Miscellaneana: Picasso paintings, prints, pottery

LONDON – Champagne taste but beer pocket money, it’s been our problem since we started collecting 40 years ago. With that in mind then, we’re unlikely to be in the bidding when Christie’s offer their latest blockbuster: Pablo Picasso’s Les Femmes d’Alger.

The work, painted in 1955, on my business manager (Mrs. P’s) birthday – Feb. 14 – is expected to fetch around $140 million (94.4 million pounds) in New York next month. Word on the street is that it’s already sold.

A guarantee underwritten by one of Christie’s billionaire art collectors means that even if no one bids on the night, he (or she) will take it home at an undisclosed price agreed prior to the public auction.

Factor in the buyer’s premium payable to the auctioneers, and it’s likely to become the most expensive painting sold at auction ever.

So here’s the challenge: Find a Picasso affordable by the man in the street. Impossible, you might say. Read on.

Picasso was a prolific printmaker, using all the different techniques to master the art. His lithographs, etchings, drypoints, linocuts, woodcuts and aquatints were all experiments aimed at pushing the boundaries of his art further and further.

Indeed, some of Picasso’s graphic works are combinations of several techniques, which really tested his printmakers’ skills. Pottery-making, underlining the diversity of his interest, also fascinated him. Buy wisely and it’s possible to buy works in either medium that need not break the bank.

We’ve never been on a cruise ship, but we are reliably informed that among the temptations to spend money while aboard are paintings and prints by well-known artists, framed and ready to take home from the holiday of a lifetime, usually at eye-watering prices. This is not how to buy a Picasso print.

By sheer coincidence, in the week that Christie’s announced their blockbuster, a regional auctioneer was offering three signed etchings on behalf of a client who had purchased them at a liquidation sale from a cruise ship dealer whose business had failed.

From Picasso’s dazzling group of etchings done in 1968 when the artist was in his 80s, known as the 347 Series and named after the number of prints it comprised, the three images were each from editions limited to 50 copies, estimated attractively at between 500 and 1,200 pounds apiece. The most expensive, Pintor Rembranesco con su modelo (below), sold for 2,400 pounds.

Picasso himself described the images as his way of writing fiction. He said: “I spend hour after hour while I draw, observing my creatures and thinking about the mad things they’re up to.” For works linked inextricably to the great artist, that seems extraordinarily affordable.

Rêveries d’Opium: Fumeur en Calotte papale (below), another etching from Picasso’s 347 Series, sold for £2,100, while a third etching earned 2,250 pounds. (Ewbank’s Auctioneers photo)

Picasso’s first venture into printmaking was a series of 15 drypoints and etchings called Les Saltimbanques, or The street acrobats, done in 1905 and published by the dealer Vollard in 1913. More followed in the early 1930s but it was not until after World War II that most of Picasso’s prints were created.

From 1945 to 1949, he produced a massive body of about 200 lithographs working in close co-operation with Henri Deschamps, a professional printmaker from the Mourlot studio, a renowned art publisher and print workshop in Paris.

Picasso prints abound, of course. Those from large editions, made after the artist’s death and obviously unsigned, by skilled printmakers copying his drawings as their base material are still highly decorative, although not necessarily good vehicles for investment.

The ones to avoid are those that purport to have been signed by the master but whose signatures are also copied in photographic processes from which the cheapest of prints are produced.

Or you could just buy them anyway because they look great in any trendy minimalist setting when framed and hung together. When you get bored with them you simply throw them away and replace them with new, cheap alternatives.

If wall space is at a premium, consider Picasso’s pots as another affordable route to explore. It was certainly his hope that they might be enjoyed by the masses. He said: “I would like them to be found in every market, so that, in a village in Brittany or elsewhere, one might see a woman going to the fountain to fetch water with one of my jars.”

Picasso’s excursion into the world of ceramics began while he was on holiday in the South of France in 1946. Summers were spent on the Cote d’Azur where he was inspired by the light and the bright Mediterranean colors.

