Illinois memorabilia company faces fraud charges

A rare, genuine Honus Wagner T206 baseball card, circa 1910. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
A rare, genuine Honus Wagner T206 baseball card, circa 1910. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
A rare, genuine Honus Wagner T206 baseball card, circa 1910. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

CHICAGO (AP) — A major U.S. memorabilia company improperly jacked up auction prices for some baseball cards with shill bids and sold hair advertised as belonging to Elvis Presley even though its authenticity was in doubt, federal prosecutors said Wednesday.

In one case, the owner of the now-shuttered Mastro Auctions, William Mastro, allegedly failed to let potential buyers know in advance that a century-old Honus Wagner T-206 baseball card had been altered — information that would have reduced the rare card’s auction price, according to the 33-page indictment released by the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago. The indictment does not say how much the card sold for, but other Wagner T-260 baseball cards have sold for more than $1 million.

Mastro and another executive at the Chicago-area firm also sold hair purported to be from Presley even though DNA tests on the follicles raised questions, according to the indictment. It does not say how much the hair fetched at various auctions.

“Consumers might be lured to the auction market for sports memorabilia and other collectibles by an emotional attachment to an item or purely as a calculated investment, but . . . bidders must remain mindful of the maxim, ‘Buyer Beware,'” said Gary Shapiro, the acting U.S. attorney, said in a statement Wednesday.

Mastro Auctions, which billed its itself as the world’s leading sports and Americana auction house, is also accused of misleading bidders into thinking demand for an item was greater than it really was.

Mastro, 59, of Palos Park, faces one count of mail fraud, and former executives Doug Allen, 49, of Crete, and Mark Theotikos, 51, of Addison, face multiple counts. Just one count of mail fraud carries a maximum prison term of 20 years.

After Mastro Auctions folded in 2009, Allen and Theotikos founded a similar company, Legendary Auctions, whose investors bought the assets of Mastro Auctions, according to the Lansing-based company’s website.

No one answered at a phone number for a William Mastro in Palos Park on Wednesday. A message left at the Legendary Auctions’ office seeking comment from Allen and Theotikos was not immediately returned.

Honus Wagner baseball cards are among the world’s rarest. Wagner retired in 1917 with more hits, runs, RBIs, doubles, triples and steals than any National League player.

John Rogers, of North Little Rock, Ark., bought a Wagner T-206 from Mastro Auctions in 2008 for $1.62 million. The indictment is unclear about which card is at issue, but Rogers said the card he bought was never altered.

“The card in question is not the card that I purchased in 2008,” he said. He has since sold that card.

Rogers said he didn’t think this week’s indictment would shake the confidence of aficionados or dissuade them from spending millions on rare baseball cards.

“This story won’t hinder that,” he said. “I don’t think our industry has any more shenanigans than any other industry.”

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


A rare, genuine Honus Wagner T206 baseball card, circa 1910. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
A rare, genuine Honus Wagner T206 baseball card, circa 1910. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Confederacy museum guides wartime Richmond walk

The walking tour will view St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond. Gen. Robert E. Lee and Confederate President Jefferson Davis are among the political figures who have worshiped there. Image by Morgan Riley. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.
The walking tour will view St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond. Gen. Robert E. Lee and Confederate President Jefferson Davis are among the political figures who have worshiped there. Image by Morgan Riley. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.
The walking tour will view St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Richmond. Gen. Robert E. Lee and Confederate President Jefferson Davis are among the political figures who have worshiped there. Image by Morgan Riley. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

RICHMOND, Va. – Join Museum of the Confederacy Education Manager Kelly Hancock for “War so Terrible: Richmond 1862,” a walking tour focused on Richmond during one of its most transformative wartime years. The tour will explore the impact of this year on Richmond through the use of photographs, descriptions and the city’s monuments. The program will take place on Aug. 18 from 10:30 a.m. EDT to noon. Participants will meet in the lobby of the museum (1201 E. Clay St.) to begin the tour.

