Big Picasso painting to move to NY museum, ending dispute

The New-York Historical Society on the corner of Central Park West and 77th Street now has a new entrance and other upgrades. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
The New-York Historical Society on the corner of Central Park West and 77th Street now has a new entrance and other upgrades. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
The New-York Historical Society on the corner of Central Park West and 77th Street now has a new entrance and other upgrades. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

NEW YORK (AP) – A stage curtain believed to be the biggest Pablo Picasso painting in the United States is moving to a museum after a dispute over whether it could stay in its longtime spot in the storied Four Seasons restaurant, the painting’s owner announced Thursday.

The 19-by-20-foot curtain, called Le Tricorne, is being donated to the New-York Historical Society, where it’s expected to go on display after some conservation work, painting owner the Landmarks Conservancy said. The timetable isn’t clear; the groups still are working out the arrangements.

The agreement will keep the painting, which is so familiar a sight that its Four Seasons berth is known as “Picasso Alley.” The pact also resolves a lawsuit that caused a stir among art lovers and preservationists, pitting the Landmarks Conservancy against a real estate magnate known as an art patron.

“It’s going to be at a good home, where even more people will see it,” conservancy President Peg Breen said. Historical Society President Louise Mirrer called the painting “an icon of New York for more than half a century, embodying both an influential social milieu and an important moment in the city’s cultural development.”

Picasso painted the curtain in 1919 for Le Tricorne, or “three-cornered hat,” a ballet created by the avant-garde, Paris-based Ballet Russes troupe. The painting depicts the aftermath of a bullfight.

Although praised at $1.6 million in 2008, the painting isn’t considered one of Picasso’s greatest pieces but stands as a major example of his theatrical set work, experts say. And it has graced the Four Seasons’ landmarked, modernist interior since its 1959 opening. The painting itself isn’t landmarked.

The midtown Manhattan restaurant, unaffiliated with the nearby Four Seasons hotel, is a power-lunch hotspot that has hosted high-wattage diners ranging from President Bill Clinton to Madonna.

The restaurant’s landlord, RFR Holding Corp. – co-founded by state Council on the Arts Chairman Aby Rosen – recently said the curtain had to be moved for repairs to the wall behind it. The Landmarks Conservancy sued RFR to try to stop the move, disputing the extent of the wall damage and saying the move could destroy the brittle canvas.

The preservation group’s concerns have been somewhat assuaged by the current plan, which involves carefully wrapping the painting on a huge roller and having conservators do any needed restoration work, Breen said. Rosen is paying for it all, said Breen, who wouldn’t disclose the estimated cost.

Through a spokeswoman, Rosen and RFR declined to comment on the agreement, first reported by The New York Times.

Some art and architecture critics had decried the move, at least as initially planned, though others took the landlord’s side. Rosen, an art collector whom the Landmarks Conservancy itself once honored as a preservationist, told the Times in March the outcry had “elevated this into something that it shouldn’t be.”

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Associated Press writer Ula Ilnytzky contributed to this report.

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Reach Jennifer Peltz on Twitter (at)jennpeltz.

Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-06-12-14 1850GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The New-York Historical Society on the corner of Central Park West and 77th Street now has a new entrance and other upgrades. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
The New-York Historical Society on the corner of Central Park West and 77th Street now has a new entrance and other upgrades. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Ewbank’s to sell art collection of renowned curator June 27

Sir Terry Frost R.A., British (1915-2003), untitled, unfinished oil and collage. Estimate: £10,000-20,000. Ewbank’s image.
Sir Terry Frost R.A., British (1915-2003), untitled, unfinished oil and collage. Estimate: £10,000-20,000. Ewbank’s image.

Sir Terry Frost R.A., British (1915-2003), untitled, unfinished oil and collage. Estimate: £10,000-20,000. Ewbank’s image.

