AUCTION PREVIEW WINTER 2017
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WELCOME TO DOYLE Now is a time of reflection that brings all Americans back to the guiding principles laid out in our Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
In our April 26 Books auction we are offering the 1778 Paris printing of the Declaration of Independence published in France, our earliest ally, during the height of the American Revolution. In the same auction, we are offering an important chronicle of the Civil War, the archive of Brevet Major General John Gross Barnard, Chief Engineer for the defenses of Washington, DC.
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Our country has weathered storms both foreign and domestic for centuries, yet the indomitable American Spirit carries forward not only in history and politics, but in the fine and decorative arts.
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And our foundations as further delineated in the Constitution of the United States of America: “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the blessings of Liberty, to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish the Constitution for the United States of America.”
We are honored to be offering outstanding works by American artists and artisans this season. We celebrate the United States THE of America and the friendships we have forged around the globe. The entire Doyle team from coast to coast joins me in wishing you a Happy New Year!
Kathleen M. Doyle Chairman / CEO
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Doyle will begin the 2017 auction season with the single-owner sale of The Nelson Doubleday, Jr.
(2) One of the finest maritime painters of the
20th century, British artist Montague Dawson
Collection. Nelson Doubleday, Jr. (1933-2015)
(1890-1973) was the son of a Thames yachtsman,
was the third-generation owner of legendary
grandson of a landscape painter and nephew
publishers Doubleday and Company and the
of Henry Alfred Dawson, also a noted marine
former owner of the New York Mets baseball team.
artist. His historical subjects reflect intimate
This landmark auction comprises the contents of
knowledge of ships, careful research and technical
the gracious Doubleday home on Long Island's
precision, as seen in Two Clippers – Nocturne,
North Shore. Among the highlights of the
one of eight works by Dawson in the Collection.
Doubleday Collection are his Mets 2000 National
Est. $150,000-300,000. (3) Somerset Maugham’s
League Championship ring and other sports
partly autobiographical masterpiece Of Human
memorabilia; the Doubleday library featuring
Bondage was published by Doubleday, Doran in
many publisher's copies of first editions; and a
a signed limited edition in 1936, and this is copy
fine collection of American and English nautical
number 1, specially bound by The French Binders
paintings. Other offerings include Georgian
and retained by the Doubleday family. Est. $500-
furniture, mirrors, decorations, silver and a collection
800. Among the other authors represented in the
of early 19th century English and Chinese export
Collection are Rudyard Kipling, Joseph Conrad,
porcelain, which gave the Doubleday home the
Christopher Morley and O. Henry. (4) Nelson
air of an English country house. Property from the
Doubleday, Jr. was a great lover of sports, and
Nelson Doubleday, Jr. Collection is illustrated
after the sale of Doubleday and Company he
throughout this issue of Auction Preview. Auction January 11. (1) London born artist James Buttersworth (1817-1894 ) emigrated in 1845
devoted himself to sailing and to his ownership of the New York Mets. A highlight of the Collection is his National League Championship
to New York, where his works had a profound
ring presented upon the Mets’ heartbreaking loss
impact on American marine painting. Yacht
to the crosstown rival Yankees in the famous
Racing Off Sandy Hook (see front cover)
Subway Series of 2000. Est. $8,000-12,000. (5) A
captures the drama of the annual regatta of the
pair of circa 1755 George II giltwood pier mirrors
New York Yacht Club in June 1877. One of five
in the Collection reflect the evolution from the
works by Buttersworth in the Collection, the
Rococo and 'Gothick' motifs of the mid-18th
painting depicts the sole victory of the Active
century to the symmetrical neoclassical designs
and was likely commissioned by her skipper,
of the late 1750s and 1760s. They are related to
Frank W. J. Hurst, a long-time treasurer of the
similar examples by John Linnell and designs by
Club. Est. $200,000-300,000.
Thomas Chippendale. Est. $25,000-35,000.