By 1862, Richmond, the Confederacy’s capital, had grown into a bustling wartime city. During this year, the city saw the inauguration of the first president of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, it became a center of medical care and it opened its warehouses to create makeshift prisons for soldiers, citizens and slaves alike. The city’s population expanded in response to its new political importance to the South. Some of the new arrivals would work as nurses and doctors. The walking tour’s route will take participants past Court End, the Capitol grounds, St. Paul’s, the Stuart-Lee House, Monumental Church, First African Baptist Church and the former sites of the Spotswood Hotel, the Canal Basin and General Hospital no. 5. The tour does not include entrance to these sites.

Advance reservations are required. Program is free for members and $10 for nonmembers. For more information contact Kelly Hancock at khancock@moc.org or 855-649-1861 ext. 121.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The walking tour will view St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Richmond. Gen. Robert E. Lee and Confederate President Jefferson Davis are among the political figures who have worshiped there. Image by Morgan Riley. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.
The walking tour will view St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Richmond. Gen. Robert E. Lee and Confederate President Jefferson Davis are among the political figures who have worshiped there. Image by Morgan Riley. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

Museum preserves legacy of ‘Grapes of Wrath’ author

The dust jacket of John Steinbeck's 'Sweet Thursday,' published by Viking in 1954. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.
The dust jacket of John Steinbeck's 'Sweet Thursday,' published by Viking in 1954. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.
The dust jacket of John Steinbeck’s ‘Sweet Thursday,’ published by Viking in 1954. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.

SALINAS, Calif. (AP) – They were the stuff of another America: Tom Joad in The Grapes of Wrath. George and Lenny in Of Mice and Men. Lee Chong, Doc and the delightfully larcenous Mack and the bums in Cannery Row. Danny and Pilon in Tortilla Flat. Adam and Cal Trask in East of Eden.

Whether you met these classic characters while reading the novels of John Steinbeck or you’re encountering them for the first time, they come to life at the National Steinbeck Center, a sprawling and modernistic museum and study center in Old Town Salinas. It is the largest museum dedicated to a single American writer.

The Nobel- and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, who grew up in Salinas, wrote about many things: migrant workers, labor “agitators,” World War II, the Mexican Revolution, New England, Russia, even Vietnam. But his most endearing and enduring works centered on the people and places he knew best, from the coast and farmland of the Salinas Valley between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

The center opened in 1998 as a library and research facility and place to store and display Steinbeck memorabilia. While Steinbeck scholars can meet here to discuss his work and life, its 30,000 annual visitors also include ordinary fans and other visitors curious about his work and life. The area around Salinas is scenic and popular among tourists, with Monterey County wineries, the Pacific Coast and other attractions nearby. Big Sur, which has connections to literary figures like Henry Miller, Jack Kerouac and poet Robinson Jeffers among others, is 50 miles.

Even those who don’t know much about Steinbeck’s work will come away from a visit to the center with a sense of his life and times. Curators have blended the work of artists, photographers and historians to bring back the atmosphere of the places he described, set mostly between the World Wars.

Here are the migrant labor camps; the louse-ridden bunkhouses of the migrant “bindle-stiffs” (as hobos were called); Lee Chong’s grocery; and the entrance to the Bear Flag Restaurant, which was the name of Cannery Row’s “stern and stately whorehouse,” which Steinbeck described as a clean, one-price joint presided over by its formidable yet soft-touch madam, Dora Flood.

Here is Ed Ricketts, “Doc” in Cannery Row, the eccentric operator of a marine biological lab, who was a character in the book but also a real person and close friend of Steinbeck’s.

Some incidents in his writings were also based on real events, such as the failed 1916 attempt to refrigerate lettuce in rail cars to bring the produce to Eastern markets, depicted in East of Eden.

And Steinbeck’s mastery of the vernacular, an ability to write the way people then talked, in a beautifully unrefined manner, can be traced not just to his observations of speech but to input from a mentor, Tom Collins, an anthropologist who researched speech patterns and customs, according to museum archivist Herb Behrens.