SURREY, UK – On June 27, Ewbank’s, Surrey’s premier auctioneer of fine art and antiques, will sell the Michael Compton Collection of postwar and contemporary art, a group of 28 works by luminaries Roy Lichtenstein, Marcel Broodthaers, Terry Frost, Henry Moore, Richard Long, Victor Newsome, Keith Milow, Billy Al Bengston, Ian Stephenson, Sol LeWitt and Joe Tilson, most of them gifted in thanks by the artists or their families whose careers were enhanced by the exhibitions Compton created. The collection is expected to raise around £200,000 ($336,000).

LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding.

Tate Director Sir Nicholas Serota described Compton as “arguably the first curator working in England to command international respect for his practice as a maker of exhibitions, collaborator with artists and contributor to the discourse of contemporary art.”

A small Lichtenstein bronze, Yellow Brushstroke is an exception. Number 11 of 19 from an initial lifetime casting, it was presented to Compton by the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation at an awards event held at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art on May 23 1991. The presentation was in recognition of his work as curator of the 1989 Marcel Broodthaers exhibition at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. It is estimated at £40,000-60,000.

Broodthaers died in 1976 and in 1980, while at Tate Gallery, Compton curated the first retrospective of the Belgian artist’s work. He went on to curate the 1989 exhibition in Minneapolis, which also travelled to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles and the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh.

Frederick R.Weisman (1912-1994) was an entrepreneur, philanthropist, and art collector, who held an uncompromising belief in the cultural value of art and an understanding of the importance of both the individual artist and the creative process.

Lichtenstein developed his Brushstrokes paintings as sculptural representations in the 1980s and ’90s, depicting the gestural expressions of the brushstroke itself. In his own words, Lichtenstein said the brushstroke “is just an idea to start with, and painting it makes it more concrete, but when you do it in bronze sculpture, it becomes real and has weight and is absurd, contradictory and funny.”

Marcel Broodthaers (1924-1976) spent 20 years in poverty as a struggling poet before turning to art and began to make objects in 1963. One the surreal images linked to him most often is Poêle De Moules, mussel shells in a frying pan, a witty nod to his homeland’s national dish. The piece is one of 10 lots in the sale gifted to Compton by the artist’s widow, Maria, at the time he was working with her on a proposed catalogue-raisonné of her husband’s work. This involved regular visits to Brussels in the 1980s and ’90s to do research.

Broodthaers was a writer, poet, filmmaker, photographer, journalist and artist, who famously remarked he would rather have put off the choice of profession until his death. Closely associated with the Belgian Groupe Surréaliste-revolutionnaire, he made use of found objects and collage, incorporating written language in his art, using whatever was at hand for raw materials, most notably the shells of eggs and mussels. Poêle De Moules is estimated at £40,000-60,000.

Un Chateaubriand bien saignant pour deux (A rare Chateaubriand for two) is unsigned but shares the same provenance as the mussels. It is stenciled on the unprimed reverse of the canvas. It is estimated at £30,000-50,000, while Palette, done in colored pencils on a prepared canvas board in 1973-4 is estimated at £15,000-25,000.

A photographer’s light box with photographs and slides inscribed “Avion” and “Avis” is estimated at £10,000-20,000.

Language as a symbol that conveys meaning is a central theme in Broodthaers’ texts, objects, installations, films, photographs, slide projections and prints. A work comprising three magic slate boards mounted on grey card is estimated at £5,000-10,000 and a group of 12 children’s ABC play bricks stenciled in black in a Dr. Pusscat on the Mouse box is estimated at £4,000-6,000, as is a pair of green glass wine bottles with printed labels “Pluie” and “Mer du Nord” (“Rain” and “Sea of the North”).

More valuable of two untitled abstracts by Sir Terry Frost (1915-2003) is an unfinished oil and collage on hardboard done in 1954-56 and estimated at £10,000-20,000. The work was begun when Frost was a Gregory Fellow at Leeds University and given to Compton who at the time was assistant to the director at the city’s art gallery.

Frost told Compton and his wife, Susan, that the motifs were inspired by a visit to Malham Tarn in the Yorkshire Dales. Frost had already produced a smaller sketch, also painted on hardboard, which Mr. and Mrs. Compton owned, so he presented them with this version saying, “I don’t know how to finish this so I’d like you to have it.” The work was probably painted in the studio provided by the university in Moor Road, Leeds and is similar to a group of works, which Frost related to his experience of the Dales landscape.

