PRESS RELEASE 09/21/2003
Carats
Bring a Lot of Lettuce at Stamford
By
Mary Lou Kirby
STAMFORD,
CONN. -- A 5.8-carat emerald cut, platinum and diamond engagement ring topped a recent
Stamford Auction Gallery sale at $27,600, selling to a private individual from New York.
Opening at $10,000, phone and house bidders rapidly drove up the price in $1,000
increments. The ring, with a center diamond accented by two illusion set tapered baguette
diamonds, came from a Fifth Avenue estate in New York City.
Auctioneer
and owner Gary Braswell said, "It sold at a fair price, within estimate."
Equally spirited was the bidding for a 2.80-carat brilliant cut diamond and 2.80-carat
dual-faceted sapphire ring, set in 18K yellow gold, which bandied among phone and house
bidders, ultimately selling to a New York dealer at $20,700.
The
900-plus lot sale also featured works by noted artists such as James E. Buttersworth, M.B.
Prendergast and Anton Mauve; antique American furniture; fine porcelain, including a pair
of Meissen ewers; Herend and Spode ironstone; Orientalia such as Satsuma, Imari and carved
ivories; Georgian and Tiffany sterling silver; mirrors; F. Barbedienne bronzes;
sculptures, sconces and candelabra; Oriental carpets; and miniature furniture and dolls.
Most of the contents came from estates in Connecticut and New York.
Following
a week of preview sessions, the sale attracted approximately 500 registered bidders,
including about 100 phone and 200 absentee bidders. Gallery manager Grant Panarese said,
"We tend to get a lot of off-site bidders because we have built a good reputation,
and people are comfortable in leaving their bids with us."
Art
drew keen and considerable activity, especially from the phone bidders. Top in this
category was an unframed oil on canvas depicting "Sailing Vessels off the Coast of
Gibraltar in a Storm" by American artist James Edward Buttersworth (1817-1894), eight
by ten inches, which opened at $3,000 and sold to a collector from New York City by phone
for $17,250. The painting came from an estate in Connecticut. "We found it in a
closet wrapped up in a bag!" said Braswell.
An oil on board, "Bathers at the Shore," by Maurice B. Prendergast, dated Paris
1891, 6 by 71/2 inches, was aggressively bid by a phone and house bidder, ultimately
selling to a phone dealer from New York for $6,900. The Prendergast painting came from a
Brooklyn, N.Y., estate. "The woman who owned the painting," according to her
niece, "had been good friends with Gertrude Stein who sold her drawings and guided
her art purchases." A phone bidder also was successful in winning an unsigned oil on
board, "Ladies at the Market," 131/2 by 151/2 inches with various South American
gallery labels on verso (Santiago, Chile, Buenos Aires), which closed at $5,462.
Other
works included an oil, "Gloucester Wharf," by American artist Harriet R. Lumis
(1870-1953), 12 by 10 inches, garnering $5,175 from a New York collector by phone; a
pencil drawing on brown paper, "Profile of a Man in Top Hat," by Egon Schiele,
signed and dedicated to Gustav Klimt, dated 1910, $4,887 from a phone buyer, and an oil on
panel, "Shepard with his Flock," by Anton Mauve (Dutch l838-1888), $4,600, again
from the phone.
There
was a concentration in antique American furniture, although English and Continental
furniture also was offered. Top in the category were two pairs of Stickley oak bookcases.
The first pair had triple doors with glazed panels (three over four each), 731/2 by 12 by
561/2 inches. The bid opened at $2,000 and bandied among phone and house bidders until it
closed to a phone bidder at $11,500. The same buyer won the second pair of bookcases, with
double doors, at $10,062. The bookcases came from a church in the Bronx that needed to
raise money for renovations. "It was a beautiful turn-of-the-century church that had
fallen on bad times," said Braswell. He was able to clean up one of the cases before
the auction, which helped the sale. "The consignor was happy with the results, which
brought more than he expected, and I was glad to help him out," said Braswell.
A
rare Horner mahogany desk with a scalloped top resting upon an elaborately carved case
with griffins on the corners and paw feet went to an absentee dealer from Canada for
$6,612. Other pieces of interest were a New England Chippendale slant front desk with four
drawers and bracket feet, $5,290; a New York classical mahogany Empire work stand with
brass inlay, lift-top with felt writing surface, two drawers and twisted column legs,
labeled inside "John Budd, New York, May 1817," selling to a private collector
from Savannah, Ga., for $5,175; and an antique English breakfast table with rosewood
circular tilt-top on a tripod base, $4,312.
The
top lots of fine porcelain included a pair of massive colorful Meissen ewers, elaborately
decorated with allegorical figures, putti, mermaids, ships and birds, actively bid by two
phone and house bidders, driving the price up and capping at $9,200, to a New York dealer,
and a signed German painted porcelain plaque of a mother and daughter, labeled "P.
Wagner, after Franz Schier, Munchen '86," achieving $5,175. Orientalia attracted
house, phone and absentee bidders. Topping the category was an Oriental famille verte
painted porcelain charger with dragons and phoenixes selling to a local dealer for $3,438.
An
unusual Japanese style mixed metal bowl by Gorham, with some design, 1861-1866, inscribed
on back, 5.5 inches diameter, was intensely sought by three phone bidders and closing to a
collector from Southport, Conn., at $2,185. A sterling silver tea and coffee service went
from $500 to $l,725, and a Georgian sterling silver sauceboat, London 1743-44, by George
Wickes with scrolled handle and three hoof feet sold to a Connecticut dealer for $1,610.
Antique mirrors attracted buyers' attention. An Eighteenth/Nineteenth Century girandole
mirror with a carved and gilt dolphin crest, and two applied scrolled candle arms, 42
inches high, actively pursued by absentee and house bidders, ultimately selling to an
absentee collector from Southport, Conn., for $4,600; a grand Nineteenth Century mirror,
carved, gessoed and gilt Renaissance revival style with reclining figures flanking the
flowering urn crest, 58 by 37 inches, going to a private collector from New York by phone,
for $4,600; and an antique Federal style mirror with an elaborately carved open winged
eagle crest, to a phone bidder for $4,025. Also of note in decorative arts was a pair of
signed Louis XVI-style bronze sconces, torch-form backs, with three curved arms, three
lights each, 21 inches high, which went to a phone bidder for $3,737.
The
sale was as wide as it was deep. "Overall," said Braswell, "good pieces
stayed strong, and moderate values in the $100 to $1,500 range provided good buys for
individuals and dealers."
An
antique Continental ivory figure of a male warrior wearing a plumed helmet and lion mask
epaulettes, mounted as a lamp, realized $3,680 from a bidder from the floor, and the top
lots in Oriental carpets were an 11- by 141/2-foot Persian rug with a center pink and
beige medallion, on a repetitive geometric and floral ivory field, $3,737, and two Sarouk
carpets, 101/2 by 171/2 feet and 10 by 14 feet, $3,450 each. An unusual Oriental inkstand,
with a painted porcelain figure mounted on a black and gilt lacquered base with metal
overlay set in stones and two lidded inkwells, piqued the interest of three phone bidders
who competed to a close of $1,610.
All
prices reflect the 15 percent buyer's premium charged.
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