Chinese wall pocket tops Ahlers & Ogletree auction at $50,000

Chinese porcelain hand-painted wall pocket from the late 19th or early 20th century, 6 3/4 inches tall, with four-character cobalt underglaze Qianlong Nian Zhi mark. Price realized: $50,000. Ahlers & Ogletree Auction Gallery images

ATLANTA – It’s a long way from mainland China to Miami Circle in Atlanta, but that’s exactly how far one determined bidder traveled to vie for a Chinese porcelain hand-painted wall pocket from the late 19th or early 20th century. The 6 3/4-inch-tall urn-form piece was the top lot at Ahlers & Ogletree Auction Gallery’s Spring Estates Auction, held March 21-22, hammering for $50,000.

The auction was packed with more than 1,000 lots, ranging from Asian objects to original works of art to fine estate jewelry to antique clocks. +All prices quoted are hammer, exclusive of a buyer’s premium.

The porcelain wall pocket, was marked to the underside with the four-character cobalt underglaze Qianlong Nian Zhi mark. It stood on a gilt red stand and was presented in a purple, velvet-hinged box.

An oil on canvas painting by Albert E. “Beanie” Backus (American, 1906-1991), one of the legendary Highwaymen artists of the 1950s and ’60s, went to a phone bidder for $20,000. The work, done circa 1960s and signed by Backus, was titled View of Florida Coastline and depicted a scene that might be of St. Lucie, on Florida’s northern coast, with the ocean, palm trees and a sandy beach.

A second pattern Confederate national flag, made during the time of the Civil War and possibly issued to the Confederate States Navy, hammered at $15,000. The flag, measuring 52 inches by 106 inches, had 13 hand-sewn, cotton stars configured in the shape of a diagonal cross, atop a blue wool bunting or tammy on a red ground. The stars were stitched around the outer edges.

A Continental, 20th century Empire-style malachite, patinated and gilt bronze center table, with the top 39 1/4 inches in diameter, changed hands for $14,000. The veneered center table had a circular top over an ormolu mounted apron, on three bronze Egyptian-style figural supports.

For more information contact Ahlers & Ogletree Auction Gallery at 404-869-2478 or email consignments@AandOauctions.com.

 

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New Orleans Auction Galleries’ first sale at new location tops $2M

A painting by Max Friedrich Rabes (German, 1868-1944) ‘The Costume Ball,’ oil on canvas, 46 3/4in x 61in, sold for $49,200. New Orleans Auction Gallery images

NEW ORLEANS – On March 20-22, New Orleans Auction Galleries realized over $2.4 million in a three-day estates auction. The new gallery, located just blocks from the company’s previous space, was officially unveiled at a highly anticipated evening preview reception on March 19.

LiveAuctioneers.com provided Internet live bidding.

“This was a landmark sale that sets the stage for a year of growth and success, thanks in part to our spectacular new facilities. Our St. Joseph Street location enables us to streamline our operations and entertain clients in a premier venue,” said Susan Sarofim, CEO of New Orleans Auction Galleries.

The three-day sale featured the contents of Glenridge Hall, a sprawling estate in Sandy Springs, Georgia, that was built by Atlanta-area businessman and philanthropist, Thomas K. Glenn, and his wife, Elizabeth Ewing.

Sale highlights from Glenridge Hall included a fine Edwardian chinoiserie-decorated satinwood breakfront that soared to $39,360 against a $3,000 to $5,000 estimate.

The personal library of New Orleans printer and noted antiquarian William Pfaff also garnered tremendous interest from collectors. Highlights from this important collection were a first edition Poor Richard’s Almanac for 1756 by Benjamin Franklin that soared to $11,377 against a $3,000 to $5,000 estimate.

Sunday began with an impressive selection of jewelry that realized high prices and sold to bidders in the room, on the phones and to the Internet. A stunning 18K white gold, sapphire and diamond ring with a central cushion-cut sapphire with an approximate weight of 9.35 carats sold to a phone bidder for $49,200.

Ceramics Collector: Hans Coper, master of form and volume

A carefully chosen selection of significant works by Hans Coper was assembled by influential American collectors Betty Lee and Aaron Stern. The Phillips New York sale of the collection in late 2013 established a new price scale for the artist’s designs. In this grouping of vases, the ovoid form with disc top at right, made about 1969, brought $100,000. Phillips image

NEW YORK – Hans Coper (1920-1981) was a transformative genius in the ceramics world, so it is not surprising that his impressive body of work has captured the attention of both art historians and collectors. Although the medium was clay, his vision transcended the material and became fully integrated into the world of contemporary design during the decades in which he created his sculptural vessels.