An abstract in watercolor on paper in black, brown and white was painted in 1957 after Frost’s Gregory Fellowship ended and while he was teaching at Leeds College of Art. It is estimated at £2,000-4,000. Similar detail can be found in a work in the Tate Collection Khaki and Lemon, 1956.

Sir Henry Moore (1898-1986) gifted two inscribed lithographs to Compton in thanks for organizing the 1977 Henry Moore Drawings exhibition at the Tate Gallery curated by Alan Wilkinson of the Ontario Art Gallery. They show a reclining figure and a mother and child respectively and each is inscribed “For Michael Compton from Henry Moore.” Each is estimated at £600-1,000, as is a signed wine bottle given to Compton during the dinner for Henry Moore at the Cafe Royale, which followed the opening of the exhibition. With it is a second bottle from the opening of a Henry Moore exhibition in 1989 at the Fondation Pierre Gianadda in Martingny, Switzerland, where a local vintage was named for the artist and served at the gallery.

Michael Compton was born in Minehead, Somerset, while his parents were on leave from India, where he spent his early childhood. Educated in England and South Africa, he studied naval architecture before turning to art history, graduating from the Courtauld Institute in 1952.

From 1953 Compton worked in public museums, beginning at Leeds Art Gallery (1953-57) where he cataloged the watercolor collection at Temple Newsam House, followed by the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, where he was keeper of foreign art. In 1960, he was appointed director of the Ferens Art Gallery in Hull for which he acquired the first David Hockney to enter a museum. He joined the Tate Gallery as assistant keeper of the modern collection in 1965 and worked there until his retirement in 1987.

Early in 1968, a Churchill Traveling Fellowship gave him three months in the U.S. to explore contemporary American art, instigating contemporary exhibitions, beginning with the Roy Lichtenstein show of 1968. In 1971, he curated the Andy Warhol and Robert Morris exhibitions, the former a great success, the latter a disaster, although it was restaged in 2009 to great acclaim.

In the 1970s, Compton planned an extension to the Tate Gallery (today Tate Britain) to provide special space for exhibitions, which opened in 1979. Additionally, he was invited to join British Council and Arts Council committees and became involved with exhibitions at the Hayward Gallery in London and British Council exhibitions overseas. He also represented Britain on the International Committee of Modern Art Museums.

By the time he retired in 1987 he was the most “international” curator in London, connecting his up-to-date knowledge of British art to first-hand experience of contemporary art in Europe and the United States. In recognition of this he was created C.B.E. He died last year, leaving a widow, who lives in Surrey, and two daughters.

For further information, contact the auctioneers on 01483 223101 or antiques@ewbankauctions.co.uk.

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


Sir Terry Frost R.A., British (1915-2003), untitled, unfinished oil and collage. Estimate: £10,000-20,000. Ewbank’s image.

Sir Terry Frost R.A., British (1915-2003), untitled, unfinished oil and collage. Estimate: £10,000-20,000. Ewbank’s image.

Roy Lichtenstein, American (1923-1997). Weisman Art Award 'Yellow Brushstroke,' 1991. Estimate: £40,000-60.000. Ewbank’s image.

Roy Lichtenstein, American (1923-1997). Weisman Art Award ‘Yellow Brushstroke,’ 1991. Estimate: £40,000-60.000. Ewbank’s image.

Michael Compton 1927-2013. Ewbank’s image.
Michael Compton 1927-2013. Ewbank’s image.

Sir Terry Frost R.A., British (1915-2003), untitled abstract, 1957. Estimate: £2,000-4,000. Ewbank’s image.

Sir Terry Frost R.A., British (1915-2003), untitled abstract, 1957. Estimate: £2,000-4,000. Ewbank’s image.

Henry Moore, British (1898-1986), mother and child, print, £600-1,000. Estimate: Ewbank’s image.

Henry Moore, British (1898-1986), mother and child, print, £600-1,000. Estimate: Ewbank’s image.

Henry Moore, British (1898-1986), reclining figure, print, £600-1,000. Estimate: Ewbank’s image.

