Fontaine’s Auction Gallery features Tiffany lamps, fine antiques in Sept. 9 sale

Tiffany Studios 18-light Lily lamp could boasting 18 signed L.C.T. art glass shades having a ribbed and trumpeted form, all in good condition. Estimate: $40,000-$60,000. Fontaine’s Auction Gallery image

 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. – A rare Tiffany Studios 18-light Lily lamp, a Gustav Becker astronomical floor regulator clock and a carved Carrara marble sculpture of a standing nude woman by Italian artist Pasquale Romanelli (1812-1887) are expected top lots at Fontaine’s Auction Gallery’s next Antiques & Fine Art Auction planned for Saturday, Sept. 9, starting at 11 a.m. Eastern time. Absentee and Internet bidding is available through LiveAuctioneers.

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Jeffrey S. Evans to host delicious Summer Variety Auction Aug. 26

Rare Coca-Cola change tray, 1900, 5 1/2 in. diameter. Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates image

 

MT. CRAWFORD, Va. – Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates’ Summer Variety Auction contains a true diversity of material, everything from vintage posters and Native American material to antique toys and sterling silver souvenir spoons. The auction will take place on Saturday, Aug. 26, at 9:30 a.m. Eastern time. Absentee and Internet live bidding is available through LiveAuctioneers.

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US history documents, artifacts comprise Cowan’s auction Sept. 8

Abraham Lincoln and his son Tad, last formal photograph of the president, in exceptional folk art carved Emancipation Proclamation frame, albumen photograph, 10 x 14 in., 21 x 30.5 in. overall. Estimate: $15,000-$25,000. Cowan’s Auctions image

 

CINCINNATI – Select items from the Eric C. Caren Archive, arguably the single most significant private collection of historic documents in the United States, will be offered at Cowan’s Auctions on Friday, Sept. 8. The auction will be held in Cowan’s showroom. Absentee and Internet live bidding is available through LiveAuctioneers.

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Tokyo museum exhibiting work of Yayoi Kusama to open Oct. 1

Portrait of the artist. Copyright YAYOI KUSAMA. Used by permission of Yayoi Kusama Museum

 

TOKYO – The 5-story museum devoted to the work of Japanese avant-garde artist Yayoi Kusama will open its doors on October 1 in Tokyo. Established by Kusama and managed by the Yayoi Kusama Foundation, the museum’s purpose is to familiarize the public with contemporary art through exhibitions of Kusama’s eye-opening polka-dot-theme artworks and installations.

A museum statement added that it is the foundation’s desire to “transmit the message of world peace and human love, which Kusama has been embodying through her artworks” and host semiannual exhibitions and lectures.

The inaugural exhibition, titled “Creation if a Solitary Pursuit, Love is What Brings You Closer to Art,” will run from October 1 through Feb. 25, 2018. It will feature Kusama’s latest painting series “My Eternal Soul.”

 

Exterior view of the Yayoi Kusama Museum in Tokyo. Photo by Masahiro Tsuchido. Copyright YAYOI KUSAMA. Used by permission of Yayoi Kusama Museum

 

The reinforced-concrete museum is located at 107 Bentencho in Tokyo’s Shinjuku-ku ward. It is constructed with five stories above ground and one story below. Visitors enter on the first floor, which also houses a gift shop. Exhibition rooms are on the second and third floors, while the fourth floor is dedicated to installations. The fifth floor contains a browsing library and also has an outdoor exhibition space.

 

Map indicating the location of the Yayoi Kusama Museum in Tokyo’s Shinjuku-ku district. Image provided by Yayoi Kusama Museum

 

Hours of operation will be 11 a.m. till 5 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays, and on national holidays, but the museum may be closed for maintenance between exhibitions as well as during the New Year holiday.

About Yayoi Kusama:

Artist and novelist Yayoi Kusama was born in 1929 in Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture. From a young age, Yayoi Kusama experienced visual and auditory hallucinations, and began creating net and polka-dot-pattern pictures. In 1957, she went to the United States and began making net paintings and soft sculptures, and developing installations that made use of mirrors, lights and “happenings,” thus establishing herself as an avant-garde artist. She discovered an artistic philosophy of self-annihilation via the obsessive repetition and multiplication of single motifs. She has held exhibitions at various museums throughout the world, and in recent years her large-scale retrospective exhibitions at the likes of Tate Modern and Pompidou Center have attracted global attention. More than 2 million visitors attended her exhibition tours in Latin America and Asia. She was named the “world’s most popular artist in 2014” by The Art Newspaper. In 2016, she was awarded Japan’s Order of Culture. In 2017, her North American tour was launched at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C.

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