On a visit to the Madoura Pottery in the small town of Vallauris, he met the workshop’s owners, Suzanne and Georges Ramié, who sat him at a bench and handed him a lump of clay.

He made three pieces, which he left at the pottery to be fired, and that might have been the end of it. However, on returning a year later, he was so impressed with his handiwork that he asked permission to make more.

The experience fired Picasso’s imagination and from that humble beginning, his passion for pots was ignited. Working closely with the Ramiés and their team, Picasso designed many playful pieces decorated with bullfighting scenes, portraits, and goats, birds and fish.

In the space of 24 years, more than 600 pieces were created in limited editions, from which thousands of others were produced, all marked with the Madoura stamp.

The visits to the pottery were among the happiest of Picasso’s life. He found that working with clay was a relaxing diversion from the strain and demands of his painting and he told his biographer Pierre Daix that he felt at home at Madoura.

His personal life also benefitted from the time he spent there. Picasso’s lover Françoise Gilot gave birth to a son, Claude, during his first year at the pottery, and Jacqueline Roque, who worked there, became Picasso’s wife and muse, remaining his partner for more than 20 years until his death in 1973.

 

Decorative arts stand out in Don Presley auction May 3

Satsuma pottery jardiniere, circa 1900. Estimate: $1,800-$2,200. Don Presley Auction


Satsuma pottery jardiniere, circa 1900. Estimate: $1,800-$2,200. Don Presley Auction

SANTA ANA, Calif. – Don Presley will present fresh to the market antiques and fine art at his auction on Sunday, May 3. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide absentee and Internet live bidding.

The auction catalog is loaded with clocks, paintings, bronzes, sterling, cut crystal, jewelry and jade, and famous names such as Tiffany, KPM, Sevres, Galle, Limoges, Dresden, Baccarat, Daum, Lalique, Amphora, Quezal and Wavecrest.

An outstanding piece in excellent condition is a 17-inch Amphora eastern dragon vase (below; estimate: $12,000-$17,000). While the wingtips of the dragon have been professionally repaired, the vase is free of cracks and chips. The eastern dragon model was included in Amphora’s display at the 1900 Universal Exposition in Paris. Amphora won a gold medal at the event.




Royal Vienna is represented in the auction by a high-quality Ruth portrait plate. Marked on the back, the 9 1/2-inch porcelain plate has an $800-$1,200 estimate.




Another fine example of Continental porcelain is a hand-painted plaque depicting a gypsy woman, 7 3/4 by 5 3/4 inches (estimate: $1,500-$2,000).




Tops among the antique timepieces is a Louis XIV Boulle marquetry French bracket clock attributed to Andre-Charles Boulle (1642-1732). The clock – made nearly 300 years ago – is a masterpiece of brass, tortoiseshell, horn and ormolu bronze. It stands 43 inches high by 15 inches wide by 6 inches deep. It is expected to sell for $8,000-$12,000.




For details contact Don Presley Auction by email: info@donpresley.com or by phone: 714-633-2437.


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.

French cameo glass, antiques from fine Fla. estates lead Apr. 27-28 auction

18th century Mongolian gilt bronze Vajrapani Bodhisattva. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image


18th century Mongolian gilt bronze Vajrapani Bodhisattva. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – A long-held collection of Galle and other French cameo glass from a Key Biscayne, Florida family will join a premier lineup of antiques from the Jupiter, Florida estate of A. B. Schram on April 27 and 28 at Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches (AGOPB). Both sessions will begin at 6 p.m. Eastern Time, with absentee and Internet live bidding available through LiveAuctioneers.

The glass collection presents a number of uncommon buying opportunities, as it contains exceptional Galle designs that have passed down through three generations of the same family. The collection includes Lot 116, a rare Galle table lamp (see below); Lot 115, an unusual triangular vase; and a sub-collection of Galle marquetry inlaid tables.