COLLECTION
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ART AT DOYLE 1
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(1) The French artist Eugène Boudin (1824-1898) is celebrated for his paintings of fashionable ladies and gentlemen enjoying the beach resorts of Normandy during the Belle Epoque. Trouville, Scène de Plage (Beach Scene, Trouville) from 1873 is a classic example of these joyful evocations of sun and sea air. Est. $100,000-250,000. One of two works by Boudin in the sale. The Nelson Doubleday, Jr. Collection / January 11
(2) Man Ray [Emmanuel Radnitzky] first took the image Les Larmes [Glass Tears] in 1930. This cropped version of a single eye first appeared in a 1934 book of Ray's photographs. Though a later printing, this example was produced before his death in 1976 and is signed in ink by Ray on the reverse and lettered E.A. as an artist proof. Est. $1,500-2,500. Photographs / April 26 (3) The still life was a theme Roy Lichtenstein (1923-1997) explored throughout his career. In Still Life with Red Jar, a color screenprint from 1994, he depicts a classic composition of fruit and a jar on a table using his distinctive enlarged halftone dots, appearing to pay homage both to 17th century Dutch still life paintings and 20th century comic strips and advertising. Est. $10,000-15,000. Prints & Multiples / May 1 (4) During the 18th century, Venetian artists created a new genre: the Venetian veduta, or "view," which could be taken home by wellheeled visitors as a souvenir. An example is The Grand Canal by an artist from the school of the mid-century view-painter Bernardo Bellotto,
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showing not only the city's splendid architecture, but the energetic activity of its people. Est. $6,000-9,000. Old Master Paintings / January 25
(5) Raised amid art and artists in upstate New York, Walter Launt Palmer (1854-1932) received early instruction from Frederic Edwin Church, who taught him to capture the effect of sunlight on snow. Forest Interior, an exquisite work in mixed media, shows Palmer’s remarkable skill as a colorist, the last rays of a sinking sun described with hints of orange and gold behind the stand of trees. Est. $12,000-18,000. American Paintings / April 5 (6) Vincent Sellaer (circa 1490-1564) was born in the Flemish town of Mechelen and worked there most of his life, but the style of his paintings suggests that he worked in Italy during the 1520s. The Virgin and Child with Saint Elizabeth and other Members of the Holy Family exemplifies a favorite Flemish subject: the "Holy Kinship," a Madonna and Child with extended family members. Est. $30,000-50,000. Old Master Paintings / January 25 (7) One of the pioneering Earthworks artists who use land as medium, Michael Heizer (American, b. 1944) never completely abandoned painting.In Actual Size/Fish with Objects I, Heizer plays with spatial reasoning, employing a photo transfer of a still life alongside a twin abstract painting, and in Actual Size/Fish with Objects III (shown), he deconstructs the elements. Est. for both $8,00012,000. Post-War & Contemporary Art / May 10
Asian Works of Art 4
Noted Yuan Dynasty painter Qian Xuan was known for his
masterful depictions of birds and flowers
and landscapes, which
blended Song Dynasty realism with the
archaic Tang style. His works were
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distinctive in their
time, and as with many famous Chinese
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painters, the style is copied by later artists
in tribute. One such example is this painting
of a fruiting vine, a Ming Dynasty expression of this important artist’s work. Est. $40,000-60,000.