Coper had no background in ceramics when he fled Nazi Germany for England in 1939. After being interned in Canada for two years, he spent the remainder of the war serving in Britain in a noncombatant role. At the end of the conflict, he needed work and – in a watershed moment – was hired by skilled potter Lucie Rie (1902-1995), who had left Austria for England in 1938. Coper proved to have remarkable natural abilities, both in pottery mechanics, such as throwing clay on the wheel, and also in ceramic design where he created his own vocabulary of forms.

Rie and Coper worked together for a dozen years, signing some pieces jointly – and they remained friends for the duration of his life. The Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge University, which owns works by both potters, notes in a joint biography: “At the same time Rie’s and Coper’s personal styles stared to diverge: While hers remained functional in focus, his became increasingly sculptural in ambition. Eventually, in 1958, Coper decided to set up his own studio … ” Also while Rie never taught formally, Coper began to teach in London in the 1960s, first at the Camberwell School of Arts and later at the Royal College of Art.

In 1958, Coper established his own studio at Hammersmith in London. In 1960, he executed an ambitious architectural commission for a wall mural at the Swinton Community School, Mexborough, South Yorkshire. While many wall murals are paintings, Coper’s design used inserted circular stoneware forms varying in size, glaze color and surface texture. The mural project set a record for the artist’s work when it sold on Sept. 27, 2011 at Phillips London “Design” sale for 181,250 pounds (est. 50,000-70,000 pounds), almost $282,000.

Never to be sold, his best-known creation is an array of six massive candlesticks which stand like abstract caryatids on either side of the High Altar at Coventry Cathedral in England. In November 1940 during World War II, the 14th-15th century St. Michael’s Church in Coventry was severely damaged by incendiary bombs; only outside walls and the tower spire were left standing. The cornerstone for a new cathedral was laid in 1956 by Queen Elizabeth II, and many important artists of the day contributed elements such as stained glass and sculpture to the interior. The completed new church standing by the ruins of the old was consecrated in 1962. Coper’s 7-foot-high candlesticks were created using thrown circular sections joined by metal supports. The trio on each side is composed of a darker center pillar flanked by banded and textured columns of lighter coloration.

Whether the revered object is an ancient Greek black-figure vase or Coper’s studio pottery, the clay has been shaped into utilitarian forms. But these works are no longer displayed filled with wine or flowers, because attention has shifted from the vessels’ function to their superb design and decoration. The Coventry candlesticks are deeply moving sculptures that bring both light and a sense of enlightenment to their altar setting. Such monumental works have only whetted the desire of collectors to own examples of Coper’s more easily possessed small scale constructions.

Han Coper’s life was cut short by illness in 1981, which makes collectors even more eager to seek out his work from the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s. Much of the artist’s best work has been sold at Phillips in their New York and London “Design” sales over the last 10 years. Ceramics specialist Ben Williams is the firm’s expert on the artist and oversaw the New York auction of the Betty Lee and Aaron Stern Collection in December 2013, which included many carefully selected examples of Coper’s stoneware.

In an interview with ACN, he noted, “Phillips is in a position where they get offered the best in the market. The problem is – for Coper especially – that there’s not a lot of work out there. When a great collection like the Sterns’ comes up, people realize that it’s an opportunity. Even people who haven’t bought a pot in years are back in the market because they want something form that great collection. That’s when the really big jumps in price happen.”

The catalog of the Stern Collection – available online – includes stunning photos of Coper’s work as it was displayed by the collecting couple. Williams said, “Betty Lee is someone I’ve known for over 20 years. She had a really remarkable collection, so that was probably for me the pinnacle of my auction career. I said to her, rather than do an auction catalog that is a stock studio style, let’s mix it up and do some vistas to illustrate what you created in your home.”

Coper’s work long ago made the transition from ceramics sales to multimedia design sales. The same collectors who might pay millions for a Francis Bacon painting are bidding on this 20th century stoneware, so individual examples that brought four or five figures less than a decade ago, now regularly fetch six figures. As Williams put it, “We would be selling the modernist pots in amongst modernist furniture. We gave it a completely new audience and it just really took off.

“Most really great artists were being influenced by other things that were going on around them outside of clay,” he continued. “Coper, in a way, has come full circle. When he started out, he was always considered to be an artist. He was hanging out with other artists in many different media, all of those commissions that were being done around the time of Coventry Cathedral. The people who were buying that work from him in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s – all the way through really – they were people who had art on the walls and didn’t consider themselves ceramic collectors, they were collectors of fine modern art.”

Ben Williams also has seen a broadening of the market to include all of Coper’s output: “When I started working in the auctions in the early 1990s, at that point the most valuable pieces – apart from one or two very large scale works – were the late ones, the Cycladic pots. They were seen as the final statement of his career – but some of his early work is incredibly powerful as well. As a younger man, he was a very powerful thrower, and he was able to make some extraordinarily large pieces. There is more equality now in price between the best of the early work and the best of the late Cycladic pots.” As the name indicates, Coper was strongly influenced by ancient artifacts, most notably the art of the Cycladic island culture, which flourished in the Aegean around 3200-2000 B.C.