Steinbeck’s family had been ranchers in the Salinas-King City area, said Behrens, and many of the characters in works such as The Red Pony and The Long Valley almost certainly reflected people the writer knew as a child.

This sometimes got in him in the doghouse locally, since the not-always-favorable depictions often could be identified by townspeople.

But it wasn’t just locals who were riled by his work. At times some of his books were burned as un-American and subversive. Steinbeck was derided by angry growers and others as a “traitor to his class.” But he was not the ideologue he was accused of being. Of his novel In Dubious Battle, for example, a hard look at leftist organizers in the orchards, Steinbeck wrote that the Communists would hate it and the other side would too.

Behrens said the migrant worker novels sired a bevy of “damage control” books by others, such as Plums of Plenty the Grapes of Gladness that tried to show migrant life was just fine, that there were good jobs for all who wanted to work.

This, of course, was hooey and Steinbeck, himself at times a laborer and straw boss who had spent time with migrant workers and leftist organizers, knew it. The labor camps and the migrants with their problems were in place before he began writing about them, and he was overwhelmed by the conditions he found.

Those researching his work for the many later screenplays of his books concluded that if anything, conditions were even worse than he portrayed them.

Steinbeck and photographer Horace Bristol visited migrant areas for Life magazine for a piece on the impact of floods in 1937 and ’38, but Life rejected the pictures as too graphic, Behrens said. After the1940 film The Grapes of Wrath won two Oscars and was nominated for five more, Life published the pictures.

Loops from some of the many movies made from his books play in the museum’s pocket theaters.

Many of the buildings in old photos in the museum remain standing in the adjacent Old Town, and are easily recognized. Steinbeck’s boyhood home, a wedding cake of a Queen Anne structure three blocks from the center at 132 Central Ave., suggests stability and comfort. It is a restaurant now, called The Steinbeck House.

Steinbeck said he initially wrote East of Eden for his for his sons because “I wanted them to know how it was, I wanted to tell them directly.” His work and the Steinbeck Center have kept that world alive for others as well.

___

If You Go…

NATIONAL STEINBECK CENTER: 1 Main St., Old Town Salinas, Calif.; http://www.steinbeck.org/ Open daily, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Adults, $14.95; children 13-17, $7.95 and 6-12, $5.95. Allow a half-day.

THE STEINBECK HOUSE RESTAURANT: 132 Central Ave., Salinas; http://www.steinbeckhouse.com/ or 831-424-2735. Lunch served Tuesday-Saturday, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., most of the year. The restaurant is located in Steinbeck’s boyhood home. Tours offered Aug. 5 and Sept. 2 at noon, 1 p.m. and 2 p.m.; suggested donation, $10.

GETTING THERE: The Steinbeck Center is 17 miles east of Monterey, 60 miles south of San Jose and 105 miles south of San Francisco.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-07-25-12 1841GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The dust jacket of John Steinbeck's 'Sweet Thursday,' published by Viking in 1954. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.
The dust jacket of John Steinbeck’s ‘Sweet Thursday,’ published by Viking in 1954. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and PBA Galleries.

Fox Auctions to serve up stein auction of a lifetime Aug. 4

VALLEJO, Calif. – Ron Fox has been in the business of collecting and selling antique drinking vessels for most of his life. His fascination started modestly in 1971, when he decided he wanted a stein to put his pennies in. Four steins later, and all his change in its place, a passion was born.

Fox has spent the past 41 years traveling throughout Europe and across America, visiting museums and private collections, researching and photographing steins. He has amassed an amazing knowledge that puts him at the top of his field. He has given numerous lectures and appraisals for the best-known collections in the world. He is editor of PROSIT, the magazine for members of Stein Collectors International.

The Stein Collectors International 2012 Convention is being held in Annapolis, Md. Fox Auctions has been appointed the official auction for this year’s event. The auction is open to the public and all interested collectors are welcome. The Internet live bidding will be exclusively provided by LiveAuctioneers.com

This live and Internet auction is being held Aug. 14, at Lowes Hotel, Annapolis, starting at noon EDT.

