who presented it to Grand Teton National Park in 1934. Fritiof Fryxell, noted mountain climber of numerous Teton Range peaks, geologist and Grand Teton National Park naturalist, concluded that the stone had weathering that indicated that the inscriptions were likely made in the year indicated. Fryxell also believed that the Beards were not familiar with John Colter or his explorations. The stone has not been authenticated to have been carved by Colter, however, and may have instead been the work of of later expeditions, possibly as a hoax, by members of the Hayden Survey in 1877. If the stone is ever proven to be an actual carving made by Colter, in the year inscribed, it would coincide with the period he is known to have been in the region, and that he did cross the Teton Range and descend into Idaho, as descriptions he dictated to William Clark indicate.

Auction Central News International contributed to this report.

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

AP-WS-08-17-10 0702EDT

 

NYC museum closes for rest of August as it restructures

Chelsea Art Museum, New York. Photo by Team Tiara, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Chelsea Art Museum, New York. Photo by Team Tiara, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Chelsea Art Museum, New York. Photo by Team Tiara, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

NEW YORK (AP) – New York City’s Chelsea Art Museum is shutting down for the rest of August to avoid foreclosure.

The company that owns the West 22nd Street museum filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection earlier this month in an effort to avoid foreclosure.

A lawyer for museum president, Dorothea Keeser, told the Wall Street Journal that the museum is in discussions with various financial parties to restructure it finances.

The Chelsea Art Museum features 20th and 21st century art, particularly works by artists who are less exposed in the United States than in their home countries.

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Information from: Wall Street Journal

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

AP-ES-08-17-10 0730EDT

 

Specialists of the South to auction antiques of special citizen Aug. 28

Two-piece, early 19th-century fall-front desk with bookcase top and inlaid conch in the drop. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.
Two-piece, early 19th-century fall-front desk with bookcase top and inlaid conch in the drop. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.
Two-piece, early 19th-century fall-front desk with bookcase top and inlaid conch in the drop. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.

MARIANNA, Fla. – A major on-site auction featuring items from the estate of the Floye E. Brewton, 2006 Citizen of the Year in Marianna and former owner of the 1840 House Antique Shop there, will be conducted Saturday, Aug. 28, by The Specialists of the South Inc. LiveAuctioneers will facilitage Internet live bidding.

The sale will be conducted at 4359 Lafayette St. (U.S. Route 90) in Marianna, a town located along Interstate 10 in the Florida panhandle. The house is just one of many historic properties that Brewton bought and renovated during his long and fruitful life. It is known as the McKinnon House.

Brewton was originally from McDavid, Fla., but he adopted Marianna as a second home. He went there in the early 1980s to build a hotel on property he purchased near the interstate, but a dilapidated train depot caught his eye while he was in town.

The depot was identical to the one he remembered as a boy growing up in Florida, and seeing it in a deplorable state motivated him to want to save and restore it. And that’s what he did. But he didn’t stop there. Over the next couple of decades, Brewton purchased and renovated many other historic properties.

By the time he died in March, Floye Brewton had become one of Marianna’s most beloved citizens. Now, many of the items he acquired for his home and business will be available to the highest bidder. Also selling that day will be five storage units filled with Continental antiques that have been kept in a climate-controlled environment for five years.

Furniture items will include a 20th-century corner cabinet with string inlay, several French-style bombe commodes, an outdoor patio set with heart-shaped Gothic design, an 11-foot by 16-foot floral Kerman Karastan rug in the #747 pattern, and a tapestry piece from one of the storage units with a figural landscape design.

Artwork will include oil portraits of Fisher Gleason (1790-1846) and Sally Harley Gleason (1792-1853), thought to be the great aunt and uncle of Walter Cronkite, in wide gilt frames; a plaster cast plaque in Classical motif of a mother and child with cherub, 28 inches in diameter; and an oil on canvas of Walter Jacob Robinson (1820-1890) in an ornate gilt frame.

Other art will include four framed architectural engravings by Deneufforge, tagged original prints, Paris, circa 1900; a pair of metal sculptural “Wildcats” signed by T. Cartier, both 19 1/2 inches tall; a bronze scalloped vide-poche depicting sea gods, signed G. Michel, 10 1/2 inches tall; an original charcoal work by Alice Louella Fidler; and a watercolor by W. McGrath.