Made during the late 18th to early 19th century, this light celadon jade vase is
an exceptional example of the high quality of jade workmanship of this time. Favored in the imperial courts, objects such as this vase harken back to archaic forms and design motifs in the most precious
medium of all, jade. Est. $20,000-30,000. Asian Works of Art / March 13
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Russian Works of Art The egg as a symbol of new life dates back centuries and is found in diverse cultures throughout the world, however, no country’s artistic tradition is more closely associated with the egg than Russia’s. In Imperial Russia, the Orthodox Easter holiday was celebrated not only with the decoration and blessing of eggs, but also with the exchange of decorative gifts in the form of eggs. The ultimate expression of this tradition was the presentation each year at Easter of magnificent jeweled eggs by Fabergé by Emperor Nicholas II to Empress Alexandra Feodorovna and the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna. This tradition was
COLORED GEMSTONES Colored gemstones continue to achieve strong prices as seen in the Fall sales in New York and Beverly Hills. Highlighting the October 19 sale in New York was a rare Padparadscha
sapphire of 'Classic' Ceylon (Sri Lanka) origin
weighing approx. 9.01 carats from the Estate of Cora Nunnally Miller that achieved $162,500. Padparadscha sapphires are the rarest and most prized form of sapphires. Their unusual color in the pinkish-orange range inspired its name, which is derived from the Sinhalese word for lotus blossom. The November 14 sale in Beverly Hills featured a rare circa 1935 aquamarine and
followed by the rest of Russian society on a
diamond necklace by Cartier London consigned
more modest scale. Members of affluent
by an Old Beverly Hills Estate. Set with well-
families would present each other with
matched quality aquamarines totaling approx.
precious miniature pendant eggs by
120.00 carats, the stunning necklace drew the
Fabergé and other prominent Russian
attention of important collectors and trade
jewelers. These eggs were decorated with
from both sides of the Atlantic, which sent the
Easter symbols, expressions of love, or
price soaring to $310,000. Cartier’s London
fashionable ornament of the time. They
branch became well known in the 1930s for its
were typically made of gold, enamel or native
aquamarine jewelry, which was popular with
Russian hardstones and set with diamonds
the firm’s English and American clients. The
or precious stones. Over successive Easters,
aquamarines were sourced mostly from the
a lady could accumulate a considerable
renowned mines of Minas Gerais, Brazil, whose
collection of miniature eggs which she
large, flawless stones are the finest in the world.
would have strung on a gold necklace or multiple necklaces by her mature years. These three circa 1900 Russian pendant eggs have descended in the same family since the early 20th century and include two examples probably by Fabergé and one by Friedrich Köchli. Est. range $2,000-5,000. Russian Works of Art / May 24
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TRENDING:
Jewelry at Doyle Doyle’s auctions in the popular Fine Jewelry category offer a wide array of pieces ranging from antique to contemporary with more moderate estimates than in the Important Jewelry sales. Showcased in the February 22 sale will be glittering creations – including many signed pieces – set with diamonds, colored stones and pearls, as well as gold jewelry, fine watches, and gentlemen's accessories. The Italian jeweler Bulgari is synonymous with chic, colorful designs,
such as this stylish gold ring with bezel-set
colored gemstones. Est. $3,000-4,000.
A heavy gold chain necklace is a timeless accessory, and this sophisticated example has a toggle closure set with cabochon colored gemstones. Est. $3,000-4,000. From a New York and Connecticut Estate is a pair of gold earclips set with iridescent cabochon opals by Tiffany & Co. Est. $2,500-3,500. Double the excitement with this glittering platinum and diamond crossover
bangle from the Estate of Cora Nunnally Miller,
the consignor of the Padparadscha sapphire on the opposite page. Est. $3,000-4,000.
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FURNITURE & Decorative Arts 7
(1) A section of the January 25 sale is devoted to
private collection are a pair of Irish sterling silver
Studios, Duffner & Kimberly, Handel, Chicago
Philadelphia-based interior designers Bennett
Nolan, a talented 19th century silversmith often
Metal Co. Est. $2,000-3,000. Doyle at HomeÂŽ /
compared to his famed London contemporary
February 8. (6) During the second half of the
comprises approximately 200 lots of elegant
Paul Storr. Dated 1827, they are engraved with
19th century, the Mahal/Sultanabad region in
furnishings, decorations, art and a large group of
the arms of Sir Colquhoun Grant, a British General
Persia became a center for the production of
porcelain, including a 1755 Chelsea melon-form
of the Napoleonic Wars who served at Waterloo.