This is one of the largest and most diversified auctions of Antique beer steins and other drinking vessels to come to the market in more than 50 years. Every type and manufacturer of beer steins is represented in the 452 lots of this phenomenal sale. Some of the examples are Mettlach, character, regimental, Russian enamel, military, pewter, sports themes, glass, silver, ivory, wood, faience, early stoneware, souvenir, Whites Utica, Lenox, Rookwood, Royal Vienna, Meissen, Viennese enameled silver and more.

“It is a sale not to be missed, if you have the slightest interest in antique beer steins. This is the type of sale that collectors talk about for years,” said Fox.

Some rare examples in this sale are:

– Lot 287, a Russian enameled, gilded silver tankard, Moscow, 1883, maker’s marks with imperial warrant. The cylindrical body has stylized flowers, trelliswork and scrolling foliage with pinecone finial and engraved inscriptions. Rare and in mint condition. Estimate: $20,000-$30,000.

– Lot 300, a 11-inch-tall silver tankard with hand-chased scenes of Pan. Eight bubble- shape Viennese enamel panels of cherubs and Pan on both the fabulous lid and the base. Figural silver cherub finial. Silver marks. Wonderful quality on both the enamel and hand-chased decoration. Estimate: $8,000-$12,000.

– Lot 278, an exceptionally rare basket weave stein dated 1702. It is a large wide tankard shape, made of tightly woven reed material. It has a pewter lid, base rim, top rim and handle straps. Excellent condition. Estimate: $10,000-$14,000.

For details contact Ron Fox at Fox Auctions 631-553-3841 or email Foxauctions@yahoo.com. Bidders are invited to post absentee bids early on 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


Russian enameled silver stein. Fox Auctions image.
 

Russian enameled silver stein. Fox Auctions image.

Viennese enameled stein. Fox Auctions image.

Viennese enameled stein. Fox Auctions image.

Rare basket stein. Fox Auctions image.

Rare basket stein. Fox Auctions image.

London’s Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair set for Nov. 12-18

Photo courtesy of the Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia.
Photo courtesy of the Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia.
Photo courtesy of the Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia.

LONDON – The Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia, now in its 22nd year, will run Nov. 12-18 at Olympia Exhibition Centre.

The Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia is considered one of the most important annual art and antiques events and is the only fair of its caliber scheduled between October and February. Attracting over 24,000 visitors, the fair features approximately 140 exhibitors in an elegant setting and is popular with anyone looking to buy art and antiques as well as those seeking individual Christmas gifs.

Visitors can expect to find such delights as Chippendale chairs, Lalique vases, Cartier earrings, Lowry paintings, 18th century farmhouse tables, silver teapots, fine dining tables, Art Deco lights, William de Morgan vases, letters from Queen Victoria, 18th century tapestries and more.

Visitors are reassured by the strict vetting process that sees 100 experts across all the categories inspect every item at the fair before it opens.

The Winter Fair has become an event in the annual social calendar. Previous attendees have included Bono, Claudia Schiffer, Jemima Khan, Jools Holland, Jasper Conran, Bryan Ferry, Nicky Haslam, Kay Saatchi, Sir Paul Smith, Sir David Tang and Sir Peter Blake.

Supported by the UK’s top trade associations, the British Antique Dealers’ Association and the Association of Art & Antiques Dealer, every exhibitor has been approved by a panel of experts and these include some of the UK’s top dealers.

For details visit the event website: www.olympia-antiques.com.

The Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia takes place at Olympia Exhibition Centre, National Hall, Hammersmith Road.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Photo courtesy of the Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia.
Photo courtesy of the Winter Fine Art & Antiques Fair at Olympia.

City council approves NYU Greenwich Village expansion

Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, a U.S. Historic District, in New York City. Image by Matthew Jesuele, courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, a U.S. Historic District, in New York City. Image by Matthew Jesuele, courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, a U.S. Historic District, in New York City. Image by Matthew Jesuele, courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

NEW YORK (AFP) – A contentious plan to expand the New York University campus in the heart of Manhattan’s Greenwich Village won the city council’s near-unanimous go-ahead Wednesday.

