Baldwin’s to sell British India coin collection Sept. 25-26

Lot 2459 - British India, gold mohur, 1841C, obverse ‘VICTORIA QUEEN,’ mint state. Estimate: £3,500-£4,500. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 2459 - British India, gold mohur, 1841C, obverse ‘VICTORIA QUEEN,’ mint state. Estimate: £3,500-£4,500. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 2459 – British India, gold mohur, 1841C, obverse ‘VICTORIA QUEEN,’ mint state. Estimate: £3,500-£4,500. Baldwin’s image.

LONDON – The third and concluding part of the prestigious David Fore collection will be the second of three significant auctions offered by Baldwin’s as the Official Coinex Auctioneer 2013. The final part of this unique collection will be sold on Sept. 25-26 at the CIPFA Conference Centre, and will feature Circulating Coins of British India, the East India Co. Presidencies and the India Native States. This auction will offer buyers a final opportunity to acquire rare and exciting pieces from this highly esteemed collection.

LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding.

This auction follows on from the extremely successful sale of parts one and two of the collection, which achieved a combined hammer total in excess of £2 million. Cultivated over 35 years by a passionate collector and a dedicated numismatist, the most extensive and finest grade of British Indian coins can be found in this collection, and this closing auction is certain to draw significant international interest.

This auction presents potential buyers with a comprehensive record of Indian currency coins across several centuries. The opening section consists of a fine selection of Early Indian coins covering the Kushan, Gupta and post-medieval periods, with an extensive selection of Mughal mohurs and rupees. Continuing through to the 18th and 19th centuries there is a complete run of all dates in the British India series, as well as Bombay Presidency coins from the period 1741-1771, and a significant run of Madras pieces between 1807 and 1808.

Several attractive pieces from the Princely States, with fine examples of Awadh gold mohurs and ashrafi, are available, which are sure to entice some strong bidding. The remarkable and detailed imagery of mermaids, lions and sea creatures on the gold ashrafi pieces as in Lot 1153 will appeal to many collectors.

Lot 1268, an AH 1176 Year 4, Monghyr, is one of the most important gold mohurs in the series. The noted numismatist, Dr. Paul Stevens, has written extensively on the coins of the Bengal Presidency. In his book on the subject he discusses the events surrounding the decision by the Nawab of Bengal, Mir Kasim Ali Khan, to move his capital to Monghyr in 1761. This decision led to a dispute with British forces resulting in the 1763 capture of the Nawab’s newly established fort. The year on this coin, AH 1176, ended on July 11, 1763, only a few months before the British occupation, indicating that this piece was issued by the Nawab during this short period in Monghyr. This is a rare example, and one of the earliest known coins of the Bengal Presidency, in extremely fine condition. The coin carries a presale estimate of £4,000-£6,000.

Highlights from the British India offering include lot 2362, a William IIII silver rupee of 1840, and estimated to sell for £5,000-£8,000, and lot 2453, a stunning gold mohur of 1835 estimated at £5,000-£7,000.

This final auction promises buyers an opportunity to purchase items from what is the most complete and high-grade collection of Indian coins to come on the market in recent years. Each of the 1,400 lots on offer in this final part is of the highest quality and grade available.

The Coinex exhibition is organized by the British Numismatic Trade Association and more information can be found on their website at http://www.bnta.net.

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


Lot 2459 - British India, gold mohur, 1841C, obverse ‘VICTORIA QUEEN,’ mint state. Estimate: £3,500-£4,500. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 2459 – British India, gold mohur, 1841C, obverse ‘VICTORIA QUEEN,’ mint state. Estimate: £3,500-£4,500. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 1366 - Princely States, Gohad, broad-flan gold mohur, 25mm, struck by the local Jat ruler in the name of Shah ‘Alam II, AH 1188 year 16. Estimate: £3,000-£4,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 1366 – Princely States, Gohad, broad-flan gold mohur, 25mm, struck by the local Jat ruler in the name of Shah ‘Alam II, AH 1188 year 16. Estimate: £3,000-£4,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 1619 - Princely States, Mysore, Tipu sultan, silver double rupee Patan, AH 1199 year 3. Estimate: £1,500-£2,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 1619 – Princely States, Mysore, Tipu sultan, silver double rupee Patan, AH 1199 year 3. Estimate: £1,500-£2,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 2362 - British India, silver rupee mule, 1840, obverse: William IV, reverse: Victoria. Estimate: £5,000-£8,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 2362 – British India, silver rupee mule, 1840, obverse: William IV, reverse: Victoria. Estimate: £5,000-£8,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 2448 - British India, silver rupee, 1939B, obverse: ‘GEORGE VI KING EMPEROR,’ Estimate: £4,000-£6,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 2448 – British India, silver rupee, 1939B, obverse: ‘GEORGE VI KING EMPEROR,’ Estimate: £4,000-£6,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 1117 - Princely States. Assam, Brajnatha Simha (SE 1739-1740; 1817-1818 AD), gold mohur, SK 1739, Assamese legends on both sides, rev lion running to left. Estimate: £2,000-£3,000. Baldwin's image.