carpets created expressly for the English and
property from the collection of acclaimed
and Judie Weinstock. This remarkable collection
tureen (Est. $7,000-10,000), all collected with the
discerning eyes of true connoisseurs. Highlights
soup tureens by Dublin silversmith William
Mosaic Lamp Co. and the Unique Art Glass &
Est. $20,000-30,000. English & Continental
American markets. Consigned by a Boston,
Furniture & Decorations / January 25. (4) The
Massachusetts Collector, a large scale Ziegler
high chest form which originated in England
Mahal carpet from that period with its allover
parallel can be drawn between furniture made in
experienced great popularity in America. This
pattern and softer palette was designed to
Ireland and furniture made in Philadelphia due to
Queen Anne walnut bonnet top high chest
appeal to Western taste. Est. $10,000-15,000.
the influence of Irish Quakers, who immigrated to
must have graced the bedchamber of a member
English & Continental Furniture & Decorations /
the city in the late 17th to the mid-18th centuries.
of the Boston area gentry in the third quarter of
January 25. (7) The Four Continents were a
Est. $5,000-7,000. English & Continental Furniture
the 18th century. The unusual feature of fluted
common European subject in the 17th and 18th
& Decorations / January 25. (2) Agateware was
pilasters on both front and sides would have
centuries, often expressing the colonial power of
originally produced in England in the 1730s and
added an extra element of luxury. Est. $6,000-
Europe with Asia, America (shown) and Africa
used different colored clays, sometimes applied
8,000. American Furniture & Decorative Arts /
depicted as the sources of Europe's great wealth.
to the surface, to create a marbleized effect. This
April 5. (5) The beautiful and elegant wisteria
In this set of four marble busts, Africa is related
differed from solid agateware introduced in the
plant with its profusion of draping flowers in
to a statue at Versailles by Georges Sibrayque
1740s, which used white clays and metallic oxides
delicate shades of purple, violet, pink or white
and finished by Jean Cornu, and the remaining
to give striation throughout the marbling. Est.
was perfectly suited as inspiration by some of
three correspond to late 17th century French
include a circa 1740 Irish wing chair. An interesting
Continental
America's best makers of the novel electric lamp
examples. Est. $80,000-120,000. English &
Furniture & Decorations / January 25. (3) From a
during the Art Nouveau era. These include Tiffany
Continental Furniture & Decorations / January 25.
range
$600-5,000.
English
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In 1956, the photographer Alfred Wertheimer, at 26, was barely older than the 21-year-old singer he had been commissioned to photograph, Elvis Presley. Elvis was far from the cultural phenomenon he was to become, and Wertheimer captured an intimacy that would have been impossible a few years later. This photograph of Presley on his motorcycle resonates with many of the leitmotifs that made him a legend. Est. $1,500-2,500. Photographs / April 26 Running from 1958 through 1963, Project Mercury was the first manned space project of the United States. This full sheet of the 4cent Mercury commemorative stamp issued in 1962 is autographed by six of the original seven “The
Right Stuff� Mercury astronauts, including the last surviving member, John Glenn, Jr., who died on December 8, 2016. Est. $1,000-1,500. Coins, Bank Notes & Postage Stamps / May 1 This 1778 Paris printing of the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation,
and several state constitutions is one of the earliest collected of these editions, published during the height of the American Revolution. There was much interest in the language of these documents by the French, our earliest ally. This book also prints a letter to Benjamin Franklin, the American ambassador in Paris during the war. Est. $500-800. Rare Books, Autographs & Maps / April 26
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History
Unfolds at Doyle The archive of Brevet Major General John Gross Barnard offers an important chronicle of the
Civil War. Barnard, shown with General Grant in the picture above, was Chief Engineer of the Army of the Potomac responsible for the defenses of Washington, D.C. This comprehensive and career-spanning archive includes hundreds of letters, maps, diaries, manuscripts, photographs and more, commencing with Barnard’s service in the Mexican War, as Superintendent of West Point, his retained papers from the Civil War, and the conclusion of his career with the Army Corp of Engineers in 1881. Rare Books, Autographs & Maps / April 26
In 1921, the New York bookseller Gabriel Wells commissioned the well-known collector A. Edward Newton to prepare an essay to accompany a publication containing a leaf from the Gutenberg
Bible, the first printed edition of the Bible.
