The Meri Jaye maritime collection steams into Clars April 18

Edward Moran, 'New York Bay from the Battery,' estimated at $20,000-$40,000 at Clars.

OAKLAND, Calif. — Meri Jaye (1920-2023) lived perhaps the most remarkable life of her generation, hitting 102 before her passing in San Francisco. She was born in Fort Worth, Texas and was raised with her siblings by her mother in San Antonio. There, she was blessed with a Catholic education in which the nuns encouraged her to follow her artistic ambitions. She served as a so-called ‘girl singer’ in numerous country and western bands in Texas before heading to Rome and elsewhere to complete her education in interior design.

In the 1960s, Meri Jaye was retained by the legendary CEO of American President Lines, Ralph K. Davies, to redesign its San Francisco corporate offices. So taken with her work was Davies that he retained Jaye’s firm to design interiors for its new line of what today are known as container ships. Each ship was named after a historic American president, which brought unique inspiration to each project. Her first ship design, The President Van Buren, launched in 1967 and featured crew compartments designed with elements from the Van Buren era (1837-1841), cementing her status as a legend herself in the maritime industry.

Clars Auction Gallery brings highlights from Meri Jaye’s lifetime collection to market with its Thursday, April 18 Maritime Sale. The complete catalog is available for bidding now at LiveAuctioneers.

The Meri Jaye collection features numerous maritime ship models, including a model of the stern of HMS Bellerophon. The lot is accompanied by a fragmentary letter stating the model was built in the 19th century by a sailor on duty on the Bellerophon in 1815. The Bellerophon was the ship Napoleon Bonaparte boarded to surrender to the ship’s captain, thereby ending 22 years of almost continuous war between Britain and France. The model is estimated at $2,500-$3,500.

Edward Moran (1829-1901) was born in England to a family of weavers that emigrated to the United States in 1844. Moran studied art in Philadelphia and in 1868 submitted a group of his maritime paintings for consideration at the Pennsylvania Academy. His works were accepted, but so unhappy was the artist with their placement that he defaced the works with an opaque wash, enraging the exhibition directors. This caused a sensation in the local news, prompting scores of Philadelphians to come see the controversy in person. New York Bay from the Battery is from 1871 and features Moran’s classic themes. It is estimated at $20,000-$40,000, making it the highest-estimated lot in the sale.

Heritage realizes new world record for Action Comics No. 1 with $6m sale

Action Comics No. 1, which sold for $5 million ($6 million with buyer's premium) at Heritage.

DALLAS — Priced at 10 cents when it appeared in 1938, a copy of Action Comics No. 1, which introduced the world to Superman, has become the world’s most valuable comic book. It sold for a hammer price of $5 million as part of the April 4-7 Comics & Comic Art auction at Heritage Auctions.

The price was $6 million including buyer’s premium. According to (grading service) CGC’s list of the most expensive comic books ever reported sold, a copy of Superman No. 1 was bought privately for $5.3 million in 2022.

The previous auction record was held by the CGC Near Mint+ 9.6 copy of Amazing Fantasy No. 15, featuring the debut of Spider-Man, which sold for a premium-inclusive $3.6 million at Heritage in September 2021.

Graded CGC Very Fine+ 8.5, the Heritage Action Comics No. 1 came from the Kansas City Pedigree — the earliest so-called ‘pedigreed’ collection ever discovered, which turned up in Kansas City in the late 1960s and featured a large group of nearly 250 high-grade No. 1 issues that ran from 1937 to the 1940s.

It was “one of the world’s finest copies,” said the auction house. “Only two other unrestored issues featuring Superman’s first flight — or, at least, his first leap over a tall building — have ever graded higher.”

There are just 78 copies of Action Comics No. 1 in CGC’s population report, with the grading service estimating there are a scant 100 survivors of the comic book that launched superheroes into popular culture. Around 200,000 copies were originally printed by DC Comics’ predecessor National Allied Publications.

Action Comics No. 1 is hailed as “the most important comic ever published,” said Heritage, and the Superman who first appeared in the spring of 1938 remains “remarkably like the version still filling comic-shop shelves every week or awaiting yet another big-screen turn in writer-director James Gunn’s retelling of the tale”.

Second tranche of the Flower majolica collection delivered stunning results at Strawser

Copeland Majolica 1876 Memorial Vase, which sold for $15,000 ($18,600 with buyer's premium) at Strawser.

KULPSVILLE, Penn. – A Copeland vase produced to mark 100 years of American Independence was among the highlights of the second tranche of the Flower collection of majolica. This model, first shown at the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia and then exclusively distributed by the New York retailers J.M. Shaw & Co., took $15,000 ($18,600 with buyer’s premium) at Strawser Auction Group on March 16.