Circa-1910 Galle cameo glass lamp and shade. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image

Emile Galle was one of the pioneers of the Art Nouveau movement, and Galle glass is synonymous with the best of decorative-art designs of that period. Galle and other art glass are shown below:



Examples from collection of French cameo and other Art Deco glass to be offered in April 27-28 auction in West Palm Beach, Florida. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image

The Key Biscayne collection contributes additional Art Nouveau pieces to the art-glass section, as well as many Italian and English silver items, 18th-century furniture, carpets and Italian art. Other consignments from South Florida and the Palm Beaches very nicely complement the auction offerings.

“Asian art prices at an all-time high, so we expect tremendous interest to be shown in the Asian art from the Jupiter estate. Mr. Schram was a client of our gallery for over a decade, and his appearance at our auctions was always a sign that the snowbirds were arriving. Over the years he bought a great variety of beautiful Asian antiques, including porcelains and ivory pieces,” said AGOPB partner Leslie Baker.

Schram’s eclectic taste is seen in Lot 146, a large agate ring-handle censor (see below) estimated at $800-$1,200; Lot 145, a large malachite carving of Hotai estimated at $600-800; and an array of fine Sino-Tibetan Buddhas, including Lot 377, a fine 18th-century Mongolian Vajrapani (see below) estimated at $6,000-$8,000.



Fine Chinese carved agate censer. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image

Additionally, there are Oriental and Chinese hardstone carvings, cloisonné, ivory netsukes, and Asian and European porcelains.

Lot 362, an English alabaster and stone jardinere and pedestal with recumbent lions, is estimated at $1,500-$2,000.



19th century English alabaster jardinière on pedestal. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image

The auction also includes more than 30 works on paper from a Delray Beach, Florida collection, including Lots 371 and 372, Marc Chagall color lithographs individually estimated at $1,500-$2,000.


Marc Chagall (Russian/French, 1887-1985, ‘The Sky,’ artist signed. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image

Other artists represented in the sale are A. Botello, Leroy Nieman, A. Clave, K. Appel and Rufino Tamayo. Lot 453 a fine and vivid painting by Italian artist Rubens Santoro (Italian, 1859-1942), depicts the Church at San Rocco, Venice, and is estimated at $25,000-30,000.




A Florida “Highwayman” painting by Sam Newton will be offered, as well.


Painting by Florida ‘Highwayman’ Sam Newton. Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches image

For inquiries or condition reports, contact the gallery at 561-805-7115.

All forms of bidding will be available for the auction, including absentee and live online bidding through LiveAuctioneers. View the catalog online at www.LiveAuctioneers.com.


View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet as the sale is taking place by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.

Pricey Chinese takeout at Quinn & Farmer; 3 pcs. of furniture realize $700K

Pair of 17th/early 18th-century huanghuali stools, one of them retaining a label from the Museum of Classical Chinese Furniture. Provenance: Christie’s New York, Sept. 19, 1996. Sold for $448,400. Quinn & Farmer image
Pair of 17th/early 18th-century huanghuali stools, one of them retaining a label from the Museum of Classical Chinese Furniture. Provenance: Christie’s New York, Sept. 19, 1996. Sold for $448,400. Quinn & Farmer image

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. – Two lots of antique Chinese furniture entered in Quinn & Farmer’s April 18 auction proved to be stellar investments for the consignor who purchased them at Christie’s in 1996, a time when the Asian secondary market was still developing in the West. A pair of important 17th/early 18th century huanghuali cabriole-leg stools (fangdeng) – two of only nine known examples – commanded $448,400 against an estimate of $100,000-$150,000, while a zitan kang table (kangzhuo) was bid to $247,800. Together, the two lots produced a handsome $696,200 payday (less fees) for the consignor, who had paid $120,250 for the items at the 1996 New York sale. Gross profit: $575,950.

“The Chinese pieces were an extremely wise investment, and many eyes in the trade were watching to see if that would be the case,” said Stephen Usry, vice president of Quinn & Farmer. “On the Monday morning following the sale, there were five phone calls from dealers asking about the results. When I told one dealer what the pieces had sold for, he said, ‘Well done. You did a great job of [marketing] them…much to my chagrin.’”

