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Chinese ceramics

Chinese ceramics among prized items in Kaminski auction Jan. 15

Fine Chinese Langyao vase. Kaminski Auctions image
Fine Chinese Langyao vase. Estimate: $3,000-$4,000. Kaminski Auctions image

 

BEVERLY, Mass. – On Jan. 15 Kaminski Auctions will hold a two-session auction beginning with an array of fine Asian items from the Travis Brock Collection of Monochrome Ceramics of Bethesda, Maryland. The collection was acquired in Derbyshire, England in 1972. Highlights include a fine Chinese Langyao vase, with a lustrous red glaze with an under glazed Kangxi seal of the period, valued at $3,000-$4,000. Absentee and Internet live bidding is available through LiveAuctioneers.

There is also a rare pair of Kangxi aubergine Dragon dishes with deeply rounded interiors finely incised with five-clawed dragons. The exteriors are similarly decorated with pairs of striding dragons. They are conservatively estimated at $6,000- $8,000. A fine Chinese sang-de-boeuf “Yuhuchun” vase of pear-shape form with the Qianlong seal on the base is estimated at $4,000-$6,000, and there is a fine Chinese celadon bottle vase painted in a rich bluish-green glaze valued at $2,500-$3,500.

Chinese furniture in the auction includes a large 18th century Chinese wood cabinet with brass work and a Chinese huanghuali wood scholar’s cabinet from the late 19th to early 20th century.

Session Two features items from the lifetime collection of Cheryl Burke of Sarasota, Florida, and other Massachusetts and New Hampshire estates. Highlights of this session include a Harriet Whitney Frishmuth bronze sculpture titled Crest of the Wave, signed and dated “1925” and marked edition 7/8 “Gorham Co. Founder.”

 

Harriet Whitney Frishmuth ‘Crest of the Wave’ bronze. Kaminski Auctions image
Harriet Whitney Frishmuth ‘Crest of the Wave’ bronze. Kaminski Auctions image

 

There is also an important 19th century or earlier carved marble head of a mythological figure (below) from a Rome, Italy estate. The figure possibly represents Alexander with the horns of Ammon after his conquest of Egypt in 332 B.C., when the priesthood accepted him as the son of the god Ammon. It is valued at $2,500-$3,500.

 

Carved head of a mythological figure. Kaminski Auctions image
Carved head of a mythological figure. Kaminski Auctions image

 

Fine art in the auction includes paintings by Brian Coole, The American Hong at Hong Kong, an oil on panel signed lower right and two paintings by the Russian artist Mikhail Aleksandrov, The Bird and Creation from the Kouros Gallery, Madison Avenue, New York.

 

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Chinese ceramics