CANVAS & CLAY
The Collection of Judith and Philip Sieg, Bellefonte, Pennsylvania
26 OCTOBER 2023
The Collection of Judith and Philip Sieg, Bellefonte, Pennsylvania
26 OCTOBER 2023
SALE 1283
26 October 2023
10:00am ET | New York | Live + Online
Lots 1–91
PREVIEW
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All property must be paid within seven days and picked up within thirty days per our Conditions of Sale. Property will be available for collection from 21 Greene Street, New York NY 10013 until Friday, November 3rd, after which all uncollected property will be transferred to Hindman’s Gallery and Salesroom at 1550 West Carroll Street, Chicago IL 60607.
All lots in this catalogue with a lower estimate value of $5,000 and above are searched against the Art Loss Register database
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Hindman is proud to offer Canvas & Clay: The Collection of Judith and Philip Sieg of Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. With a shared passion for the arts, the Siegs amassed over the course of their marriage an extraordinary array of predominantly American drawings and paintings alongside striking examples of English and European pottery.
Philip Sieg was an innovative businessman, real estate developer, traveler, and collector. A proud Pennsylvania State University alumnus, Sieg was highly engaged with the university, supporting many programs such as the Schreyer Honors College, the University Libraries, and teaching fellowships in the business school. His impact was acknowledged when he was named an Alumni Fellow in 1988 and a Distinguished Alumnus (Penn State’s highest honor) in 1993.
Judith Sieg was a passionate supporter of the arts, an interest she shared with her husband, and an astute collector. A generous philanthropist in her community and beyond, Judith made the very first donation to the Bellefonte Art Museum for Centre County in 2009 which helped establish the local museum in the Siegs’ hometown. Judith was also a Penn State alumna and was a founding member of The Palmer Museum of Art at the university.
Through the raw materials of canvas, clay, paper, paint, and wood, the story of the Siegs’ unwavering commitment to the arts and connoisseurship is brought to life by some of the most influential and dynamic artists of the 19th and 20th centuries. We are honored to share their collecting story with you here.
Gemma Sudlow Managing Director, New York RegionLOTS 1–68
Zinnias in a Glass Vase, 1981 oil on board
15 1/2 x 11 3/4 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1981
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, Albert York Paintings, October 12 - November 6, 1982, no. 12
$80,000 - 120,000
In his 1995 New Yorker magazine profile, art critic Calvin Tomkins said Albert York was perhaps “the most highly admired unknown artist in America.” The artist was described as a shy man who shunned the art world, who worked painstakingly slowly, and who was perpetually unhappy with his work, often scraping down his wood panels and starting over. At rarely more than 12 inches on a side, his paintings evoke a contained world in which time and art seem to stand still or even move backward through history. They purposefully seek to reject interpretations of narrative and ignore the more widespread trend towards abstraction popular throughout the 20th century.
Born in Detroit in 1928, York was raised by his father but lived mostly in boarding schools and foster homes while his father worked in the automobile industry. In his teens he lived with an aunt and uncle in Belleville, Ontario and he studied at the Ontario College of Art, and then at the Society of Arts and Crafts in Detroit. He saw active duty in the Army during the Korean War, and once discharged, moved to New York in 1952. York briefly enrolled at the Art Students’ League, but he could not afford the fees, and instead enrolled in Raphael Soyer’s evening classes on West 56th Street. Soyer’s admiration for Degas and the French School was to later influence York in style and subject matter.
For a time, York stopped painting so he could instead support himself with odd jobs. In 1957, he found full time work as a gilder with the frame maker Robert Kulicke. He began to paint again in earnest in 1960, after taking a four-month trip to France with Virginia Mann Caldwell, his future wife, and her two children. Inspired by the French countryside, York took elements of the landscape and rearranged them as he worked, creating small, concentrated pictures in halftones of green and blue. In 1962, he reluctantly showed his paintings to Kulicke, who enthusiastically recommended them to Roy Davis, an art school friend and business partner. Davis proved incredibly important to York and the advancement of his standing within the New York art scene, with his first exhibition at the Davis Galleries in 1963 and his last (at Davis & Langdale) in 2007, for a total of 16 exhibitions there. That same year, York and his family moved to Long Island, where the artist was to live and work for his remaining life. After the move, he would send new paintings to Davis Galleries in brown parcels via regular post, promising that next time he would “do better,” revealing his brutal artistic standards.