NYU, which says it needs more space to remain a top-flight institution, will be allowed to add nearly two million square feet of new teaching, lab and other facilities.

The expansion is sharply reduced from an initial proposal by the university in the already crowded neighborhood.

Activists had bitterly opposed the construction plans, saying they would ruin a neighborhood famed for decades as the haunt of writers and artists.

Vocal protesters attending the council vote were ejected from the chamber, local NY1 television reported.

The Small Business Coalition, which represents more than 100 shops, restaurants and other businesses, welcomed the scaling back of the expansion, but said it was still not satisfied after the council’s 44-1 approval.

“We appreciate the reductions in the bulk and size of the buildings,” said the coalition’s Judy Paul, CEO of the Washington Square Hotel, which has been operating in Greenwich Village since 1902.

“However, the overall scope and 20-year time frame of the project is still a daunting prospect for the community and small businesses alike.”

According to the coalition, Greenwich Village is already one of the most built-up areas in New York, while also featuring a vacancy rate more than three times the city average, meaning that more construction is unnecessary.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, a U.S. Historic District, in New York City. Image by Matthew Jesuele, courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, a U.S. Historic District, in New York City. Image by Matthew Jesuele, courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

John Wayne, William Holden cowboy movie guns stolen

Movie poster for 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.' Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and the Last Moving Picture Co.
 Movie poster for 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.' Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and the Last Moving Picture Co.
Movie poster for ‘The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.’ Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and the Last Moving Picture Co.

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) – Police say two guns used in vintage movies starring John Wayne and William Holden have been stolen from a Portland video store that features movie memorabilia.

Sgt. Pete Simpson says the shop owner at Movie Madness told officers that a man spent about 25 minutes in the store Tuesday afternoon before breaking into a locked display cabinet and stealing the guns.

Simpson says one gun is a Winchester rifle used by John Wayne in the 1962 film, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, and the other is a shotgun used by William Holden in the 1969 film, The Wild Bunch.

The man is described as in his 30s or 40s, stocky and bald, wearing a white T-shirt, shorts and riding a mountain bike.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-07-25-12 0307GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


 Movie poster for 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.' Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and the Last Moving Picture Co.
Movie poster for ‘The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.’ Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com Archive and the Last Moving Picture Co.

Fine art part of Kaminski Auctions 20th century sale July 28

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

BEVERLY, Mass – Kaminski Auctions will hold an exciting 20th Century Decorative Arts sale on Saturday, July 28. Presenting an impressive range of items from oil paintings and sculpture, to lithographs, furniture, and important collectible items, bidding is set to begin at 11 a.m. EDT in the Kaminski auction gallery. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding.

The top lot of the sale is an oil on canvas work by American painter Dennis Akervik Coelho. Born in 1968 in Rhode Island, Coelho is most noted for his abstract and figural works, as well as his seascapes. Two of his pieces are on offer in this July auction: Puffer Fish (estimated $15,000-$20,000), and On The Atlantic (estimated $1,000-$5,000). Both are impressive compositions that include certificates of authenticity from the artist.

Another highlight is a large-scale magiscope sculpture by Mexican-American artist Feliciano Bejar (1920-2007). Made of reclaimed steel, automotive parts and cut crystal, with a circular crystal element within ring-gear on the base, the work is signed and dated 1999 (estimated $3,000-$5,000). A second sculpture by Bejar will be up for auction. It is also a magiscope sculpture made of reclaimed steel, automotive parts and cut crystal, this piece, titled Fas de Luna, has four semicircular elements on the base, and is signed and dated 1987 (estimated $2,000-$3,000).

A bronze by Lithuanian-born artist David Aronson (b. 1923) will be featured in the 20th Century Decorative Arts sale. Kaminski will offer a bronze plaque (estimated $3,500-$4,500) by the internationally recognized sculptor and painter. Aronson’s work can be found in the museums of major cities in the U.S. and abroad. In Kaminski’s May 17 Fine Art Auction, three of Aronson’s works achieved impressive sales. Harlequin sold for $11,700.