Orientalia will feature a pair of blue and white 19th century-style Chinese vases and a late 19th century-style Southern Chinese marriage chest, wood, with red and black lacquer and gilded carved inserts with figural motifs. Silver will include a Gorham flatware set in the Strasbourg pattern, and a repoussé sterling flatware set, 61 1/2 troy ounces, and a Reed & Barton carving set.

Decorative accessories will include an outstanding Federal three-arm girandole 19th-century mirror in a gilt wood and gesso frame with convex mirror surmounted by a carved spread eagle, spelter figurines, cloisonné, a trumeau-style mirror, a Victorian fire screen with carved pierced crest and tapestry inset, and a wonderful hand-painted ceramic desk set stamped “Orlik, Germany.”

Lamps and lighting will illuminate the saleroom. Expected top lots include a pair of candelabra with prisms and marble bases, a nice wooden floor lamp with a grid shade and a gorgeous lamp with a camel base.

Additional furniture includes a Federal-style oval table by Johan Tapp marked “707 1/2,” a refectory table with side and armchairs, a gold velvet tufted-back sofa, a marquetry top table with ormolu and a Victorian marble-top dresser with secret drawer.

The live sale will begin at 9 a.m. Central with a preview scheduled for 8 a.m.

For details visit the Web site www.SpecialistsoftheSouth.com or call 850-785-2577.

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


Federal three-arm girandole 19th-century mirror in a gilt wood and gesso frame with convex mirror. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.
Federal three-arm girandole 19th-century mirror in a gilt wood and gesso frame with convex mirror. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.

Trumeau-style mirror with period print after a painting by French artist Jean-Honore Fragonard. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.
Trumeau-style mirror with period print after a painting by French artist Jean-Honore Fragonard. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.

Mahogany 19th-century inlaid hunt board table with secret compartment. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.
Mahogany 19th-century inlaid hunt board table with secret compartment. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.

Bronze scalloped vide-poche figural work depicting sea gods, signed G. Michel. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.
Bronze scalloped vide-poche figural work depicting sea gods, signed G. Michel. Image courtesy The Specialists of the South Inc.

Florence defends its ownership of Michelangelo’s David

Michelangelo's David, 1504, in situ at Galleria dell'Accademia, Florence, Italy. Photo by David Gaya, GNU Free Documentation License.
Michelangelo's David, 1504, in situ at Galleria dell'Accademia, Florence, Italy. Photo by David Gaya, GNU Free Documentation License.
Michelangelo’s David, 1504, in situ at Galleria dell’Accademia, Florence, Italy. Photo by David Gaya, GNU Free Documentation License.

ROME (AP) – Florence’s mayor is defending his city’s ownership of Michelangelo’s marble masterpiece David after the Culture Ministry reportedly asserted that the treasure belongs to the central government in Rome.

The Renaissance-style feud broke out over the weekend with reports that Rome was laying claim to the sculpture, one of the most popular tourist attractions in Italy.

Michelangelo completed the 4.34-meter (14 foot)-high nude statue in Florence in 1504, and its home has been the city’s Galleria dell’Accademia for more than 100 years.

Florence Mayor Matteo Renzi said the statue, along with other treasures, was ceded to the city of Florence by a decree in 1870 or 1871 when Rome became the capital of newly formed modern Italy.

“David is ours,” Renzi told La Repubblica over the weekend in an interview broadcast on its website. “That’s what the documents say.”

Lawyers commissioned by the culture ministry in Rome, however, argue that Florence cannot own David because, over the centuries, the sculpture passed from sovereign state to sovereign state, starting with the Medici’s rule.

Culture Minister Sandro Bondi called the debate “absurd and inopportune.”

“Michelangelo’s David is a symbol of cultural unity for Florence and for Italy,” Bondi said in a statement Monday. “The problem of ownership of a piece of art, posed in propagandistic terms by Florence’s mayor, is a petty one.”

He said the issue could be resolved by joint management.

Renzi sees the government’s move as a grab for money, including the reported euro8 million ($10 million) in annual ticket sales to view the masterpiece.

He complained in newspaper interviews that the government was quick to grab the revenue, but was not doing its part to help Florence pay for cleaning and maintenance of infrastructure sorely tried by tourists.

“This government is federalist when it comes to spending, and centralist when it is time to cash in,” Renzi said.

Florence officials are also upset that Premier Silvio Berlusconi has not kept an electoral promise to give Florence more freedom in dealing with its historic and artistic treasures.

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AP-ES-08-16-10 1115EDT