In the Stern catalog, Hans Coper is quoted as saying, “My concern is with extracting essence rather than with experiment and exploration.” Garth Clark, ceramics expert and author of many books in the field, recently talked about his admiration for Coper’s subtle artistry: “He started making pretty conventional things and then eventually his work began to change. He would play with volumes; he would flatten his pots. He would compress the volume, and it created a kind of visual illusion. Also, in his later work, he created beautiful constructions and profiles.”

Clark continued, “Right at the end, he made the Cycladic pieces. In those pots, you have these exquisite shapes and outlines – extraordinary silhouettes. And the pot itself again is not fully round so it moves them between a 2-D world and a 3-D world. That gave a very special quality to his work. No artist at the time was doing that flattening of the volume, so that was very rare.”

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References on the artist include the still-available earlier study Hans Coper by Tony Birks and Modern Pots: Hans Coper, Lucie Rie and Their Contemporaries, The Lisa Sainsbury Collection by Cyril Frankel (University of East Anglia 2006).

 

VIDEO: Fantastical sculptures comprise Wright auction April 16

Professor B.J. Sears' Sinehouse Archive, USA, 2009, found objects and electronics. Alternating stoic portraits morph and change on the screen of the Sinehouse Archive, a work that claims to steal the soul of each sitter. Wright images. For the slide, I suggest using any two of the vertical images available through the link. Please include all of the videos.

CHICAGO – Wright presents an unusual auction April 16 titled “Professor B.J. Sears’ Technological Rarities.” For the first time at auction, this select collection of 11 artworks features an array of fantastical machines that fuse modern technologies with inventions of the past. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide absentee and Internet live bidding.

A celebrated film editor and professor at Savannah College of Art and Design, B.J. Sears united his love of invention and passion for history in the creation of these elaborate sculptures.

Highlights from this unique auction include the Electrophonic Anacroscope a machine for exploring time travel. The mixed media work of found objects and electronics stands 78 inches high and has an estimate of $20,000-$30,000.

For an out of body experience bidders will find the B.J. Sears periscope intriguing. The work subtly confronts the viewer with as one’s likeness is captured by the gooseneck and projected on the upper monitor, while a video plays below. It has a $10,000-$15,00 estimate.

Paying homage to Eadweard Muybridge, the English photographer and motion picture pioneer, is Professor Sears’ Muybridge Experiment. At the press of a button, a scrolling series of images proves the theory that, while galloping, all four hooves of a horse are lifted off of the ground. Estimate: $10,000-$15,000.

The auction will begin at noon Central time. For details contact Wright at 312-563-0020.

 

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VIDEO:

Professor BJ Sears Technological Rarities – Lot 100 – Periscope from Wright on Vimeo.

Reddington's Phonelescope from Wright on Vimeo.

Professor BJ Sears Technological Rarities from Wright on Vimeo.

Roland Auctions NY to disperse estate of well-known dealer April 11

From the estate of Angelo Pace, former owner of Chelsea Mews Antiques, is this oil on canvas painting of a merchant ship after Seth Arca Whipple. It is signed and dated 1893. Framed, the painting measures 17 1/2in x 14 1/2in. Estimate: $3,000-$5,000. Roland Auctions NY images

NEW YORK – On April 11 Roland Auctions NY will present its April Springs Eternal Auction featuring over 1,000 lots of Fine and Decorative Arts selected from choice estates throughout New York City featuring hundreds of items selected solely from the estate of Angelo Pace, late owner of Chelsea Mews Antiques.

LiveAuctioneers.com will provide absentee and Internet live bidding.

Pace was well-known personality in the metropolitan fine arts and antique community. His generous cornucopia of luxury items filled Roland’s galleries.

Asian and Chinese art is represented by a multitude of ceramic, bronze and enamel objects. Featured items include a Zhou-type Gui ritual food vessel, which may date to the 10th or 11th century. It stands 9 3/4 inches high and has a $30,000-$50,000 estimate.

Several Tiffany & Co. items are offered in the sale including a mahogany long case clock with the inscription “Whitington-Westminster.” It has an estimate of $$9,000-$11,000.

Among Roland’s offering of modern art are several early to mid 20th century design lots including a sunburst mirror by Tommi Parzinger. Measuring 34 3/4 inches in diameter, this mirror has a $650-$850 estimate.

A youthful Christ is depicted on this KPM plaque that is signed “Wagner.” Framed, the painted porcelain portrait measures 15 3/4 inches by 12 3/4 inches. It is expected to bring $800-$1,200.

