Johnny Cash cane leads interesting walking stick collection at Nye & Co. Jan. 24

Johnny Cash's personal hand-carved cane, estimated at $7,000-$10,000 at Nye & Co.

BLOOMFIELD, N.J. — The annual deluge of Americana each January means a feast for collectors, offering up items which, in many cases, are coming to market for the first time. Nye & Co.’s Collectors’ Passions brings together a major and minor collection of Americana to present a 396-lot sale Wednesday, January 24. Its catalog is now available for bidding at LiveAuctioneers.

The sale’s main focus is on items from Marjorie and Robert L. Hirschhorn, who were major collectors of American folk art marquetry, a technique in which objects are adorned with intricate cut wooden elements. Their collection was the focus of a 1998-1999 exhibition at the American Folk Art Museum on Lincoln Square in New York. That exhibition was turned into the book American Folk Marquetry: Masterpieces in Wood by Richard Mühlberger, released in 1998 in association with the exhibition.

Perhaps no better symbol of American folk art marquetry can be found than in the cane of country music legend Johnny Cash (1932-2003). Marked only as Burch 82, the 35in cane features both an owl at its top and a winding snake working its way up the staff towards the bird — a metaphor for Cash’s life. Used by Cash late in life as his health worsened, the masterpiece in marquetry is estimated at $7,000-$10,000.

Dating to 18th-century France, this carved cane is referred to as ‘satirical’ and features governmental and military caricatures, including one long-haired gent at the top with an elephant’s trunk for a nose, forming the cane’s handle. Well worn, the notes say it was purchased from the Woodhaven, Connecticut collection of Marion Harris. It carries an estimate of $2,000-$3,000.

American cane-carving legend Mike Cribbins (1837-1917) was born in Ireland but is most associated with his later life in Michigan, where he created an untold number of intricate, hand-carved canes made from diamond willow. This wood takes on a snake-like diamond-back pattern when infected with fungus. Cribbins would rely on this pattern as a legend to carve faces, hands, fish, animals, names, Civil War references and much more. This example measures 34.5in in length and is estimated at $3,000-$5,000.

Another diamond willow cane in the Hirschorn collection is this example with provenance to Deadwood, South Dakota. Marked This cane was made in Deadwood: June 11, 1894, Speceimen (sic) Gold Silver Ore, it features inlaid metal and measures 34in in length. It has an estimate of $2,000-$4,000.

Marquetry artist earns showcase at Addison Gallery of American Art

Alison Elizabeth Taylor, ‘Laocoon,’ 2013. Marquetry hybrid: wood veneer, oil and shellac, 58 by 76in. Private collection. Courtesy Alison Elizabeth Taylor and James Cohan Gallery, NY
Alison Elizabeth Taylor, ‘Laocoon,’ 2013. Marquetry hybrid: wood veneer, oil and shellac, 58 by 76in. Private collection. Courtesy Alison Elizabeth Taylor and James Cohan Gallery, NY
Alison Elizabeth Taylor, ‘Laocoon,’ 2013. Marquetry hybrid: wood veneer, oil and shellac, 58 by 76in. Private collection. Courtesy Alison Elizabeth Taylor and James Cohan Gallery, NY

ANDOVER, Mass. – Alison Elizabeth Taylor: The Sum of It is on view now through July 30 at the Addison Gallery of American Art . Known for her daring and inventive fusion of the centuries-old practice of marquetry, or wood inlay, with gritty and provocative subject matter, Alison Elizabeth Taylor tells tales that are unequivocally modern. This exhibition, the first museum survey devoted to Taylor, assembles dozens of works that chronicle her steady mastery of the now nearly forgotten techniques of this rarified medium and reveal her talent as an extraordinary storyteller and chronicler of 21st-century American culture. It is accompanied by a fully illustrated publication featuring essays by exhibition curator Allison Kemmerer, New Yorker journalist Naomi Fry and novelist Lynne Tillman.

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Hermann Historica offers bidders art, antiques, Asian art and more, May 6

Corinthian helmet dating to the late 6th or early 5th century B.C., estimated at €38,000-€76,000
Corinthian helmet dating to the late 6th or early 5th century B.C., estimated at €38,000-€76,000
Corinthian helmet dating to the late 6th or early 5th century B.C., estimated at €38,000-€76,000

MUNICH, Germany – The stage is set and the curtain is about to rise on Hermann Historica‘s Saturday, May 6 auction, titled Works of Art, Antiques, Ancient and Asian Art and featuring just under 750 lots. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

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Hindman presents property from elegant Miami Beach estate, May 31

Exterior of the Miami Beach estate Casa de Suenos. Image courtesy of Hindman
Exterior of the Miami Beach estate Casa de Suenos. Image courtesy of Hindman
Exterior of the Miami Beach estate Casa de Suenos. Image courtesy of Hindman

PALM BEACH, Fla. – Hindman Auctions will offer property from Casa de Suenos, a historic Miami Beach estate, in an exclusive single-owner sale on May 31. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

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Hindman presents fine Atlanta collections Oct. 13

Louis XV/XVI transitional style marquetry marble-top commode, est. $2,000-$4,000
Louis XV/XVI transitional style marquetry marble-top commode, est. $2,000-$4,000
Louis XV/XVI transitional style marquetry marble-top commode, est. $2,000-$4,000

ATLANTA – On October 13, Hindman Auctions will present an Atlanta Collections auction, which will feature a wide assortment of decorative arts, furniture and fine art from prominent collections. Collections to be featured include decorative objects and furniture from the property from the estate of Susan Tucker of Atlanta, Georgia, fine British watercolors from the collection of F. Alan Cummings of Tallahassee, Florida and continental furniture from the estate of Emily Bourne Grigsby of Atlanta, Georgia. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

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