Multiple in-house bidders and four telephone bidders from China – who were assisted by Mandarin-speaking students from the University of Virginia Chinese Students Society – competed aggressively for the late 17th/early 18th-century huanghuali stools. The final two competitors were phone bidders, one of whom ultimately dropped out at $448,400.

A different Chinese phone bidder paid $247,800 for the kang table, which had been estimated at $40,000-$60,000. Ironically, the underbidder, a New York dealer, had owned the table many years ago.

“He sold it to a museum, who later deaccessioned it and sold it through the 1996 Christie’s sale, where our consignor purchased it. Unfortunately for the underbidder, he was not successful in reclaiming it. It has gone back to China,” said Usry.

Repatriation seemed to be a recurring theme at the April 18 auction. “The Brits took an important piece of English furniture away from the colonists, as well,” Usry joked, referring to a George III serpentine-front dressing chest whose maker was not specified in the catalog. “The style of the chest was very distinctive, and we suspected it was the work of an important cabinetmaker but couldn’t make a positive identification.”

However, several sharp-eyed dealers in England knew who had crafted the chest – a Chippendale contemporary named William Gomm. “They also knew that only six of these chests are known to exist, but they kept their cards close to their vests,” Usry said.

Three phone bidders from London parried in a lengthy bidding battle that ended at $76,700, approximately three times the price realized by the last such chest to reach the auction market. After the hammer came down on the chest, one of the unsuccessful bidders asked Usry who had won the piece. “I told him it was a bidder from England, and he replied, ‘Victoria Britannia! It’s coming home!” Usry said. “He was elated.”

Other highlights included a palace-size Serapi carpet, $25,960; and paintings by Montague Dawson, $28,320; and Peder Mork Monsted, $41,300. They are shown in order below:

The 180-lot auction totaled $1.19 million, inclusive of 18% buyer’s premium. More than 80% of the goods sold were the property of a single consignor local to Charlottesville, leading Matthew Quinn, vice president of parent company Quinn’s Auction Galleries, to comment: “We achieved our goal, which was to show people in the Charlottesville area and beyond that we’re capable of doing a bang-up job of marketing, then following through with top results.”

Ken Farmer, president of Quinn & Farmer, added: “An event like our April 18th sale is exactly what the Quinn family and I envisioned when we first came to Charlottesville. We wanted to combine our forces and produce global sales that would identify Charlottesville as a world-class auction destination.” The company’s profile has been heightened considerably by its inclusion of absentee and Internet live-bidding services through LiveAuctioneers.

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

Alexander Haig items commanded attention at Kaminski Auctions

This T.C. Steele fall landscape far surpassed estimates, selling for $16,800. Kaminski Auctions images


This T.C. Steele fall landscape far surpassed estimates, selling for $16,800. Kaminski Auctions images

BEVERLY, Mass. – Kaminski Auctions dispersed the collection former Secretary of State Alexander Haig on April 12. LiveAuctioneers.com provided absentee and Internet live bidding. The sale was a huge success. All lots were sold unreserved, with close to a 90 percent sell through rate, and excellent prices achieved in all collecting categories.

The top lot of the sale was a fall landscape by the noted Indiana artist T.C. Steele. The painting came form a California collection and brought well above its auction estimate of $750-$1,250 to bring $16,800 after spirited bidding from the floor and Internet.

The imposing 18th/19th Italian ebonized Renaissance Revival cabinet with intricate bone detail featuring classical elements was finally hammered down at $9,600.




The star Asian entry in the sale was an antique Chinese enameled silver necklace that measured 60 inches long and was made of natural pods that looked like caved beads. The rare piece, estimated at $300-$500, sold for $6,600.




All prices quoted include buyer’s premium.

For more information or to sign up to attend email dcriva@kaminskiauctions.com or call 978-927-2223 ext. 500.