Lot 1117 – Princely States. Assam, Brajnatha Simha (SE 1739-1740; 1817-1818 AD), gold mohur, SK 1739, Assamese legends on both sides, rev lion running to left. Estimate: £2,000-£3,000. Baldwin’s image.

Lot 1153 - Princely States, Awadh, Wajid ‘Ali Shah, Gold Ashrafi, struck at Lukhnow, mintname Mulk Awadh Bait al-Saltana Lakhnau, AH 1264 Year 2. Baldwin's image.

Lot 1153 – Princely States, Awadh, Wajid ‘Ali Shah, Gold Ashrafi, struck at Lukhnow, mintname Mulk Awadh Bait al-Saltana Lakhnau, AH 1264 Year 2. Baldwin’s image.

Phila. estate furniture, art, gold coins on tap at Stephenson’s, Sept. 20

Pair of Sevres mantel urns. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Pair of Sevres mantel urns. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Pair of Sevres mantel urns. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

SOUTHAMPTON, Pa. – Stephenson’s auction gallery in suburban Philadelphia is brimming with estate antiques, furniture, fine and decorative art; jewelry and gold coins from local upscale residences, all of which will be auctioned on Friday, September 20th. The sale will begin at 2 p.m. Eastern Time, with all forms of bidding available, including live via the Internet through LiveAuctioneers.

Quality furniture of every imaginable style will be on hand for bidders’ perusal. For those with a taste for modern design, there’s a sleek 3-piece mid-century living room suite in the style of LeCorbusier. It’s a compatible choice alongside a 1960s Arco floor lamp designed by Achille and Pier Castiglione. Other highlights in this section include a set of four Frem Rojle Danish modern chairs, a 5-piece mid-century modern teak bedroom set with wicker drawer fronts and marble-top nightstands; and a Lucite and chrome magazine rack.

A wealth of traditional furniture will cross the auction block, including a pair of leather Chippendale-style wing chairs, a 7-piece walnut Louis XV-style dining room set, an English mahogany secretary/desk, and two excellent-quality sideboards – one in Empire style, the other of oak with a large, mirrored backsplash and paw feet.

The list of furniture highlights goes on – a 1920s English 3-piece leather-top faux books coffee table and end tables set, a Kittinger walnut Chippendale-style 4-drawer chest, a 19th-century English cherry linen press, an Arts & Crafts oak desk, circa-1900 oak double-glass-door bookcase with turned “rope” side columns, and a white leather sectional sofa by Carson’s.

The fine art section displays a multitude of media and painting styles. A few of the better artworks include a Walter Frederick Osborne (attrib.) oil-on-canvas interior scene with seated figure, a Henry Campotosto (attrib.) oil titled “A Spring Day at Loch Lubnaig,” a Pierre Bonnard lithograph from original etching, and a pair of Chinese ancestor paintings on silk. Still others include a Y.B. Henry oil-on-canvas wharf scene with flower seller, an 1880s poster from the Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia announcing the appearance of “Sold Smith Russell – Distinguished Comedian,” and numerous other European and American paintings.

An unusually broad selection of sculptures and bronzes will be auctioned. It includes an American School bronze head of an eagle, a John Schackerman wood sculpture of a torso, and two French Art Deco works: a Charles Charles spelter sculpture on marble base and a Louis Riche bronze.

With the holidays just around the corner, it’s not to soon to be shopping for gleaming silver and china to set out on holiday tables. The array of sterling silver includes: a Black Starr & Frost oval bowl, Watson Co. footed bowl, Saart Bros. 5- piece tea and coffee service, Dominick & Haff “Queen Anne, Plain” flatware service for 12, set of nine Reed & Barton bread plates in the “Hawthorn” pattern, a 23in handled tray, and both a handled basket and bonbon bowl by Gorham. Other highlights include a Tiffany & Co. large sugar sifter in the Wave Edge pattern, a Storch & Sinsheimer .800 silver-handled figural pierced bowl and a Vienna Austria .800 silver 110-piece flatware set. A pair of seven-light, silver-plated candelabra features a grape-and-leaf decoration on its branching arms.

