Warhol and Diebenkorn headline Revere’s March 20 fine art evening auction

Andy Warhol, 'Sunset,' estimated at $70,000-$100,000 at Revere.

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Revere Auctions has announced a 58-lot evening auction of fine art for Wednesday, March 20. Major names from the 20th century are featured, including Pablo Picasso, Joan Miro, and Andy Warhol. The catalog is now open for bidding at LiveAuctioneers.

Richard Diebenkorn (1922-1993) was a major player in the Bay Area Figurative Movement of the 1950s and 1960s. Abstract expressionism was his forte, as reflected in the sale’s top-estimated lot, a 1959 oil on canvas titled Reclining Nude II. It was originally offered at Poindexter Gallery in New York in 1961 and sold many times before landing in the private Minnesota collection from which it has been consigned. The piece carries a $200,000-$300,000 estimate.

As a member of the New York School of abstract expressionism, Grace Hartigan (1922-2008) was contemporaries with Jackson Pollock, Willem and Elaine de Kooning, and Larry Rivers. She was profiled in Life Magazine in 1957, further boosting her presence on the art scene. Dublin is from the 1958-59 period and is from her European Place painting series. It was first exhibited at the Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts in 1960 and has had few owners since. It comes to market now with an estimate of $150,000-$200,000.

In 1972, Andy Warhol (1928-1987) was commissioned by the Hotel Marquette in Minneapolis to create a series of screen prints. Sunset is from a 632-print edition, and as Revere notes, “The Sunset prints demonstrated Warhol’s ability to elevate mundane subjects into captivating, mass-produced art.” The print is estimated at $70,000-$100,000.

Charles Biederman (1906-2004) has three works in the sale. Structurist Relief, NY #7 is a painted wood wall sculpture depicting a three-dimensional geometric composition in blue, yellow, and white. The design is dated to 1938, but the piece itself carries a copyright notice of 1978. It is estimated at $30,000-$50,000.

Historic Americana offers a view to the 18th century at Freeman’s Hindman March 15

Charles Lyman, portraits of Thaddeus and Elizabeth Leavitt, estimated at $8,000-$12,000 at Freeman's Hindman.

CINCINNATI — Freeman’s Hindman brings three family collections to market Friday, March 15, with a large selection of Americana from the late 18th and early 19th century. The catalog is now open for bidding at LiveAuctioneers.

Early American portraits are lead items in the sale. Charles Lyman (1775-1818) was an American portraitist engaged to depict Thaddeus and Elizabeth Leavitt in July of 1803. Their portraits measure 27.5 by 24.325in and are oils on canvas. Both are marked by the artist on the back and the lot also includes a watercolor on silk titled View of Cronberg Castle near Elsineur (sic), done by Elizabeth in 1806. The complete three-item lot is estimated at $8,000-$12,000.

The next set of husband and wife portraits contain something of a mystery. Everyone involved — subjects and artist — are French, but they were apparently rendered in the United States in 1807. Charles Balthazar Saint-Mémin (1770-1852) was a French aristocrat who came to America and painted hundreds of portraits using a Physiognotrace, a mechanical device that allowed for the relatively easy creation of profile portraits. His subjects, Maurice and Marguerite Tristant de Verdun, are historically known but show no evidence of having been in America at the time. The lot is estimated at $6,000-$8,000.

The sale also includes a large selection of early American-themed Liverpool and Staffordshire creamware featuring transfer-printed Founding Father political figures. Most are pitchers, but the selection also features bowls, plates, and even mugs. Some of the highlights include:

Unique Adelaide Herrmann poster conjures $57K in magical $863K sale at Potter and Potter

CHICAGO – Potter & Potter‘s February 24 sale of the Edwin A. Dawes (1925-2023) magicana collection netted $863,000, more than $300,000 above the presale high estimate. With a 99% sell-through rate, the performance reinforced the high demand for quality magic-related memorabilia in the contemporary market. Complete results are available at LiveAuctioneers.

Dawes was a singular figure in the world of magic and magicians, and the most prolific chronicler of conjuring history in the 20th century. The sale’s top earner was Adelaide Herrmann and Company. The Flight of the Favorite. Estimated at $10,000-$15,000, it traded hands at an amazing $48,000 ($57,600 with buyer’s premium). This bright, one-sheet stone lithographed promotional poster was published around 1905 in New York by The Metropolitan Printing Co. and featured Hermann’s (1853-1932) signature transposition effect from her vaudeville magic show. According to Potter & Potter’s experts, this was the only known example of this poster to survive.

Chung Ling Soo Chinese Conjurer was estimated at $8,000-$12,000 and sold for $34,000 ($40,800 with buyer’s premium). The poster was printed in Ashton-Under-Lyne by Horrocks & Co. around 1910 and features a central full-length portrait of Soo (actually Brooklyn-born William E. Robinson, 1861-1918), flanked by Chinese characters. This was one of only a handful of three-sheet Soo posters extant of any design, and was the first of its kind ever seen or handled by Potter & Potter’s experts.