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

Michaan’s sale travels from Art Deco era to old Hong Kong, May 9

Elizabeth Keith (1887-1956), woodblock print, estimate: $800-$1,200. Michaan's Auctions images


Elizabeth Keith (1887-1956), woodblock print, estimate: $800-$1,200. Michaan's Auctions images

ALAMEDA, Calif. – Michaan’s May 9 auction will feature fine art, decorative arts, Asian art and jewelry. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide absentee and Internet live bidding.

The Asian section of Michaan’s May sale includes decorative items, literature, jewelry and various artworks. One such artwork is Elizabeth Keith’s (1887-1956) woodblock print titled Hong Kong Harbor (estimate: $800-$1,200). Keith, a self-taught British artist born in Scotland, came to be influenced by the Japanese culture during her travels to the Far East. Keith’s woodblock prints continue to be rare and desired, as their production was often kept low, some in editions of only 30 or 50 copies.

Jewelry in the May auction will be plentiful, with more than 130 lots available. In addition to gemstones, jades, pearls and corals will be this month’s highlight, an understated yet lovely Art Deco brooch (below, estimate: $300-$400). The period piece of a carved black onyx rectangular plaque is sparsely adorned, letting geometry and sharp color differentiation take precedence. The openwork plaque holds two full-cut accent diamonds, as well as geometric red and green enamel enhancements and foliates motifs. The brooch remains in a beautifully lustrous, glass-like appearance, set in an 18K yellow gold and platinum mounting.




Approximately 80 lots make up the fine art portion of Michaan’s May estate auction that includes oil paintings, watercolors, serigraphs and etchings primarily from American and European artists. However, a bronze sculpture by Vietnamese artist Tuan (b. 1963) titled Prelude to a Kiss is the feature lot of the sale section (estimate: $1,500-
$2,000). The sculpture measures approximately 38 by 34 by 18 inches and stands upon a tiered black marble base.




Taking center stage in the decorative arts category is a bird’s-eye maple table box whose hinged cover features an original 1935 watercolor by British artist Reginald Augustus Wymer (1849-1935). The painting, titled Coldstream Guards 1760 upon the lower left, depicts uniformed guards in a courtyard at St. James’s Palace. The box, once gifted, contains a note within stating it was purchased as an antique when the buyer was stationed in England in 1942. Wymer has been regarded as a premiere military illustrator. The box has a $400-$600 estimate.




For more information call Michaan’s Auctions at 510-740- 0220 ext. 0 or e-mail info@michaans.com. Michaan’s Auctions is located at 2751 Todd St. Alameda, CA 94501.


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.

Record-setting prices expected at Morphy’s Vegas coin-op sale, May 1-3

Extremely rare Spirit gas globe with beehive graphics, condition 9.5. Estimate $10,000-$15,000. Morphy Auctions image


Extremely rare Spirit gas globe with beehive graphics, condition 9.5. Estimate $10,000-$15,000. Morphy Auctions image

LAS VEGAS – Featuring some of the most highly sought-after antique coin-operated machines in existence, the 1,500-lot-strong Coin-op, Advertising and Arcade Auction being held at Morphy Auctions Las Vegas on May 1, 2 and 3 could be the highest-grossing sale ever held at the auction house. Absentee and Internet live bidding through LiveAuctioneers is expected to help boost prices to record-setting levels.

“This sale has the best arcade items, both antique and contemporary, that have come to market in the last 20 years,” said Peter Sidlow, president of Morphy Auctions Las Vegas. “Coupled with the gambling machines, advertising signs, oil and gas collectibles; and other unique items, this could be a landmark event.” An extremely rare Spirit gas globe with beehive graphics, condition 9.5 out of 10, is estimated at $10,000-$15,000.

A strong contender for top-lot honors is a 1907 five-cent Caille Peerless roulette floor console. Beautifully maintained in original, fully functional condition, this model is described by Sidlow as the “finest roulette machine [he’s] ever seen,” and is expected to sell for $200,000-$250,000.