The fine china section is led by a 45-piece set of Royal Copenhagen dinnerware in the “Henriette” pattern and also includes china sets, dessert plates and service pieces by Royal Crown Derby, Doulton Burslem, Meissen, Adams and Lenox. The holiday table is complete with the addition of a light-catching American brilliant-cut glass punchbowl, pitchers and vases.

A vast selection of decorative art includes Old Paris porcelain urns, Armani figurines, Swarovski crystal figurines, Bing & Grondahl porcelain figurines including “Actor” signed Axel Locher, Dahl Jensen porcelain figurines, a Royal Doulton seated fox, Chinese export ginger jars, and Royal Copenhagen porcelain figurines including an 1145-color Wee Willie Winkie and Sandman.

Stephenson’s is known for its outstanding Estate Jewelry division and the uncompromising quality of pieces presented in its sales. The September 20 auction includes a number of fine rings: an early 20th-century 1¾-carat mine-cut, bezel-set diamond solitaire yellow gold ring, an Art Deco 1.4-carat diamond solitaire ring in 14K yellow gold mounting, and an ornate lady’s platinum wedding band. Additionally, there are gold and diamond stickpins, a contemporary white gold diamond bangle bracelet, gold chains, bracelets and earrings, lavaliers, and hand-carved cameos in 14K-gold mountings.

The correct time will be easily to track at the auction. Fine watches include an Omega Dynamic wristwatch, lady’s Bulova 14K gold bracelet watch, and a lady’s Just 18K gold-cased wristwatch with two-tone gold filled band. Also featured are a J.E. Caldwell & Co. 14K gold pocket watch, Illinois Bunn Special railroad pocket watch and an Art Deco penholder with Elgin clock. Three St. Gaudens $20 gold coins – one from 1925 and two from 1927 – join the luxury lineup, which also includes mink stoles and a full-length mink coat.

A pair of brass seated dog andirons, English scales, textiles, a Swiss music box with six airs, and a leaded-glass oak door with matching transom typify the many varied categories that deserve a close look in this interesting, 434-lot sale.

Stephenson’s Friday, September 20 Autumn Antiques & Decorative Arts Auction will begin at 2 p.m. Eastern time. The company’s gallery is located at 1005 Industrial Blvd., Southampton, PA 18966. Inspection is on Thursday, September 19, from 3-6 p.m., and on auction day from 1-2 p.m.

All forms of bidding will be available, including live via the Internet through LiveAuctioneers. View the fully illustrated online catalog and sign up to bid absentee or live via the Internet at www.liveauctioneers.com.

For additional information on any auction lot, to leave an absentee bid or arrange for a phone line on auction day, call Cindy Stephenson at 215-322-6182 or e-mail info@stephensonsauction.com. Online: www.stephensonsauction.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 Sevres mantel urns. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Pair of Sevres mantel urns. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

Royal Copenhagen Wee Willie Winkie. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Royal Copenhagen Wee Willie Winkie. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

Iridescent blue art glass vase. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Iridescent blue art glass vase. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

Grouping of three sterling silver and .800 silver tea strainers. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Grouping of three sterling silver and .800 silver tea strainers. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

1927 U.S. Saint-Gaudens $20 gold piece. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

1927 U.S. Saint-Gaudens $20 gold piece. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

Art Deco gold and diamond solitaire ring. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Art Deco gold and diamond solitaire ring. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

Attributed to Walter F. (Frederick) Osborne, oil on canvas. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Attributed to Walter F. (Frederick) Osborne, oil on canvas. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

Kittinger Williamsburg Chippendale-style mahogany four-poster bed. Stephenson's Auctioneers image.

Kittinger Williamsburg Chippendale-style mahogany four-poster bed. Stephenson’s Auctioneers image.

 

Reading the Streets: KM by Russell King

Russell King, New York City. Photo via Loftygoalsnyc.com.
Russell King, New York City. Photo via Loftygoalsnyc.com.
Russell King, New York City. Photo via Loftygoalsnyc.com.

NEW YORK – A mysterious woman bathed in pink light stared out mysteriously from an Orchard Street doorway, wedged so tightly that when I tried to take a picture, I found myself contorting in uncomfortable directions, attracting stares from nearby construction workers. Fortunately, the woman didn’t mind, as she was on a poster created by street artist Russell King.