Hocus Pocus Junior, The Anatomy of Legerdemain, Or, The Art of Juggling set forth in proper Colours, was estimated at $10,000-$15,000 and delivered $30,000 ($36,000 with buyer’s premium). Printed in London by G. Dawson in 1663, this example of the book was noted as the sixth edition, ‘with many additions.’ This was only one of two known examples of this exact edition and was purchased by Dr. Dawes a Sotheby’s auction in 1979.

One of the more surprising performances was achieved by Chung Ling Soo’s address book, which was estimated at $4,000-$8,000 and made $26,000 ($31,200 with buyer’s premium). Owned by the man dubbed the ‘Marvelous Chinese Conjurer,’ the address book was filled with entries in ink in his own hand, including many key contacts important to his career as an entertainer.

Ionia, Goddess of Mystery was estimated at $4,000-$6,000 and rang up $22,000 ($26,400 with buyer’s premium). This full-color half-sheet stone lithograph poster showed performer Ionia (born Clementine DeVere, 1888-1973) beside a trunk decorated with Egyptian iconography, from which a woman appears.

According to Potter & Potter Auctions President Gabe Fajuri, “It’s gratifying to bring unique pieces of history to the auction block. Some of the material in the Dawes collection has not been on the market in over 50 years – or longer – and the results for this kind of fresh to the market, one-of-a-kind material speak for themselves.”

 

 

Antique toy collection of Curtis and Linda Smith heads to Bertoia March 16

VINELAND, N.J. – Antique toy collectors who dream of time-traveling to the 1970s and ’80s when now-legendary toy shows and auctions took place have an opportunity to bid on items originally collected then. The breathtaking collection of Linda Smith and her late husband Curtis Smith will be offered in a single-owner auction (the first of two) on Saturday, March 16 at Bertoia. The catalog is now available for bidding at LiveAuctioneers.

“Curt and Linda Smith were prominent in the toy-collecting fraternity for decades,” said Michael Bertoia, president of Bertoia Auctions. “Both were active members of the Antique Toy Collectors of America (ATCA) and served on numerous committees over the years. Curt even served as the club’s president.”

The Smiths’ decades-long collecting adventure would take them to now-historic East Coast and European auctions, shows, and markets, where they acquired pieces with provenance from such fabled pioneers of the antique toy hobby as Louis Hertz, Bernard Barenholtz, Athel Spilhaus, Covert Hegarty, and Leon Perelman.

Top billing in this month’s auction goes to a Carpenter cast-iron Tally Ho horse-drawn coach. All-original, including its removable, often-missing figures, the dashing 26in-long vehicle is described by Michael Bertoia as being “the finest of all known examples.” Its estimate is $50,000-$75,000.

Curtis Smith made no secret of the fact that he especially loved firefighting pieces. The Smith collection includes a large-scale German horse-drawn fire pumper of hand-painted tin with painted wooden horses and composition fireman figure at the reins. Remarkably, it retains its original rubber fire hose and hand lever for pumping water. In excellent condition, the 14in-long toy is estimated at $15,000-$25,000.

Linda Smith has always favored the hand-lever velocipedes in their collection, in particular a circa-1880 Uncle Sam clockwork perambulator that is believed to be one of only two surviving examples. The Uncle Sam figure is dressed in its original cloth jacket and ‘American Flag’ striped pants. This famous toy is pictured in two esteemed reference books: American Clockwork Toys by Blair Whitton and American Tin Toys by Bernard Barenholtz. It was owned by both authors, consecutively, before joining the Smith collection and now comes to auction with a $40,000-$60,000 estimate.

A grand Althof Bergmann circus roundabout, measuring 17in in diameter, is unquestionably one of the finest early American clockwork toys ever to reach the marketplace. It has a storied background, having been discovered in a Pennsylvania attic by a picker. According to Linda Smith, the picker had been given permission to “clear out the attic and keep anything he wanted.” He was not a toy expert, so he listed it on eBay, where it was purchased by Steven Weiss of Gemini Antiques Ltd, then resold to the Smiths. In pristine condition and in fine working order, it is the only known example of its type. It carries an estimate of $30,000-$50,000.

Politically significant, a circa-1890s George Brown clockwork hoop toy depicts a William Goodwin-made girl with a hand-painted head pushing a wheeled vehicle with a suffragette balance-figure at its center. The 11.5in toy is pictured in Whitton’s American Clockwork Toys and has a $10,000-$15,000 estimate.

Michael Bertoia said: “The Curtis and Linda collection is a classic, and the March auction – part one of a two-part series – is an event the world will want to watch. The high condition that distinguishes the entire collection is unrivaled. Many of the best of all known examples, whether tin or cast iron, are included in the Smith collection. Some of the primitive American tin pieces, which are so desired by collectors, have thick, bright, original paint. These are the types of toys you just never see. They were acquired by collectors 40 to 50 years ago, and unless a collection is auctioned as a whole, there aren’t many opportunities to buy toys of this caliber.”