York’s oil paintings are simple and compelling, reflecting an introspective awareness of art history while also projecting a sense of modern unease. His carefully balanced landscapes, such as Landscape with Three Trees and Pond (Lot 85), June 1984, are in the pastoral tradition established in the 17th century by Claude Lorrain. Porch Bench with Seated Figure (Lot 45) and Figures in a Field (Lot 46) evoke the leisurely idylls of Impressionists such as Claude Monet and Edgar Degas, while at the same time channeling the profound solitariness of an Edward Hopper painting. The various still lifes of flowers and plants in tin cans, glass vases, and terracotta pots, always seeming to be in danger of sliding off the table surfaces on which they precariously sit, bring to mind the tumbling apples of Paul Cézanne. Seascape with Sailboat (Lot 84) is rendered with the impressionistic strokes of Eugène Boudin, though stripped of his fashionable, promenading figures.
Despite the numerous art historical references, York’s paintings exude a quiet modernity, with their geometric simplicity, flatness of form, and economical brushwork. Likewise, his palette of greens and blues tinged with gray creates a sense of muted stillness and isolation in his work. Although his subject matter is realistic and inspired by his rural Long Island surroundings, there is a tension between what is real and what is imaginary. The art critic Bill Berkson poetically described this seemingly painted agitation:
“There’s something inclement beneath all that idyllic sunlight, a bruxism out of key with the blithely tumbled midday glow, and an elegiac mood that turns the convex pressure of accumulated dabs and dry swishes of paint teetering reflectively back on itself. The light could falter, the whole scene evanesce or fall apart as you look on.” (“The Idylls of Albert York”, Art in America, September 1988, p. 174)
An exacting perfectionist, the artist is said to have only created 200 to 250 paintings during his lifetime, partly due to his slow rate of production, and that he stopped sending works to his gallery in 1992. This may have been a result of his reaction to a three-person exhibition, Painting Horizons: Jane Freilicher, Albert York, April Gornik, at the Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, New York, in 1989. In a rare interview, the artist told Calvin Tomkins that after seeing his artwork at the Parrish, he was “pretty upset about what I’d been doing for these last years.”(“Artist Unknown,” The New Yorker, June 19, 1995, p. 81) As a result, the present nine artworks by the artist are an unprecedented group; never before have this many examples been offered at auction at one time. The seven oils here, as well as the two works on paper, were acquired from York’s lifetime dealers, Roy Davis and Cecily Langdale, and they show the appreciation of a collector who delighted in the artist’s depictions of simple, familiar subjects that also speak of intense psychological mysteries. His spare, efficient brushstrokes reveal a unique willingness to look deeply and profoundly, and to set aside conventional notions of how objects are supposed to exist in the world.
2
Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
Three Roses in a Can, 1980 oil on canvasboard 11 15/16 x 9 15/16 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Provenance:
The Artist Davis & Long, New York, 1980
Private Collection, acquired from the above, 1980-1996 Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1996
$70,000 - 90,000
3 Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
12
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Provenance:
Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1980
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, Albert York, October 12 - November 6, 1982, no. 6
$70,000 - 90,000
Pink Roses in a Glass Vase, 1980 oil on canvasboard x 10 inches.4
Aaron Shikler (American, 1922-2015)
Bouquet of Roses, 2001 pastel on board signed with initials AAS and dated (lower right) 7 1/2 x 14 1/4 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2003
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, Aaron Shikler: Recent Work, October 18 - November 15, 2003, no. 12
$1,000 - 2,000
5
Robert Kulicke (American, 1924-2007)
White Peonies in a Glass Jar, 1988 oil on canvas laid to masonite signed Kulicke and dated (upper center) 8 1/4 x 10 inches.
Bears a frame by the Artist.