Printed in Mainz by Johann Gutenberg and Johannes Fust, in about 1455, the leaf in this copy consists of Luke 1:12 to 2:9. The Latin text contains Luke's account of the birth of John the Baptist, the Annunciation, and the first part of the Nativity including the birth of Jesus. It is hard to imagine a more compelling sample of this monument of printing. Est. $40,000-60,000. The Nelson Doubleday, Jr. Collection / January 11
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Sailors & Mermaids The Works of Ralph Cahoon The name of New England Yankee Ralph
offered their paintings in her Long Island based
market. One such example in the April 5 sale
Ralph Cahoon
Cahoon (1910-1982) is as inextricably linked
Country Art Gallery, the works were a huge hit.
of American Paintings depicts an alluring
Mermaid in China (detail)
with whimsical scenes of mermaids cavorting
Clarissa Watson, the gallery’s young director,
mermaid reclining in a junk steered by a trusty
From a New Jersey Collector
with sailors as that of his contemporary, Orville
wrote with glee, “There just suddenly seems
pipe-smoking seaman, an oar in one hand and
Est. $8,000-12,000
Bulman, is associated with fanciful views of
to be a run on mermaids!” By late 1960, after
the lines for his sail in the other. The young
One of three works by Cahoon
elegant Caribbean ladies and children frolicking
successful exhibitions at the Lobster Pot
beauty admires her reflection in a mirror, as
to be offered with American Paintings on April 5
on fantastical sailing ships. Interestingly, the
Gallery in Nantucket, Palm Beach Galleries in
waterfowl with fish in their beaks swim nearby.
work of both men appealed to a similar group
Florida, and most particularly, Vose Galleries in
In the distance are an elaborate Chinese gate
of collectors.
Boston, the Cahoons were truly launched.
and other inventive architectural elements.
Ralph continued with his whimsical sailors Descended from whalers and fishermen on
and mermaids, and Martha focused on her
The combination of naïveté and whimsical,
Cape Cod, the young Cahoon displayed an
more restrained themes.
slightly naughty subjects was irresistible.
early affinity for drawing. His marriage in 1932
With time the Cahoons severed their ties
to Martha Farham, the daughter of a gifted
The Vose exhibition appears to have been a
with commercial galleries, finding they could
furniture decorator, introduced him to the art
watershed moment that inspired Ralph to
market their paintings successfully from
of painting furniture inspired by Swedish,
dramatically expand the range and scope of
their own studio. Among their clients were
Pennsylvania-German and American folk
his subjects. In his world, mermaids cavort
Jacqueline Kennedy, Jean Kennedy Smith,
traditions. Settling in Cotuit, Massachusetts in
with sailors in seaports and on whaling ships.
Maxim Karolik, Lily Pulitzer, Joan Fontaine,
1945, the young couple opened an antique
They ride bicycles, go sledding on a frozen
Marjorie Merriweather Post and several
shop that also offered their own hand-painted
harbor, ride in hot-air balloons, and frolic with
members of the Mellon and du Pont families.
furniture. With time, the Cahoons incorporated
whales. They do laundry, take tea while sailors
their own unique designs into their furniture,
serve them, and shamelessly flirt with their
Today, the Cahoon family home on Cape Cod
with Ralph favoring mermaids and sailors and
seafaring admirers. The innate charm and
endures as the Cahoon Museum of American
Martha preferring rural themes and floral and
whimsy of his subjects offset any potentially
Art. Founded in 1984, the museum includes a
shell motifs.
bawdy associations.
stellar collection of the folk paintings of Ralph
In 1953, when the well-connected socialite and
Chinese scenes were another specialty,
gallerist Joan Whitney Payson urged them to
inspired in part by the nineteenth-century
create art rather than decorated furniture and
China trade paintings created for the Western
and Martha Cahoon, as well as American art
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of the 19th and 20th centuries.