Caille Peerless 5-cent floor roulette slot machine, circa 1900, glass and wheel in mint original condition. Estimate $200,000-$250,000. Morphy Auctions image

Other outstanding coin-operated gambling machines in the May auction include a pair of very rare upright nickel slot machines, a 1901 Caille Lion estimated to reach $40,000-$60,000; and a 1902 Caille Black Cat musical cabinet, which is expected to sell for $30,000-$40,000. Both are in excellent working condition. A circa-1899 Mills Duplex 5-cent upright slot machine is considered one of the best extant examples. It is estimated at $80,000-$100,000.


Mills Duplex 5-cent upright slot machine, circa 1899, one of the best extant examples. Estimate $80,000-$100,000. Morphy Auctions image

Also within the superb selection of gambling machines are a 1938 Pace Royal Twin upright slot featuring dual sets of reels for both quarters and nickels, potentially worth $18,000-$25,000; a very rare 1938 Superior Golf Balls three-reeler with vibrant Art Deco styling that pays out in golf balls (see below), estimate $35,000-$50,000; and a similarly designed 1935 Superior horse racing console, which is expected to make $35,000-$45,000.


Superior Confection 25-cent golf ball slot machine, circa 1936. Estimate $25,000-35,000. Morphy Auctions image

Both an ESCO Spear The Dragon 1-cent strength tester and a Caille 5-cent Mickey Finn Tug of War arcade game, formerly part of the Stardust Hotel collection in Las Vegas, could reach $15,000-$25,000 apiece.


ESCO Spear The Dragon 1-cent strength tester. Estimate $15,000-$25,000. Morphy Auctions image



Caille 5-cent Mickey Finn Tug of War arcade game, ex Stardust Hotel collection. Estimate $15,000-$25,000. Morphy Auctions image

Among the other coin-operated gems in the May 1-3 auction are a rare, 1912 five-cent Mills Novelty Co. double Violano Virtuoso with self-playing piano and dual violins, estimate $60,000-$80,000; and a 1905 Edison Multiphone, billed as the “world’s first selective automatic jukebox. Accompanied by 24 original cylinders, it could reach or exceed $50,000. A 1937 World Series baseball arcade game expected to garner $35,000-$50,000.

The auction also includes a very nice collection or road signs from the Bruce Clark collection. A Peerless Stages bus depot sign is estimated at $30,000-$40,000.


Peerless Stages bus depot sign. Estimate $30,000-$40,000. Morphy Auctions image

The May. 1-3 auction will be held at Morphy’s Las Vegas gallery, with absentee and Internet live bidding available through LiveAuctioneers. Start time for all three sessions is 9 a.m. Pacific / 12 noon Eastern Time. For additional information on any item in auction, call 702-382-2466.


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.

Prosecutor claims convict offered to sell art stolen in 1990 heist

The Storm on the Sea of Galilee, 1633, Rembrandt van Rijn. Stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum on March 18, 1990.


The Storm on the Sea of Galilee, 1633, Rembrandt van Rijn. Stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum on March 18, 1990.

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) – A reputed mobster told an undercover FBI agent that he had access to two of the long-sought paintings stolen from Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990 and could negotiate a sale of each for $500,000, a prosecutor said Monday.

Robert Gentile, a 79-year-old convict who was released from a year ago, allegedly made the offer within the last several months to an agent posing as a drug dealer looking for help with a large-scale marijuana operation, prosecutor John Durham said.

The subject of the biggest art heist in U.S. history arose at a hearing Monday, where the judge ordered Gentile detained following his arrest Friday on allegations that he sold a handgun for $1,000 to a convicted murderer who wanted it to collect a drug debt.

Gentile’s attorney, A. Ryan McGuigan, said his client began working with the FBI three years ago to help find the stolen artwork. But because the FBI believes Gentile has not been forthcoming with everything he knows about the heist, McGuigan said, the agency has set up his client for arrests twice in the last three years.

“It’s my argument that a crime isn’t committed if it’s not orchestrated by the FBI,” said McGuigan, who said his client is not withholding any information.