Henry Moore, British (1898-1986), reclining figure, print, £600-1,000. Estimate: Ewbank’s image.

Marcel Broodthaers, Belgian (1924-1976), circa 1965. 'Poêle De Moules.' Estimate: £40,000-60,000. Ewbank’s image.

Marcel Broodthaers, Belgian (1924-1976), circa 1965. ‘Poêle De Moules.’ Estimate: £40,000-60,000. Ewbank’s image.

Spain’s royals revel in silver won from US treasure-hunters

Felipe, Prince of Asturias, who will be crowned King Philip VI of Spain next week. Image by CarlosVdeHabsburgo. This file islicensed under the Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.

Felipe, Prince of Asturias, who will be crowned King Philip VI of Spain next week. Image by CarlosVdeHabsburgo. This file islicensed under the Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.
Felipe, Prince of Asturias, who will be crowned King Philip VI of Spain next week. Image by CarlosVdeHabsburgo. This file islicensed under the Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.
MADRID (AFP) – Spain has proudly put on show tens of thousands of silver coins from a 19th-century shipwreck that it won back in court from U.S. treasure hunters.

The country’s soon-to-be king, Felipe, and future queen Letizia on Thursday launched the exhibition in central Madrid celebrating the return of the sunken treasure to Spain. They viewed treasures and documents that tell the story of how British warships blew up the Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes, sending its preciouscargo to the bottom of the sea.

The highlight of the show, in the basement of Madrid’s recently reopened National Archaeological Museum, is a glass case containing heaps of more than 30,000 silver coins.

The cargo came to Spain in 2012 after a five-year legal battle with Odyssey, the U.S. company that hauled it up two centuries after it sank.

“It’s emotional,” said James Goold, a U.S. lawyer who fought Spain’s case in the courts. “To get it back to Spain says to me: ‘Mission accomplished’.”

Sea battle, treasure hunt

On Oct. 5, 1804, the Mercedes was nearing the coast of Spain on its way from Peru, part of the Spanish empire at the time. Spain and France had signed a peace treaty with Britain in 1802 but that soon broke down.

British ships thought the Mercedes was carrying treasure bound for Napoleon’s coffers. They fired cannons at the Mercedes, blowing up its powder kegs and sinking it – a moment captured in a contemporary oil painting in the exhibition. The attack, known as the Battle of Cape Santa Maria, led Spain to declare war on Britain and re-enter the Napoleonic Wars.

In May 2007, deep-sea search specialists Odyssey Marine Exploration found the wreck at a depth of 1,700 feet (518 meters) in the Atlantic.

Spanish authorities said at the time that the trove was worth at least 350 million euros ($474 million) overall. It is thought to be the most valuable sunken treasure discovery in history.

Odyssey challenged Spain’s sovereign claim to the cargo and said the wreck lay in international waters. Peru and descendants of the treasure’s original owners also claimed it. But a judge in Florida ruled in March 2012 that the trove belonged to Spain. The U.S. Supreme Court turned down a final appeal by Odyssey in May 2012.

Winning the battle

The 30,000 coins on show in Madrid are just a fraction of the estimated 580,000 found in the wreck. Most of those on show have been cleaned and are laid out in a glass case, but some are displayed just as they were found, lumped together with mud.

Some 8,000 other coins from the ship went on show last month at the Museum of Subaquatic Archaeology in the southeastern Spanish city of Cartagena. A third exhibition also opened on Thursday in Madrid’s Naval Museum, telling the story of the battle and the Mercedes.

More than just a pile of treasure, the winning of the lost cargo was a point of pride for Spain. One of the organizers of the new exhibition, Manuel Mortari, hoped it would “serve as a precedent and make people aware of the importance of heritage.”

“A big battle has been won,” he told AFP. “It is like winning a World Cup – it raises the country’s self-esteem.”

The future king and queen shook hands with youngsters gathered to greet them at the museum, smiling and chatting with them before going down to view the treasure.