Provenance:
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1989
$3,000 - 5,000
6 Robert Kulicke (American, 1924-2007)
Pink Roses and Yellow Daisies in a Glass Jar on a Light Gray Background, 1997 oil on board signed Kulicke and dated (upper center) 8 3/4 x 7 1/2 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1997
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, Robert M. Kulicke Recent Paintings, November 15 - December 20, 1997
$3,000 - 5,000
7 Robert Kulicke (American, 1924-2007)
Cornflowers in a Gray Jar on Brown Surface Against a Black Background oil on silk laid to masonite 8 3/8 x 6 3/4 inches.
Provenance: The Artist’s family, until 2005 Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2005
Exhibited: New York, Davis & Langdale, Robert M. Kulicke: A Celebration, November 26 - December 23, 2005, no. 45
$2,000 - 4,000
8
Severin Roesen (American/German, 1848-1872)
Still Life of Fruit with Bird’s Nest, c. 1860-70 oil on canvas signed Roesen (lower right) 25 x 30 inches.
This lot is accompanied by a copy of the letter from Dr. Judith Hansen O’Toole confirming its authenticity.
Provenance:
Alexander Walsh, South Woodstock, Connecticut
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1984
$15,000 - 25,000
Severin Roesen, one of America’s preeminent early still life painters, created the present magnificent still life circa 1860-1870, when the artist lived in Williamsport, Pennsylvania and enjoyed the patronage of the newly rich, predominately German community engaged in the lumber industry. Anxious to celebrate the natural abundance of the New World, the population in central Pennsylvania responded positively to the lush images of fruits and flowers produced by Roesen. Painted in the still life tradition of their homeland, the artist was trained in Cologne and his compositions resonated with the Victorian mindset of new Americans.
Still Life of Fruit with Bird’s Nest is exuberant with fruit so plentiful they have fallen from the vase, or perhaps never made it into the arrangement, as if the arranger was stopped in mid action. Small droplets of water further attest to their freshness. The popular late nineteenth century concept of memento mori, or a reminder of life’s fragility, is present in these fruit that will soon fade, as well as in the suspended activity of the arranger who has not yet finished their task. One could also see the appeal of Roesen’s subject matter to the more prosperous citizens of the “new world,” as it reflects the natural abundance of the Americas. Of further importance is the presence of the exquisitely rendered bird’s nest containing three eggs, the same number of children the artist had with his wife, Wilhelmina, also German-born.
In the artist’s typical style, the fruits are presented in a shallow picture plane and arranged directly on a dark, marble tabletop. The fresh, brightly colored fruits stand out against a slightly modulated background and are executed with precise rendering of detail and texture throughout, as was Roesen’s technique. An additional important feature of this still life is the authentic signature in italic script, as the artist signed only about twenty-five percent of his works. The signature is applied as if formed by a grape tendril, one of Roesen’s favored signature formats.
9
Willem Van Aelst (Dutch, 1627-1683)
Still Life with Peaches and a Perroquet, 1651 oil on panel
16 1/4 x 12 3/4 inches.
We are grateful to Fred G. Meijer for endorsing the attribution to Willem van Aelst, based on digital photographs. This painting is number 191970 in the online database of the Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie (as Willem van Aelst or Anonymous Dutch, with Dr. Meijer’s assertation that the there is no reason to doubt the authorship of van Aelst).
Provenance:
Private Collection, England
Sold: Christie’s, London, July 11, 1980, Lot 36 (as Peaches, Figs, and Blackberries with a Parrot on a Draped Marble Table, and as signed and dated 1651)
Leonard & David Koetser Gallery, Geneva, 1980 (as signed and dated 1651)
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1981
Exhibited:
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Netherlandish Art, 17th Century, January 8 - March 22, 1985
Loaned to Palmer Museum of Art, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, August 4 - November 19, 1993
Literature:
Tanya Paul, “Beschildert met een Glans” : Willem van Aelst and artistic self-consciousness in seventeenthcentury Dutch still life painting, PhD dissertation, University of Virginia, 2008, n. 131, p. 296, Section B, no. 131 (as “paintings with debatable attributions that I have not been able to confirm as the work of van Aelst, but which I feel may be the work of van Aelst.”)