Over the last 25 years, the FBI has chased thousands of leads around the world in the investigation into the theft of works worth an estimated $500 million, including Rembrandt’s Storm on the Sea of Galilee. Gentile’s alleged assertions would suggest significant new evidence, but it’s unclear what came of the offer to negotiate the artworks’ sale, and the U.S. attorney’s office declined to comment on how it was interpreted by investigators.

On March 18, 1990, two men posing as police officers stole 13 pieces of art including paintings by Edouard Manet, Edgar Degas and Johannes Vermeer. The paintings have never been found and nobody has been charged in the robbery.

Two years ago, the FBI in Boston said investigators believed the thieves belonged to a criminal organization based in New England and the Mid-Atlantic. They believe the art was taken to Connecticut and Pennsylvania in the years after the theft and offered for sale in Philadelphia. After that, the trail went cold.= The museum is offering a $5 million reward for the return of the artwork, and the government is offering immunity from prosecution.

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

AP-WF-04-20-15 1912GMT

Modern art, Continental pieces accent John Moran sale April 28

‘Woman with Flowered Hat,’ an acrylic silkscreen by Los Angeles-based artist Richard Pettibone (b. 1938). An excellent illustration of the artist’s appropriation-based, Dada-influenced work, the diminutive piece is a copy from Roy Lichtenstein’s ‘Picasso’s Woman with Flowered Hat,’ after Picasso’s portrait of Dora Maar dating to 1939-40. The work is estimated at $8,000-$12,000. John Moran Auctioneers images


‘Woman with Flowered Hat,’ an acrylic silkscreen by Los Angeles-based artist Richard Pettibone (b. 1938). An excellent illustration of the artist’s appropriation-based, Dada-influenced work, the diminutive piece is a copy from Roy Lichtenstein’s ‘Picasso’s Woman with Flowered Hat,’ after Picasso’s portrait of Dora Maar dating to 1939-40. The work is estimated at $8,000-$12,000. John Moran Auctioneers images

PASADENA, Calif. – John Moran Auctioneers is diving headlong into the Spring auction season. Moran’s April 28 auction features contemporary and modern art, traditional Continental paintings, fine silver, objects of virtu, hand-painted porcelain and fine furniture.

LiveAuctioneers.com will provide absentee and Internet live bidding.

The modern and contemporary fine art selections include a somber female portrait by Spanish-Puerto Rican sculptor, painter and graphic artist Angel Botello (1913-1986), which  has a conservative estimate of $6,000 to $8,000. Two additional works by the artist are also on offer in the April catalog.




Complementing the modern artwork, two lots of Picasso pottery for Madoura promise to interest bidders. A polychrome and knife-engraved pichet à glacé vessel numbered 37 from the limited edition of 50, should find a buyer for between $12,000 and $18,000.




A considerable selection of French bronzes large and small should appeal to those with more traditional Continental tastes. The dynamic La Lutte de Jacob avec l’ange, marked with the Susse foundry pastille and after the model by Auguste Henri Carli (1868-1930) is expected to bring $1,500 to $2,500.




The auction catalog includes a number of signed French furniture pieces by celebrated 19th/20th century ébénistes, including two pieces from the Paris workshop of Paul Sormani. Below is a gilt bronze-mounted cabinet in the transitional Louis XV/XVI-style, indicative of the maker’s keen eye for detailing. With carefully matched veneers and an elegant, slender form, the cabinet is expected to bring $8,000 to $12,000.




A small selection of Asian decorative arts offered in the April auction serve as an intriguing prelude to the contents of Moran’s upcoming June 16 Decorative Art Auction, which will feature an extensive collection of Asian works of art from an important Southern California collection. The April catalog selections include a handsome Thai lacquered gilt bronze Buddha Shakyamuni dating to the 17th/18th centuries, carrying a conservative estimate of $4,000 to $6,000.




Tuesday’s auction will be held at the Pasadena Convention Center, located at 300 E. Green St. For information regarding any upcoming auctions or queries regarding consignment, interested parties are invited to contact John Moran Auctioneers directly, either via telephone: 626-793-1833 or email: info@johnmoran.com.


View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet as the sale is taking place by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.