The auction will begin Saturday, April 11, at 10 a.m. Eastern time. For details contact Roland Auctions NY by calling 212-260-2000.

 

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Only in Texas: Dallas developer to build 77-space garage at his home

Aerial view of Harlan Crow's Preston Road mansion in Dallas. Image courtesy of Bing

DALLAS (AP) – Real estate investor Harlan Crow is trying to ease concerns of his neighbors in the wealthy Dallas enclave of Highland Park about construction of a 77-space underground garage on his estate.

Crow, 65, CEO of Dallas-based Crow Holdings, says the $5.1 million project is intended for guests to a large library at his family’s home and for those attending other functions at his estate like political fundraisers who would have to park on the streets.

Neighbors worry about the intrusion of buses and tour groups that could ensue if Crow turns the 8-acre estate, now zoned as a single-family dwelling, into a museum.

“It’s hard for me to see how a 77-space parking garage can be construed as a single-residence use,” Michael Lewis, who lives next door, told The Dallas Morning News.

Property records show the site has an eight-bedroom home, a greenhouse, a swimming pool and two unattached servants’ quarters.

Two years ago the 65-year-old CEO tried to get “historical collection” added to the zoning definition for his home, then dropped the proposal amid similar opposition from neighbors.

“I’m afraid they’re going to open it up to more people,” another neighbor, Laura Williamson, said. “Accommodating the cars he has is a good idea, but it’s going to enable him to have larger groups.”

The Harlan Crow Library is in a wing of Crow’s mansion. It holds thousands of rare books, manuscripts and artwork related to American politics, science and literature and employs a full- and part-time librarian. The property also includes a sculpture garden.

“I have what I hope is a very fine collection of manuscripts and books pertaining to American history,” Crow said. “And to the extent that I can share that with people from the area in a way that is educational and enjoyable, then I feel like I’ve done a good thing. And that has been and continues to be what I want to do.”

He said the parking area will be more convenient for guests and neighbors.

“And other than that, I see no impact on the whole matter,” he said.

Crow said he’s had “a good couple of years” and can afford the project, which he sees also being used by his three children for sports activities on rainy days.

Williamson said she’s been in the library, enjoyed the visit and found it beautiful. “It’s simply in the wrong place,” she said.

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Information from: The Dallas Morning News, http://www.dallasnews.com

Copyright 2015 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This information may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Bill seeks to curb sales of ivory in Nevada

Despite the global embargo on elephant ivory that has been in place since 1990, the rate of elephant slaughter for tusks is at the highest point in a decade. In this picture, three female African bush elephants travel as a small herd in Tanzania. Photo by Ikiwaner, taken July 29, 2010, licensed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2.

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) – Lawmakers are considering a bill that would cut down on the sale or transfer of ivory in Nevada.

Democratic Sen. Mo Denis and others are sponsoring SB398, which was discussed on Friday in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee. It would ban the sale or transfer of ivory but make exceptions for antiques in which the substance makes up less than 20 percent of the object, musical instruments made before 1975 and items passed down as an inheritance.

Proponents say the bill is important to curb poaching and prevent elephants from going extinct on account of their tusks. Opponents included gun rights groups, who said the bill would strip the value from lawfully purchased items that contain ivory. The material was historically used in gun grips and knife handles.

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Copyright 2015 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This information may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Jeffrey Evans to hold annual antique ceramics auction April 14

Peafowl wares from the collection of George and Mickey Deike are among the highlights of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates’ auction April 14. Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates images.

MT. CRAWFORD, Va. – Several fine private collections amassed over decades form the backbone of an 18th and 19th century ceramics auction to be held at Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates on April 14. Following the strong success of last spring’s selection of items from the collection of George and Mickey Deike, the auction house will be holding Part II of the Deike’s collection of Peafowl, shell-edge and Prattware-decorated English Pottery. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide absentee and Internet live bidding.

The catalog of more than 500 lots includes creamware; pearlware, including many jugs, coffee and teapots; canary yellow; lusterware; 400-plus pieces of English and American transfer-printed wares in many color variations, featuring romantic, rural and historical scenes, as well as Flow Blue, Japaneseque pottery and children’s wares.

The auction starts with a small but strong selection of 18th and 19th century porcelain. Lot 2 is a Bristol teapot, cover and stand, formerly in the Trapnell collection, with a gilt strap-work band identical to that of the Ludlow service, but without bearing arms. It is estimated at $2,000-$3,000.

Within the Continental porcelain offerings, the highlight is an extraordinary group of 12 green-ground plates centering flowers by Feuillet. The Vieux Paris plates are lavishly decorated with ciselè and rouletted 24K gold paste to the rims. The plates are expected to bring $4,000-$6,000.

For further information email info@jeffreysevans.com or call 540-434-3939.

 

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