The woman has the symmetrical features and practiced stare of a model. A halo of fuchsia light envelopes her features, which would make most of us look as if we were melting, only serves to make her more interesting, a spotlight for her features, much more sharply rendered than many street portraits I’ve seen. Her Cupid’s bow lips and blue eyes were so clear, it seemed like a photograph.

The slickness of the lighting and the very clearly labeled signature made me think that my interest was the result of a particularly effective guerrilla marketing campaign for a mysterious product (clothing? vodka?) called KM by Russell King. The overall effect seemed so art directed I thought, this has to be an ad.

While the subject, Karolina Muller, is in fact a model, the picture isn’t selling anything. It turns out that Mr. King is simply talented at figure drawing, and that perhaps I am too cynical.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Russell King, New York City. Photo via Loftygoalsnyc.com.
Russell King, New York City. Photo via Loftygoalsnyc.com.
Russell King, New York City. Photo by Ilana Novick.
Russell King, New York City. Photo by Ilana Novick.
Russell King, New York City. Photo by Ilana Novick.
Russell King, New York City. Photo by Ilana Novick.
Russell King, New York City. Photo via Street Art NYC: http://streetartnyc.org/blog/2012/02/07/speaking-with-russell-king/
Russell King, New York City. Photo via Street Art NYC: http://streetartnyc.org/blog/2012/02/07/speaking-with-russell-king/

Jewelry, autographs starring at Atlanta Auction, Sept. 28

Joan Crawford autographed photo. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Joan Crawford autographed photo. Atlantic Auction Co. image.
Joan Crawford autographed photo. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

ATLANTA – On Saturday, Sept. 28, Atlanta Auction Co. will present another impressive offering of top quality lots. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet Live bidding. The auction will begin at 10 a.m. Eastern.

Estate jewelry will consist of diamond rings, a vintage red coral set, an Indian Head gold ring, a jade cicada, vintage Chinese alexandrite. There will also be a fine selection of sterling silver items.

Historical items will include samurai swords, Russian icons, a signed 1927 banquet program honoring Charles Lindbergh, a Troop A Scrapbook by Charles F. Roe, Nixon Wheaton campaign bottles and a Civil War bullet found at the site of a cavalry charge in Lovejoy, Ga. in 1864.

Notable autographs in the auction include Ann Miller, Ann Sheridan, Frank Sinatra, Eddie Cantor, Charlie Kelly, Tommy Dorsey, Sammy Kaye, Phil Rizzo and Liberace,

Miscellaneous items include a bronze Icarus cat, a mink jacket, St. Louis crystal, Lalique glass, a large carved Quan Yin head, carved masks and cast-iron banks.

Atlanta Auction Co. is uniquely equipped to handle any type of auction in today’s marketplace and has been performing auctions for over 18 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


Joan Crawford autographed photo. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Joan Crawford autographed photo. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

St. Louis crystal lion head with jeweled eyes. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

St. Louis crystal lion head with jeweled eyes. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Vintage red coral and turquoise jewelry. Atlantic Auction Co. image.
Limoges fish set. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Limoges fish set. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Samurai sword. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Samurai sword. Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Atlantic Auction Co. image.

Atlantic Auction Co. image.

1965 Corvette convertible, excellent condition, 85,000 miles. Atlanta Auction Co. image.

1965 Corvette convertible, excellent condition, 85,000 miles. Atlanta Auction Co. image.

Kovels Antiques & Collecting: Week of Sept. 16, 2013

Garden stools have become popular again, and buyers use them indoors or outdoors. This blue porcelain antique Chinese stool sold for $1,210 at a Leland Little auction in Hillsborough, N.C.
Garden stools have become popular again, and buyers use them indoors or outdoors. This blue porcelain antique Chinese stool sold for $1,210 at a Leland Little auction in Hillsborough, N.C.
Garden stools have become popular again, and buyers use them indoors or outdoors. This blue porcelain antique Chinese stool sold for $1,210 at a Leland Little auction in Hillsborough, N.C.

BEACHWOOD, Ohio – Garden seats shaped like a barrel are being made today from porcelain, pottery, plastic, rattan and even plaster. They are used in a living room as a coffee table, in a powder room as a pedestal to hold towels, or inside or outside as a seat.