The 1876 exhibition was an important one in the story of the medium of majolica. Many British ceramics factories exhibited at the event, with majolica proving a big hit with the North American public. This 10in vase has become arguably the most coveted of Copeland’s majolica output. It is modeled as three back-to-back gray eagles guarding the American flag with spears, and includes three cobalt blue shields with the words 1876 Centennial Memorial and also Washington the Father of Our Country. Examples only very occasionally appear at auction, although the (restored) vase in the Joan Stacke Graham collection sold by Doyle New York in April 2023 made $9,500.

This was the second of three auctions dedicated to the remarkable collection of Edward Flower (1929-2022) and his wife Marilyn (1930-2017). The Flowers began collecting majolica in the late 1990s, relatively late in their lives, but the bug bit them hard. Across a trio of sales (the first held last August, and the last taking place later this year) more than 600 pieces will be offered. London specialist dealer Nicolaus Boston has cataloged the collection for Strawser.

Of the 185 lots offered on March 16, two were expected to vie for top honors, with estimates of $25,000-$30,000 each. The first was a George Jones teapot, one of only a few known formed as a Chinese junk filled with cargo, with the cover modeled as a figure in Chinese costume. “In my 30 years of selling majolica this is the first one I’ve ever offered,” said Michael Strawser. It sold just short of expectations at $24,000 ($29,760 with buyer’s premium).

The second was a version of the Minton ‘Hare and Duck’ head game pie dish and cover, affectionately known among collectors as The Bunny Tureen. The model is one of several by the French émigré animalia sculptor Paul Comolera, who worked at the Minton factory from 1873 to 1877. Prices for these have soared above $50,000 in the past, but with several major collections sold in recent years, the market is now relatively soft. It hammered for $20,000 ($24,800 with buyer’s premium).

Another Comelera design for Minton is the 2ft 9in high umbrella stand modeled as a fawn nibbling oak leaves on a tree stump – a model based on sketches Comolera made of the fallow deer herd at the Duke of Sutherland’s residence near Trentham Hall in Staffordshire, England. With some restoration, it hammered at $3,750 ($4,650 with buyer’s premium).

Several pieces in the Flower collection were recently part of the renowned Majolica Mania exhibition that was launched in New York City in the fall of 2021, traveled to the Walters Museum in Baltimore in early 2022, and finished at Stoke-on-Trent in the UK in fall 2022. These include a circa-1875 Minton tete-a-tete in the chinoiserie taste  that is one of just three complete sets known. The individual elements are a teapot formed as a lychee, a gourd-shaped sugar bowl and cover, a thistle cream jug, and two cups and saucers shaped as yellow fruit on leaves. All sit neatly on a quatrefoil tray with a pierced trellis border. In remarkably good condition, with its only imperfection being a small nick to the teapot lid, it took a solid $25,000 ($31,000 with buyer’s premium) — the top price of the sale.

Also shown at Majolica Mania were a circa-1875 pair of rustic vases modeled with peacocks by William Brownfield, and a vase of around the same date formed as a pair of herons by Brown Westhead Moore & Co., possibly designed by Mark V. Marshall of Doulton Lambeth fame. They were estimated at $1,500-$2,000 and $1,500-$2,000 respectively, and sold at $3,500 ($4,340 with buyer’s premium) and $2,500 ($3,100 with buyer’s premium).

Another rarity, best known from the collecting literature, is a Minton ink well and cover, modeled as a bird atop an upright pinecone. It’s one of only three recorded, with another pictured in Victoria Cecil’s influential 1982 catalog Minton Majolica. The hammer price for the example in the March 16 auction was $5,000 ($6,200 with buyer’s premium) against an estimate of $1,500-$2,000.

One of two known, a Wardle & Co. garden seat modeled as an ivy-clad tree trunk draped with a tablecloth sold at $4,500 ($5,580 with buyer’s premium), despite some wear and restoration. The circa-1881 design, with the crisply modeled woodpecker clinging to the side, is among the best pieces from the factory that produced large quantities of majolica in the budget-friendly price range.

It is an indication of collecting fashion that a large Palissy-style ‘art of the earth’ basin, inscribed and dated Avisseau, Tours, 1856 for French ceramicist Charles-Jean Avisseau (1795-1861), had shared the top price of the first sale at $40,000. The March 16 event included a similar teapot by the Avisseau, modeled as a snake climbing an ivy-clad tree trunk. After buying this piece in 2014, Ed Flower commissioned the contemporary ceramics sculptor Jonathan Court and the decorator Nicola Rose to recreate a missing frog cover. Both artists signed their names on the underside. It came to auction with an estimate of $3,000-$4,000 and hammered at $3,750 ($4,650 with buyer’s premium).

Continental European wares, once the slightly poorer relation to pieces by the best Staffordshire, England factories, were a strength of the first sale. Particularly well-received was a menagerie of large naturalistic models by the Massier Brothers, Choisy Le Roi, and Hugo Lonitz factories. All had lived together cheek-by-jowl in the Flowers’ Bay Shore, New York residence. Highlights in Part II included a monumental 18in model of a jay perched on a tree stump by Hugo Lonitz, estimated at $4,000-$6,000. One of only two known examples, it brought $7,000 ($8,680 with buyer’s premium).