A 1920s bronze sculpture by French artist Henry Arnold (1879-1945), made using the lost wax technique, founded by AG Paris, edited by Goldscheider (La Stele), will also be included in the sale.

Three lithographs by American artist Alexander Calder (1898-1976) are on offer. Une Famille de La-Bas, ed. 28/75, signed in pencil lower right, Maeght (with watermark), circa 1976 (estimated $1,500-$2,500) will be included, as well as, Flags, lithograph, ed. XXXV/L, signed in pencil lower right, Arches watermark (estimated $1,500-$2,500), and Les Folles de Sache, ed. 22/75, signed in pencil lower right, Maeght (with watermark), circa 1976 (estimated $1,400-$2,000).

Kaminski is excited to put forth a collection that features several important furniture items. Highlights include a pair of Eugene Schoen (1888-1957) custom designed slipper chairs, originally made for Gwen and Morris Cafrits. The chairs have rolled high-back forms with channeled decoration on the perimeters and are signed with “ES” monogram on two rear legs of each chair, Schmeig and Kotzian, circa 1937 (estimated $2,500-$3,500).

Two Mies Van der Rohe “MR” chairs, leather and polished steel, Knoll, New York, each with tan leather padded upholstery on cantilevered steel frame, from the Seagram Collection will also be for sale (estimated $2,400-$3,000). Mies Van der Roche (1886-1969), originally born in Germany, moved to the United States where he settled primarily in the Chicago area. Known for his significant contributions to modern architecutre, Mies Van der Roche also experimented in furniture making. The two chairs that Kaminski offers in July are noteworthy examples of his craftsmanship.

Beyond furniture, this sale will also include many modern decorative objects. One particularly noteworthy item is an Art Deco rug originally owned by John Lennon (estimated $1,800-$2,200). This German, machine-made rug is printed in tones of lavender, blue, black, rose and brick, on beige ground, measures 69 inches long by 56 1/2 inches wide. It was purchased by the current owner from the June 23, 1984 Sotheby’s Auction, Collectors’ Carrousel. The 1984 sale included property from the collection of John Lennon and Yoko Ono. It was lot 281, and was sold with its original lot card/ certificate of ownership signed by Yoko Ono, with Xeroxed catalog cover, introduction and lot page. A Gustav Stickley floor lamp (estimated $1,000-$2,000) no. 500, held on adjustable hammered copper frame and supported by an oak pedestal, is also a main feature of the sale.

Other important collectible items include a 1961 Wurlitzer jukebox. It features a multi-selector phonograph, model 2510, serial number 513963, the item measures 51 inches high by 34 inches wide by 28 inches deep, and is in working condition (estimated $1,000-$2,000).

Kaminski Auctions, located on the North Shore of Boston, has been serving the New England antiques market for over 25 years.

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


Image courtesy of Kaminski's.
 

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.
 

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

Image courtesy of Kaminski's.

Image courtesy of Kaminski’s.

Carvings among works selling at Elite Decorative Arts, Aug. 18

Chinese Qing Dynasty Famille Rose enameled double gourd hulu form vase, 4 3/4 inches tall. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Chinese Qing Dynasty Famille Rose enameled double gourd hulu form vase, 4 3/4 inches tall. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Chinese Qing Dynasty Famille Rose enameled double gourd hulu form vase, 4 3/4 inches tall. Elite Decorative Arts image.

BOYNTON BEACH, Fla. – Over 300 fine Chinese carvings and works of art—to include porcelains, jade, ivory, bronze, jewelry, stone carvings and silver—will be sold to the highest bidder on Saturday, Aug. 18, by Elite Decorative Arts. The auction will begin at 1 p.m. EDT. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding.

The auction will be the final event of the summer season for Elite Decorative Arts, a firm that has become synonymous with Chinese antiquities and rare Asian objects.