$30,000 - 50,000
The carefully composed still life of peaches, figs, and blackberries, accompanied by a parrot, is a typical and highly finished work by Willem van Aelst, an important advocate of the pronkstilleven (ornate or sumptuous still life) genre. The various textures, reflections of light, and gradations of color seen in Van Aelst’s paintings are what made him a highly sought-after artist among elite patrons. Van Aelst was brought up and trained in Delft, probably by his uncle Evert van Aelst (1602-57). A precocious talent, he entered the painters guild in 1643 at the early age of 16. His peripatetic youth next took him to France, where he remained from 1645 to 1649, and from 1649 until 1654, he worked in Florence as court painter for the Medici family, with his two primary patrons being Cardinal Giovan Carlo and Cardinal Leopoldo. Van Aelst developed his fruit still life compositions while in the employ of the Medici family, and it would have been during this time that the present painting was executed. Its rich, luxurious colors and opulent, decorative details would have appealed to his courtly audience. In Italy, the artist also met and worked closely with Otto Marseus van Schrieck, with whom he returned to Delft in 1656 (he had previously been in Venice from 1654-1656, after having to flee arrest in Florence), before settling in Amsterdam the following year. He became the teacher of several notable still-life painters, including Rachel Ruysch and Maria van Oosterwijk, and was held in great esteem both during and after his lifetime. Samuel van Hoogstraaten, a contemporary, wrote of him, “[He] so excelled at art, and copied so well from life, that his painted works appeared not to be a picture, but life itself.”
10
Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
Pink Rose on Grey Ground watercolor and graphite on paper 11 3/4 x 11 1/2 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Provenance: Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, by 1980
$3,000 - 5,000
11
Robert Kulicke (American, 1924-2007)
Tomato on a Bread Board, 1980 oil on wood signed Kulicke and dated (lower center) 10 1/4 x 10 1/2 inches.
Provenance: The Artist
Davis & Long, 1980 Private Collection, 1980-2005
Thence by descent, until 2005 Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2005
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, Robert A. Kulicke: A Celebration, November 26 - December 23, 2005, no. 14
$2,000 - 4,000
12
Robert Kulicke (American, 1924-2007)
Single Green Pear, 1980 oil on board signed Kulicke and dated (lower center) 7 x 6 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1980
$3,000 - 5,000
13
Robert Kulicke (American,
Provenance: Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1980
$3,000 - 5,000
1924-2007) Two Yellow Pears, 1980 oil on board signed Kulicke and dated (lower center) 5 1/2 x 7 3/4 inches.14
Gerardo Pita (Spanish, b. 1950) Quince, 1989 oil on canvas signed Gerado Pita and dated (upper left) 13 1/8 x 16 1/4 inches.
Provenance:
Staempfli Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1989
$1,000 - 1,500
15
Cristobal Toral (Spanish, b. 1940)
Small Still Life with Torn Canvas, 1985 oil on canvas signed C. toral (center left) 9 1/4 x 9 inches.
Provenance:
Staempfli Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1985
$1,000 - 1,500
16
Lennart Anderson (American, 1928-2015)
Two Butter Fish and a Yellow Tomato on a Broken Plate, 1988 oil on canvas
8 7/8 x 12 15/16 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1991
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, Lennart Anderson: Recent Paintings, 1991, no. 21 Wilmington, Delaware, Delaware Art Museum, Lennart Anderson, A Painter’s Painter, October 2 - November 29, 1992, no. 39
$8,000 - 12,000
17
Lennart Anderson (American, 1928-2015)
Still Life with Kippered Herring & Slice of Lemon on a Plate, 1988 oil on canvas signed Anderson (on the reverse) 13 x 17 inches.
Provenance:
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1989
$8,000 - 12,000
18
John
Still Life with Almonds oil on board
inscribed by the artist’s daughter: Painted by my father John Frederick Peto/Helen Peto Smiley (on the reverse)
8 7/8 x 11 7/8 inches.