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DOYLE WINTER/SPRING 2017 175 East 87th St New York, NY 10128 212–427–2730 DOYLE.com
JAN 11
THE NELSON DOUBLEDAY, JR. COLLECTION
FEB 22
FINE JEWELRY Auction: Wednesday, February 22 at 10am
Auction: Wednesday, January 11 at 10am
Exhibition: February 18 – 20
Exhibition: January 6 – 9
Contact: Ann Lange, G.G., 212-427-4141,
Contacts: Peter Costanzo, 212-427-4141,
ext 221, Jewelry@Doyle.com
ext 248, Books@Doyle.com, Anne Cohen DePietro, ext 249, Paintings@Doyle.com JAN 25
OLD MASTER PAINTINGS /
ENGLISH & CONTINENTAL FURNITURE & DECORATIVE ARTS
FEB 23
JEWELRY &
CONTENTS OF ABANDONED SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES Auction: Thursday, February 23 at 10am
Exhibition: February 18 – 20 Contact: Martha Garcia, FGA, 212-427-4141, ext 262, Jewelry@Doyle.com
Auction: Wednesday, January 25 at 10am Exhibition: January 21 – 23 Contacts: Furniture–Peter Lang, 212-427-4141, ext 274, Furniture@Doyle.com, Paintings–Elaine Stainton, ext 249, Paintings@Doyle.com FEB 8
DOYLE AT HOME ® Auction: Wednesday, February 8 at 10am Exhibition: February 4 – 6 Contact: Todd Sell, 212-427-4141, ext 269 DoyleAtHome@Doyle.com
MAR 8
DOYLE AT HOME
®
Auction: Wednesday, March 8 at 10am Exhibition: March 4 – 6 Contact: Todd Sell, 212-427-4141, ext 269 DoyleAtHome@Doyle.com MAR 13
ASIAN WORKS OF ART Auction: Monday, March 13 at 10am Exhibition: March 10 – 12 Contact: Marley Rabstenek, 212-427-4141, ext 299, Asian@Doyle.com MAR 14 & 15
JEWELRY, WATCHES, SILVER & COINS BY ORDER OF THE PROVIDENT LOAN SOCIETY Auction: Tues & Wed, March 14 & 15 at 10am Exhibition: March 10 – 13
A notable figure in 1960s-70s arts and theater, Scott Burton (1939-1989) was by the early 70s creating pieces that were equal parts furniture and sculpture. His work has been shown at MoMA, the Guggenheim, the Whitney and the Tate. Produced in the last year of his life, the Two Curve Chair is made of a heavy steel that belies its light silhouette and minimalist design. Est. $30,000-50,000. Doyle+Design® / June
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MAR 29
MAY 1
MAY 24
Auction: Wednesday, March 29 at 10am
Auction: Monday, May 1 at 10am
Exhibition: March 25 – 27
Exhibition: April 28 – 30
& CONTINENTAL FURNITURE &
Contact: Todd Sell, 212-427-4141, ext 269
Contact: Cynthia Klein, 212-427-4141,
DoyleAtHome@Doyle.com
ext 246, Prints@Doyle.com
APRIL 5
MAY 1
DOYLE AT HOME
®
AMERICAN PAINTINGS, FURNITURE & DECORATIVE ARTS
Auction: Wednesday, April 5 at 10am Exhibition: April 1 – 3 Contacts: Paintings – Anne Cohen DePietro 212-427-4141, ext 249, Paintings@Doyle.com Furniture – David Gallager, ext 271, American@Doyle.com APRIL 25
IMPORTANT JEWELRY Auction: Tuesday, April 25 at 10am Exhibition: April 21 – 24 Contact: Ann Lange, G.G., 212-427-4141, ext 221, Jewelry@Doyle.com APRIL 26
RARE BOOKS, AUTOGRAPHS
& PHOTOGRAPHS
Auction: Wednesday, April 26 at 10am Exhibition: April 22 – 24 Contacts: Peter Costanzo, 212-427-4141, ext 248, Edward Ripley-Duggan, ext 234 Books@Doyle.com
PRINTS & MULTIPLES
COINS, BANK NOTES & STAMPS
over 150 years, and a society hostess at the turn of the century would certainly have impressed her guests with this 18 kt. gold demitasse service for twelve. Offered