“It has become difficult to assign some items high and low estimates, because the market for Chinese antiques, especially porcelain pieces, is so hot right now,” said Scott Cieckiewicz, an officer with the firm.

He added, “In the end, it will be the bidders who determine the value of these lots. That’s the beauty of an auction. It’s an accurate and instant barometer of market conditions.”

A piece of jewelry, not a porcelain, may end up being the day’s top earner. It’s a woman’s 18k yellow gold imperial jadeite cabochon and diamond ring/pendant combination (est. $40,000-$50,000, against an appraised value of $80,000). The center of the ring/pendant is prong set with a fine oval cabochon cut natural Burmese jadeite weighing a staggering 12.50 carats.

A large Chinese Qing Dynasty relief carved, fully reticulated ivory tusk, depicting a total of 24 men and women, each wielding an item, has an estimate of $6,000-$8,000. The people are situated among pine trees and enclosed by dragons and phoenix birds. The tusk is 53 1/2 inches in length, with an ivory weight of 4.96 kilograms. It includes a fitted wooden stand.

An impressive and palace-size Chinese carved jadeite pagoda village, featuring five pagoda towers with an overall height of 98 inches, is expected to make $10,000-$15,000. Each pagoda is linked to the next with a hanging chain. The massive late Qing to Republic period village shows a total of eight foo dog figures, four tripod dragon urns and four dragon plaques.

Another jade piece expected to do well is a Chinese Qing Dynasty, hand-carved jadeite Guan yin (Quan Yin) figure of a woman, depicted in a standing position with a tassel in the right hand and a bead in the left (est. $7,000-$10,000). A nimbus can be seen behind her head and she is standing on a stylized lotus blossom base. The piece is 15 1/2 inches tall and weighs 3,192 grams.

Two bronze pieces are certain to get attention. One is a Chinese Tang Dynasty silvered bronze mirror, well cast and of disc form, with the central hemispheric knob enclosed by calligraphy and with a sunburst design to the center (est. $6,000-$8,000). The mirror, 8 1/2 inches in diameter, shows a raised serpent, a dragon, phoenix and chin lung dragon with lotus blossoms.

The other is a Chinese Tibetan bronze figure depicting a seated Quan Yin goddess with four arms seated over a lotus blossom throne (est. $5,000-$7,000). The figure, dating to the Ming Dynasty, is 15 1/4 inches tall and has a total weight of 4.14 kilograms (almost 5 pounds). It was purchased in New York in the 1980s and was consigned from an important St. Louis collection.

Porcelains will be offered in abundance. Two have pre-sale estimates of $5,000-$7,000. The first is a rare imperial Chinese heritage Kangxi period Qing Dynasty Famille Verte plate. The plate is unusual in that it bears an incised inventory mark (N481) from the Dresden collection, formed by Augustus the Strong (1670-1733), the former King of Poland and Elector of Saxony.

The second is a Chinese Qing Dynasty Famille Rose enameled double gourd hulu form vase. The piece holds the red, six-character archaic Qianlong period (1736-1795) reign mark to the bottom, and is made of the period. It is 4 3/4 inches tall and weighs 134 grams and shows a vibrant scrolled floral design over yellow ground, with pink draped cloth knotted to the front.

Two other porcelain pieces of note carry estimates of $2,000-$3,000. One is a 19th century Chinese phoenix tail form blue and gold vase, 13 3/4 inches, with a hand-painted gold design depicting a paradise bird on a tree branch with lotus blossoms over a cobalt blue ground. The vase holds blue six-character calligraphy Qianlong (1736) period reign marks to the bottom.

The other is a Chinese lidded Qing Dynasty enameled porcelain mei ping form vase, 10 3/4 inches tall, holding the red six-character calligraphy Guangxu period (1875-1908) reign marks to the bottom. The vase is finely hand painted and enameled throughout, depicting pink and blue chih lung dragons among a scrolled floral design over a light green ground and stylized border.