The original antique “zuodun,” a Chinese barrel seat, was a drum made with stretched skin tops held by nails and trimmed with nail heads. Many modern barrel seats have a row of round bumps that imitate old nail heads. Most common are white porcelain “barrels” decorated with blue designs, often hand-painted. A 19-inch-high porcelain garden stool made in about 1900 sold for $1,210 at a Leland Little auction last December. The porcelain is blue with white flowers and birds. The stool has pierced decorations and bumps that resemble nail heads.

Q: When I lived in the north woods, I came across a pile of half-buried old bottles along a logging road. One of them was a Dr Pepper bottle. There is no label on it, only raised letters and numbers. It reads “Dr Pepper, Good for Life.” On the back is a circle with the numbers 10, 2 and 4. The bottom reads “Fairmont, Minn.” Can you tell me something about it and if it’s worth anything?

A: The Dr Pepper soft drink was first served in Waco, Texas, in 1885 and marketed nationally in 1904. The period after “Dr” was used on and off in logos, then removed entirely in the 1950s. Your Dr Pepper bottle dates from between 1927 and 1934. During this time period, embossed or “raised” logos and letters were used on the brand’s bottles, along with the bottling city’s name on the bottom. The 10-2-4 marketing idea for Dr Pepper was introduced in 1926 and stands for “Drink a Bite to Eat at 10, 2 and 4 o’Clock.” The circle represents a clock dial. Dr Pepper bottles with raised letters like yours can sell for up to $50.

Q: I have a leaf-shaped brooch that belonged to my mother. It’s marked “McClelland Barclay.” Can you tell me when it was made and what it’s worth?

A: McClelland Barclay (1891-1942) worked in New York City as a commercial artist and magazine illustrator. He started designing jewelry in the late 1930s. His designs were made by the Rice-Weiner Co. from 1939 to 1943. They ranged from gilt-metal Art Moderne pieces in 1939 to sterling-silver stylized animal designs in 1943. Pieces usually were marked with Barclay’s name. He also designed metal bookends, ashtrays, desk sets and lamps signed with his name. Barclay was a U.S. Navy officer during World War II. He died when his ship was torpedoed near the Solomon Islands. After Barclay’s death, Rice-Weiner made a line of jewelry called “Barclay” that was influenced by his earlier designs. A McClelland Barclay pin sells for about $200.

Q: I would like help in placing a value on a tea set marked “Phoenix Ware, Made in England, T.F. & S. Ltd.” I have the tray, six dessert plates, six cups and saucers, the cream pitcher and the sugar bowl. Two cups are broken, but I have the pieces.

A: The mark on your tea set was used by Thomas Forester & Sons Ltd. at the Phoenix Works in Longton, Staffordshire, England. Thomas Forester opened a pottery in Longton in 1877 and built the Phoenix Works in 1879. The name of the company became Thomas Forester & Sons after his sons joined the business in 1883. The pottery closed in 1959. Even if the set were perfect, the 21 pieces would sell for less than $100.

Q: I have a set of 14-inch-square cardboard cards titled “Your Planned Conditioning Program.” They’re at least 60 years old. Each card pictures an athlete or sports star explaining how to do a conditioning exercise. Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra and Whitey Lockman are among the baseball players. What is the set worth?

A: A complete set of the cards, including its accompanying brochure, was up for auction a few years ago with a minimum bid of $50. It didn’t sell. But don’t throw away your set—someone out there might be interested in buying it. But you won’t get a lot of money for it.

Q: I have had a Hummel wall plaque of an angel and two children since the 1950s. It has the Goebel full-bee mark and the word “Germany” on the back. A wide crown mark with “WG” also is stamped on it. I learned from a Hummel price guide that the design never went into production. The book said that there are “no specimens known.” Value?

A: Your plaque is thought to be a prototype of a Hummel design called “Angel with Two Children at Feet.” Factory records say it was designed in 1938 by Reinhold Unger, but it may not have been approved for regular production. A similar production model is listed in a 1950 Goebel catalog, but not as a Hummel. Talk to an auction house or shop that specializes in Hummels. Your plaque may be a very exciting find—or it may be a variation, or even a fake. Let us know what happens.

Tip: If you are buying a safe to store coins, jewelry, valuable papers, money, rare sports cards or other valuables, don’t forget that a thief can just carry a safe away if it is lightweight and not bolted to a wall or floor. We laughed at the full-page ad in our local newspaper that showed a mailman carrying a boxed new safe to the buyer’s front door. A large safe, however, may be too heavy to put anywhere but in the garage or basement and too big to fit through a standard door.