together with a set of twelve George III silvergilt teaspoons. Est. $40,000-60,000. American Furniture & Decorative Arts / April 5
OF ART
Auction: Wednesday, May 24 at 10am Exhibition: May 20 – 22 Contacts: Peter Lang, 212-427-4141, ext 274, Furniture@Doyle.com,
Exhibition: April 28 – 30
Paintings–Elaine Stainton, ext 249,
Contact: Norman Scrivener, 212-427-4141,
Paintings@Doyle.com, Russian–Mark
ext 273, Coins@Doyle.com
Moehrke, ext 272, Russian@Doyle.com
MAY 10
JUNE
Auction: Wednesday, May 10
20TH & 21ST CENTURY ART, FURNITURE & DESIGN
Exhibition: May 6 – 8
Contacts: Furniture & Design–Todd Sell,
Contacts: Elaine Stainton, Anne Cohen
212-427-4141, ext 269, Malcolm Mac Neil,
DePietro, Shani Toledano, 212-427-4141,
ext 218, DoyleDesign@Doyle.com
ext 249, Paintings@Doyle.com
Art–Harold Porcher and Angelo Madrigale,
IMPRESSIONIST & MODERN ART
DOYLE+DESIGN®
ext 249, Paintings@Doyle.com MAY 10
POST-WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART
JUNE
Auction: Wednesday, May 10
FINE JEWELRY
Exhibition: May 6 – 8
Contact: Ann Lange, G.G., 212-427-4141,
Contacts: Harold Porcher and Angelo
ext 221, Jewelry@Doyle.com
Madrigale, 212-427-4141, ext 249, Paintings@Doyle.com MAY
FINE JEWELRY – BEVERLY HILLS Contacts: Nan Summerfield, G.G. Emily Marchick, G.G., 310-276-6616
purveyor of choice for New York’s elite for
DECORATIONS / RUSSIAN WORKS
Auction: Monday, May 1
DoyleLA@Doyle.com
Tiffany & Co. has been the luxury goods
OLD MASTER PAINTINGS / ENGLISH
175 EAST 87TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10128
We Invite You to Auction!
Doyle invites consignments from collectors, estates and institutions around the world. Our team of specialists, supported by our network of regional representatives, regularly meet with collectors, heirs, fiduciaries, curators and art advisors in the New York area and across the country to evaluate property for auction at Doyle. We are always available to discuss the sale of a single object or an entire collection. For information or to schedule an appointment, please call our New York offices at 212-427-2730 or email Info@Doyle.com. Visit Doyle.com and go to ‘Selling at Doyle’ where you can upload images of your property on our easy and convenient digital Auction Estimate form for a complimentary auction evaluation. Realize the value of your collection!
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DISCOVER DOYLE NEAR YOU! Doyle’s Regional Representatives serve collectors, families and
fiduciaries across the country and facilitate the entire process from the initial appraisal to the successful auction in New York or Beverly Hills. In addition to meeting daily with collectors, they regularly host Consignment Days in communities throughout our regions. We invite you to contact your local representative or Laura Doyle, Vice Chairman/EVP, Director of Regions, 212-427-4141, ext 219, Laura@Doyle.com
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WASHINGTON, DC / MID-ATLANTIC
LOS ANGELES / WEST COAST
Kathryn Craig 129 Newbury Street Boston, MA 02116 617-999-8254 Boston@Doyle.com By appointment
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Collin Albertsson 561-322-6795 DoyleFL@Doyle.com
Daniel Huntington, The Counterfeit Note (detail), 1858. Sold October 2016 for $406,000. A World Auction Record for the Artist. Acquired by a Prominent American Institution.