One more jade piece of note is a massive Chinese relief carved jadeite boulder depicting a seated laughing Buddha with five attendants climbing on him and playing musical instruments (est. $6,000-$8,000). Also in the scene are two foo dogs, both climbing on the Buddha. The 16 8 1/2- inch-tall late Qing to Republic piece has mottled white, lavender and apple green jadeite colors.

Elite Decorative Arts’ next big sale after this one will be a fine porcelains and decorative arts auction slated for Saturday, Sept. 15. Quality consignments are still being accepted. To consign an item, an estate or a collection, call 800-991-3340 or email info@eliteauction.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


Chinese Qing Dynasty Famille Rose enameled double gourd hulu form vase, 4 3/4 inches tall. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Chinese Qing Dynasty Famille Rose enameled double gourd hulu form vase, 4 3/4 inches tall. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Woman's 18k yellow gold imperial jadeite cabochon and diamond ring/pendant combination. Elite Decorative Arts image.
 

Woman’s 18k yellow gold imperial jadeite cabochon and diamond ring/pendant combination. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Large Chinese Qing Dynasty relief-carved, fully reticulated ivory tusk. 53 1/2 inches in length. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Large Chinese Qing Dynasty relief-carved, fully reticulated ivory tusk. 53 1/2 inches in length. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Palace-size Chinese carved jadeite pagoda village, featuring five pagoda towers, 98 inches tall. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Palace-size Chinese carved jadeite pagoda village, featuring five pagoda towers, 98 inches tall. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Chinese Tang Dynasty silvered bronze mirror, well cast and of disc form, 8 1/2 inches in diameter. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Chinese Tang Dynasty silvered bronze mirror, well cast and of disc form, 8 1/2 inches in diameter. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Imperial Chinese heritage Kangxi period Qing Dynasty Famille Verte plate, from the Dresden collection. Elite Decorative Arts image.

Imperial Chinese heritage Kangxi period Qing Dynasty Famille Verte plate, from the Dresden collection. Elite Decorative Arts image.

B. Langston’s presents Asian, fine and decorative art, July 29

Ivory female Immortal figurine 'He Xiangu,' Republic Period, circa 1900-1925, est. $1,500-$2,000. B. Langston's image.
Ivory female Immortal figurine 'He Xiangu,' Republic Period, circa 1900-1925, est. $1,500-$2,000. B. Langston's image.
Ivory female Immortal figurine ‘He Xiangu,’ Republic Period, circa 1900-1925, est. $1,500-$2,000. B. Langston’s image.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Auctions by B. Langston’s LLC is hosting yet another exciting auction event on Sunday, July 29, starting at 1 p.m. Eastern Time. Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.com.

“You know what they say about the snowbirds from the North. Before they move south, they sell the rest and keep the best. The estate of a prominent dealer, which we are featuring in our July 29 auction, is an example of just that,” said B. Langston’s auctioneer, Anthony Grogan.

The sale includes around 300 lots of ivory, bronzes, clocks, jewelry, fine art and quality Asian art. Among the highlights is a pair of beautiful Kutani censers estimated at $2,000-$3,000.

Another fine Asian entry is the carved ivory figurine of the Immortal He Xiangu, dating from the Republic Period, circa 1900-1925. Its presale estimate is $1,500-$2,000.

An outstanding European artwork is the signed Auguste Moreau bronze statue surmounted on a marble base with a clock marked ‘Reims’ and movements by A D Mougin, with the distinction ‘Deux Medailles.’ It is expected to make $4,000-$5,000 at auction.

For additional information on any item in the sale, call B. Langston’s at 904-642-1003 or e-mail info@blangston.com.

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

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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


Pair of Kutani censers, est. $2,000-$3,000. B. Langston's image.
Pair of Kutani censers, est. $2,000-$3,000. B. Langston’s image.
Aug. Moreau bronze statue surmounted on a marble-base clock, marked 'Reims.' Est. $4,000-$5,000. B. Langston's image.
Aug. Moreau bronze statue surmounted on a marble-base clock, marked ‘Reims.’ Est. $4,000-$5,000. B. Langston’s image.