Take advantage of a free listing for your group to announce events or to find antique shows and other events. Go to Kovels.com/calendar to find and plan your antiquing trips.

Terry Kovel answers as many questions as possible through the column. By sending a letter with a question, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names, addresses or email addresses will not be published. We cannot guarantee the return of any photograph, but if a stamped envelope is included, we will try. The volume of mail makes personal answers or appraisals impossible. Write to Kovels, Auction Central News, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019.

CURRENT PRICES

Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions.

  • Land O’Lakes cheese box, wooden, blue letters, printed on all four sides, 10 x 3 x 3 inches, $20.
  • Star of David pin, mother-of-pearl, c. 1955, 2-inch square, $40.
  • Milk glass sugar shaker, owl shape, 6 1/4 inches, $45.
  • Tonic bottle, Ackers English remedy, cobalt blue, W.H. Hooker & Co., 2 x 5 1/2 inches, $70.
  • Dedham Pottery creamer, rabbits, blue and white, handle, 3 1/3 inches, $130.
  • Masonic ring, 10K gold, “YOD” emblem inside black triangle, 14th degree, Scottish Rite, size 11, $300.
  • Mrs. Beasley doll, vinyl and cloth, blue polka dot dress, apron, glasses, pull-cord voice, Mattel, box, 1967, 22 inches, $385.
  • Howdy Doody wristwatch, Howdy’s portrait, metal case, green vinyl band, c. 1950, 3 3/4 x 6 3/4 inches, $410.
  • Banjo clock, federal style, mahogany, giltwood, eagle finial, aurora enamel panel, Philip Stolze, Pleasantville, N.Y., 44 1/2 inches, $2,610.
  • Chippendale sofa, mahogany, pine, camel back, scrolled arms, molded legs, silk upholstery, c. 1790, 36 x 77 inches, $5,170.

Kovels’ Advertising Collectibles Price List has more than 10,000 current prices of your favorite advertising collectibles, from boxes and bins to trays and tins. More than 400 categories are organized by brand name, company name, product or collectible. Plus 300 photographs, logos and trademarks. A 16-page color insert features important advertising collectibles. Clubs, publications, resources and a full index. Available at your bookstore; online at Kovels.com; by phone at 800-303-1996; or send $16.95 plus $4.95 postage to Kovels, P.O. Box 22900, Beachwood, OH 44122.

© 2013 by Cowles Syndicate Inc.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Garden stools have become popular again, and buyers use them indoors or outdoors. This blue porcelain antique Chinese stool sold for $1,210 at a Leland Little auction in Hillsborough, N.C.
Garden stools have become popular again, and buyers use them indoors or outdoors. This blue porcelain antique Chinese stool sold for $1,210 at a Leland Little auction in Hillsborough, N.C.

Alaska mural features fireweed transformation

Dan Coe, center, stands with the assistants who helped him paint the fireweed mural, Karen Simpson, left, and daughter Rachel Coe, right. The six-panel mural shows the progression of fireweed from flower to fluff over the growing season. Image by Michael Walsh.
Dan Coe, center, stands with the assistants who helped him paint the fireweed mural, Karen Simpson, left, and daughter Rachel Coe, right. The six-panel mural shows the progression of fireweed from flower to fluff over the growing season. Image by Michael Walsh.
Dan Coe, center, stands with the assistants who helped him paint the fireweed mural, Karen Simpson, left, and daughter Rachel Coe, right. The six-panel mural shows the progression of fireweed from flower to fluff over the growing season. Image by Michael Walsh.

HOMER, Alaska (AP) – As summer slides into fall, Alaskans track the fading of the season by an iconic flower and plant: the persistent, sturdy fireweed. Weeks ago, fireweed lost its flowers and has now gone to fluff, its stems and leaves turning into red tinged with golden. Only summer-long visitors or residents can actually see that transformation. Thanks to a new mural by Homer artist Dan Coe, that change has been visualized. Coe installed the six-panel mural in late August on the Driftwood RV Park fence on Bunnell Avenue.

“We kind of mark our summers by fireweed,” he said of his mural.

Coe’s mural is the first of several works of art in Bunnell Street Arts Center’s Old Town AIR, or artist in residence, project. Funded by a $150,000 grant from ArtPlace America, Old Town Air seeks to inspire and create art and artistic events in the historic neighborhood south of the Sterling Highway near Bishop’s Beach. Poet Wendy Erd also is doing a residency, “Poetry on the Trail,” to create poems in place along the Beluga Slough trail.