Felipe, 46, is to be sworn in as king on Thursday, replacing his father Juan Carlos, 76, who is abdicating after 38 years on the throne.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Felipe, Prince of Asturias, who will be crowned King Philip VI of Spain next week. Image by CarlosVdeHabsburgo. This file islicensed under the Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.
Felipe, Prince of Asturias, who will be crowned King Philip VI of Spain next week. Image by CarlosVdeHabsburgo. This file islicensed under the Creative Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.

Cy Twombly Foundation makes major gift to Tate

The room of works given by Cy Twombly is currently on display at Tate Modern, Level 4, in room 7 of the Energy and Process wing. Tate image.

The room of works given by Cy Twombly is currently on display at Tate Modern, Level 4, in room 7 of the Energy and Process wing. Tate image.
The room of works given by Cy Twombly is currently on display at Tate Modern, Level 4, in room 7 of the Energy and Process wing. Tate image.
LONDON – Following the wishes of the American artist Cy Twombly, who died in 2011, the Cy Twombly Foundation has made a major gift of works to Tate, it was announced Thursday by Tate and the Foundation.

The gift comprises three large late paintings, Untitled (Bacchus) 2006-8, and five sculptures in bronze dating from the period 1979-91. These may be shown separately, or together, as in the installation of the works that is currently on view at Tate Modern. Twombly’s decision to place these works in London was made out of his admiration for Tate and his sympathy for the work of Turner, and followed his major retrospective, “Cy Twombly: Cycles and Seasons” at Tate Modern in 2008, curated by Nicholas Serota and Nicholas Cullinan.

The Roman god Bacchus is a recurring theme in Twombly’s work. In summer 2005, he returned to the Iliad for inspiration to create a cycle of eight paintings in vermilion color on the theme of the ecstasy and insanity of the Roman god. Red is the color of wine and also of blood and the three canvases encompass both the sensual pleasure and violent debauchery associated with the god. The unfurling scrolls of the paintings were made, like Matisse’s large drawings for the chapel at Vence, with a brush affixed to the end of a pole, which accounts for their vitality and scale. The three late paintings extend Twombly’s series of Bacchus paintings from 2005 and were begun on canvases dating from that first campaign of painting.

The five sculptures are all bronze casts of Twombly’s assemblages of found objects and detritus, such as the top of an olive barrel, which forms one of the works, Rotalla. Through simple elements Twombly evokes classical artifacts, such as chariots and ships, while their casting in bronze lends otherwise ephemeral objects the permanence of ancient sculpture.

“This is one of the most generous gifts ever to Tate by an artist or a foundation,” said Nicholas Serota, director, Tate. “It ranks alongside Rothko’s gift of the Seagram mural paintings in 1969 and together with Twombly’s cycle of paintings The Four Seasons 1993-5, acquired in 2002, this gives an enduring place in London to the work of one of the great painters of the second half of the 20th century.”

Cy Twombly (1928-2011) was born in Lexington, Va. He lived and worked in America and Italy. He studied in Boston, New York and at Black Mountain College in North Carolina at the height of Abstract Expressionism. He moved to Italy in 1957 where he incorporated graffiti-like pencil marks onto the surface of his early paintings, introducing elements of hesitancy and fragility into the confident physical gestures of abstract expressionist painting. Increasingly his subjects were drawn from classical antiquity, as conveyed by the poets, or through the work of poets inspired by classical example from Alexander Pope to Rilke and T.S. Eliot.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The room of works given by Cy Twombly is currently on display at Tate Modern, Level 4, in room 7 of the Energy and Process wing. Tate image.
The room of works given by Cy Twombly is currently on display at Tate Modern, Level 4, in room 7 of the Energy and Process wing. Tate image.

Germany awards Jewish family $68M for lost assets

The former Schocken department store in Chemnitz, Germany. Designed by architect Erich Mendelsohn in 1930, it is considered a milestone in modern architecture. Image by Shaqspeare. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.

The former Schocken department store in Chemnitz, Germany. Designed by architect Erich Mendelsohn in 1930, it is considered a milestone in modern architecture. Image by Shaqspeare. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.
The former Schocken department store in Chemnitz, Germany. Designed by architect Erich Mendelsohn in 1930, it is considered a milestone in modern architecture. Image by Shaqspeare. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.
BERLIN (AP) – A Berlin court has ordered Germany to pay the heirs of Jewish owners of a department store chain an additional 50 million euros ($68 million) in compensation for property seized by the Nazis.