The idea for a mural came when Coe visited Bunnell Street Arts Center earlier this year and talked with director Asia Freeman about Old Town AIR. Freeman mentioned putting a mural on the Driftwood RV Park that’s just across the street from the arts center.

“It went from there. It was talking to Asia Freeman that started the whole thing,” Coe said.

Like many Homer artists, Coe, 51, aspires to create and make a living from fine art. But also like many Homer artists, he makes money from commercial applications of his art, mainly painting custom signs. Through his business, Handpainted Design, Coe has done more than 100 signs on the lower Kenai Peninsula.

Coe and his wife Nancy moved to Alaska in 2001 and later to Homer in 2004. Coe learned the art trade growing up in Pennsylvania. In the 1980s with his friend Alex Hutnik, he started a custom tie-dyed clothing business called the Baba Klub. He later worked the night shift for the Monroeville Penny Saver, drawing ads for the paper. During the day he painted landscapes on otherwise plain wood furniture. Customers began demanding northwest images.

In 2000, Dan and his wife Nancy visited Alaska to see the source of those images and then moved here with their family in 2001. They now have nine children, six still at home. As with many Homer residents, all it took was rounding the hill to fall in love with Kachemak Bay.

Dan Coe first became known for his handpainted furniture. Later, after a commission to paint a sign for the Pregnancy Center on Bartlett Street, Coe moved into sign painting. He was conscious of the niche artist Brad Hughes had carved painting custom signs, but Hughes said he didn’t want to do that anymore. Coe asked Hughes for tips on painting signs and learned techniques like what kind of material to use and how to paint signs that could stand up to Homer’s wet and cold winters. He credits Hughes for much of what he learned about the craft of painting signs.

Unlike traditional sign makers, Coe doesn’t hand letter his signs. Rather, he designs the signs with images and lettering and paints the entire thing.

“Basically, all my signs have been paintings of signs,” Coe said.

For each sign and customer, Coe tries to make the sign original and not like other signs. While the signs have a utilitarian aspect, they also have fine art elements.

“I guess it’s a passive-aggressive way of getting people to view my art,” he said.

After the installation on Aug. 29, Coe talked about painting the mural and how he incorporated sign-painting techniques into it. His initial idea had been discrete panels of fireweed. He kept the idea of separate panels, but with the images connected. Moving from left to right, the painting changes from new green stalks to flowers and then fluff.

His idea, Coe said, was “to capture the experience of fireweed, the movement, the way color changes, the way the blossoms flutter.”

Coe sketched out a 14-inch-by-16-inch mock-up of the design, and then using a graphics program, took a digital image and stretched it out to 205-inches-by-17-inches and broke it up into panels. From that he printed it out as a collection of 8 1/2-inch-by-11-inch prints.

“This is the dirty little secret of how I make signs,” he said.

With his assistants, Karen Simpson and his daughter, Rachel Coe, he taped together the prints so he had one big print. Using carbon paper, they then traced the big print onto medium density overlay, or MDO, board. Coe credited his assistants with much of the work on the mural, including installation.

In precomputer days, sign painters would expand small sketches onto big canvases using an overhead projector, Coe said.

“I guess I kind of do old world using new-school methods,” he said.

Simpson and Rachel Coe then did the underpainting using Payne’s gray acrylic paint, a dark indigo color. Coe painted the finer details over that. He purposely went wild with the fireweed leaves, using classic impressionistic techniques, he said.

“You stand in front of them and they’re psychedelic,” Coe said. “This outdoor installation art is pretty cool.”

Coe could have done one giant mural, as he did on the east wall of AJ’s OldTown Steakhouse. Instead, he went back to his newspaper advertising roots, and broke the image up into panels. That concept—where information comes across in blocks of text or art—has become pervasive in modern graphic art, such as smart phone apps or website design, he said. The fireweed mural is something like a giant comic strip.

“I think the panel way of doing murals is really cool,” Coe said. “Media is commonplace. Art is the exception.”

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Information from: The Homer (Alaska) News, http://www.homernews.com

Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-09-14-13 1212GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


Dan Coe, center, stands with the assistants who helped him paint the fireweed mural, Karen Simpson, left, and daughter Rachel Coe, right. The six-panel mural shows the progression of fireweed from flower to fluff over the growing season. Image by Michael Walsh.
Dan Coe, center, stands with the assistants who helped him paint the fireweed mural, Karen Simpson, left, and daughter Rachel Coe, right. The six-panel mural shows the progression of fireweed from flower to fluff over the growing season. Image by Michael Walsh.
Fireweed as it appears in the fall near a roadside in Alaska. Image by Joseph N. Hall, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Fireweed as it appears in the fall near a roadside in Alaska. Image by Joseph N. Hall, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

After delay, Italy loans Botticelli masterpiece to Israel

Botticelli masterpiece 'The Annunciation of San Martino alla Scala.' Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Botticelli masterpiece 'The Annunciation of San Martino alla Scala.' Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Botticelli masterpiece ‘The Annunciation of San Martino alla Scala.’ Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

JERUSALEM (AP) – An aide to Israel’s culture minister says Italy will loan a Botticelli masterpiece to Israel as scheduled, after delaying the loan over worries about Syria.

Italy’s culture ministry said this month it would not send the 15th-century The Annunciation of San Martino alla Scala to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem due to geopolitical and logistical considerations.

But Meir Bardugo, aide to Culture Minister Limor Livnat, said Sunday that the minister worked “behind the scenes intensively” to convince Italy the work would be safe.

The head of the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Antonio Natali, told the ANSA news agency on Saturday that the work had left Italy a few days ago bound for Jerusalem.

Israel Museum Director James Snyder said Sunday that the four-month exhibit will open Tuesday.

Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-09-15-13 1243GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Botticelli masterpiece 'The Annunciation of San Martino alla Scala.' Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Botticelli masterpiece ‘The Annunciation of San Martino alla Scala.’ Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

George Caleb Bingham portraits adorn Kan. courthouse

George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) – A renovation project breathed new life into the Jackson County Truman Courthouse in Independence, but it was the acquisition of several paintings by a 19th century Missouri artist that makes the face-lift truly remarkable, Jackson County Executive Mike Sanders said.

The portraits of three judges are among 27 works by George Caleb Bingham that hang in several second-floor rooms that have been transformed into an art gallery, The Kansas City Star reported. Most of the paintings are owned by Ken McClain, an Independence lawyer and developer.

“Bingham is recognized as a national treasure, but his Jackson County roots are not focused on that frequently,” McClain said of the artist, who maintained a studio in his Independence home, later served as a Kansas City police commissioner and is buried in Union Cemetery. “I thought the courthouse would be an appropriate place for a museum dedicated to him.”

Sanders worked with McClain to set aside space during renovations for the gallery. Ceiling-mounted pendant lamps that harken back to the courthouse’s 1933 renovation hang alongside track lighting, and long blinds have been installed on the windows to protect the paintings, some of which are about 150 years old.

“Ken’s vision has moved the courthouse renovation from a great project to an incredible one, increasing its value exponentially,” Sanders said. “Visitors will come here from all over the country.”

The nonprofit museum will be administered by its own board of directors. The Bingham pieces make up the museum’s principal holdings, while other works are on loan from the State Historical Society of Missouri and the Jackson County Historical Society.

Bingham started painting around 1830 and often earned his living by doing portraits. His other works include paintings such as The Jolly Flatboatmen and The County Election.

McClain started collecting Bingham portraits about eight years ago, including some that had been handed down by generations and didn’t always receive the best care.

Patricia Moss, a Washington state fine arts investigator who grew up in Kansas City, helped McClain track down a Bingham portrait of 19th century Kansas City banker Thomas Hoyle Mastin, who also was an investor in The Kansas City Times.

Moss found the portrait in 2007 in a Texas Gulf Coast antique shop operated by the wife of a family descendant and her business partner.

The business partner, who hadn’t liked the painting, had it taken down and put into a storeroom. Various objects placed on the canvas resulted in a gash in the portrait’s lower left-hand corner.

A Minneapolis conservator restored the Mastin portrait, which hangs in the new museum along with before-and-after images that illustrate the painting’s rescue and restoration.

McClain said he is fulfilling the wishes of Bingham, who believed the appreciation of fine art shouldn’t be reserved for those who can afford to own it.

“Bingham’s paintings need to be seen, not be hidden away in basements,” he said.

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Information from: The Kansas City Star, http://www.kcstar.com

Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-09-14-13 1727GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), self-portrait of the artist, St. Louis Art Museum. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
'The County Election' by George Caleb Bingham, which is said to depict an election in 1850 in Saline County, Mo. St. Louis Art museum, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
‘The County Election’ by George Caleb Bingham, which is said to depict an election in 1850 in Saline County, Mo. St. Louis Art museum, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.