The Berlin administrative court said Thursday that the Schocken family lost its chain of stores, primarily in Saxony, during the Nazis’ so-called “Aryanization” of businesses in the 1930s.

The family was paid about 15 million euros for one building in the 1990s, but said the others were undervalued. In the ruling, the court ordered the heirs, who live in Israel and the U.S., receive an additional 50 million euros.

The best-known building involved was built in the eastern city of Chemnitz by architect Erich Mendelsohn in 1930. It now houses the State Museum of Archaeology.

Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-06-12-14 1400GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The former Schocken department store in Chemnitz, Germany. Designed by architect Erich Mendelsohn in 1930, it is considered a milestone in modern architecture. Image by Shaqspeare. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.
The former Schocken department store in Chemnitz, Germany. Designed by architect Erich Mendelsohn in 1930, it is considered a milestone in modern architecture. Image by Shaqspeare. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.

NYC subway system to celebrate 110 years with party

Historic New York subway cars on display at the New York Transit Museum. The exhibit in the unused Court Street station in Brooklyn was opened on July 4, 1976 as part of the United States Bicentennial celebration. Image by Marcin Wichary, CC 2.0 license.

Historic New York subway cars on display at the New York Transit Museum. The exhibit in the unused Court Street station in Brooklyn was opened on July 4, 1976 as part of the United States Bicentennial celebration. Image by Marcin Wichary, CC 2.0 license.
Historic New York subway cars on display at the New York Transit Museum. The exhibit in the unused Court Street station in Brooklyn was opened on July 4, 1976 as part of the United States Bicentennial celebration. Image by Marcin Wichary, CC 2.0 license.
NEW YORK (AP) – The New York City subway system is celebrating its 110th birthday with a party.

It’ll be held Saturday at the New York City Transit Museum. The museum is in a historic subway station in Brooklyn Heights.

The system opened in 1904 with the Interborough Rapid Transit line that ran from City Hall to 145th Street. There were 28 stations, compared to today’s 468.

As part of the celebration, visitors will be able to ride vintage cars dating to the 1930s between the museum and the Hoyt-Schermerhorn station in Brooklyn.

Costumed interpreters will be on hand at the museum’s decommissioned Court Street Station platform to talk about the history of the subway.

The party runs from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Tickets can be obtained at www.mta.info/museum or at the door.

Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-06-12-14 1415GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Historic New York subway cars on display at the New York Transit Museum. The exhibit in the unused Court Street station in Brooklyn was opened on July 4, 1976 as part of the United States Bicentennial celebration. Image by Marcin Wichary, CC 2.0 license.
Historic New York subway cars on display at the New York Transit Museum. The exhibit in the unused Court Street station in Brooklyn was opened on July 4, 1976 as part of the United States Bicentennial celebration. Image by Marcin Wichary, CC 2.0 license.

Historic Va. estate to be sold at auction

The estate manor at Four Mile Tree, circa 1940. Historic American Buildings Survey image, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The estate manor at Four Mile Tree, circa 1940. Historic American Buildings Survey image,  courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The estate manor at Four Mile Tree, circa 1940. Historic American Buildings Survey image, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

SPRING GROVE, Va. (AP) – A historic estate in Surry County is going on the auction block.

The 309-acre Four Mile Tree is scheduled to be sold at auction on June 26. The estate’s manor home and a caretaker’s cottage are both on the National Register of Historic Places.

Bill Londrey with auction company Tranzon Fox tells the Richmond Times-Dispatch that the highest bid is subject to approval of the estate.

The property was claimed in a 1625 land grant. The manor home was built around 1745.

Information from: Richmond Times-Dispatch, ttp://www.timesdispatch.com

Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-06-11-14 1140GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


The estate manor at Four Mile Tree, circa 1940. Historic American Buildings Survey image,  courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The estate manor at Four Mile Tree, circa 1940. Historic American Buildings Survey image, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.