Provenance:
Helen Peto Smiley, the Artist’s daughter, Island Heights, New Jersey
Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Howard, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, by 1965 until 1973
Hirschl & Adler Galleries, New York
Davis & Long, New York
Stuart and Mimi Feld, 1974-2013
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2013
Exhibited:
La Jolla, California, La Jolla Museum of Art, The Reminiscent Object: Paintings by William Michael Harnett, John Frederick Peto, and John Haberle, July 11 - September 19, 1965, no. 55 (as Still Life)
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Selections from the Collections of Mimi and Sanford Feld, March 22 - May 24, 1981, no. 17, illus.
Literature:
John Wilmerding, Important Information Inside: The Art of John F. Peto and the Idea of Still-Life Painting in Nineteenth-Century America, no. 68, pp. 82-83, illus. (as Orange, Lemons, Nuts, Pitcher and Honey Pot on Box, probably 1890s)
$15,000 - 25,000
Born in 1854 in Philadelphia, John Frederick Peto was an American master in trompe l’oeil (or trick of the eye) effects. Much of Peto’s work, particularly those that include fruits, vases, and jars, including Still Life with Almonds and Still Life with Box, Orange, and Bottle, invites comparisons to the great French master, Jean-BaptisteSiméon Chardin. While there is no record that Peto was familiar with Chardin’s work, it is likely that he was aware of Chardin’s oeuvre and might have even seen the French artist’s work in person. The present two paintings recall the work of Chardin for its simple elegance, celebration of quotidian life, and prioritization of light effects. However, Peto stands out amongst other still life painters for simplifying his objects’ forms, which grants them an abstract power without obscuring their appearance. Additionally, both of the still lifes here are particularly striking examples of the artist’s use of bright colors, a hallmark of his work.
19
John Frederick Peto (American, 1854-1907)
Still Life with Box, Orange, and Bottle oil on panel signed J.F. Peto (lower left) 6 x 6 inches.
Provenance:
Helen Peto Smiley, Island Heights, New Jersey, daughter of the Artist
Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Howard, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, by 1980 Davis & Long, New York Private Collection
Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1980
Exhibited:
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Bellefonte Collects, August 13 - October 22, 1989, no. 22, p. 21, illus.
Literature:
John Wilmerding, Important Information Inside: The Art of John F. Peto and the Idea of Still-Life Painting in Nineteenth-Century America, no. 57, p. 76, illus. (as Still Life with Box, probably 1890s)
$15,000 - 25,000
20
Robert Kulicke
(American, 1924-2007)
Still Life after John F. Peto: Books and Ink Bottle, 1980 oil on panel signed Kulicke and dated (lower center)
7 5/8 x 10 7/8 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Long, New York Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1981
$2,000 - 4,000
21
John Edward Heliker
(American, 1909-2000)
Interior with Lilacs oil on canvas signed Heliker (lower right) 20 x 16 1/4 inches.
Provenance: Kraushaar Galleries, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1977
$1,000 - 2,000
22
Aaron Shikler (American, 1922-2015)
The King of Lamatz, 1988 oil on board
signed with initials AAS and dated (lower right) 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1988
$1,000 - 2,000
23
Aaron Shikler (American, 1922-2015)
460 Feet, 1991 oil on board
signed with initials AAS and dated (lower right) 7 5/8 x 8 7/8 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1991
Exhibited:
Bridgehampton, New York, Elaine Benson Gallery, Objects of My Affection, 1991
$1,000 - 2,000
25 Fernando Rivero (Spanish, b. 1928)
The Typewriter, 1986 oil on canvas
signed F. Rivero (lower right), titled and dated (label on the reverse) 36 x 48 inches.
Provenance:
Staempfli Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1986
Exhibited:
Staempfli Gallery, New York, Fernando Rivero, February 10 - March 7, 1987
$1,000 - 1,500
24 Robert Kulicke (American, 1924-2007)
One Dollar Bill, 1983 oil on board etched signature Kulicke and date (lower center) and inscribed
An “Unfinished” Dollar For Leslie and Karl (on a label on the reverse) 6 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches.
Provenance: The Artist
Private Collection, until 2010 Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2010
Exhibited: New York, Davis & Langdale, Robert Kulicke, 1924-2007, March 6 - April 3, 2007, no. 31
$2,000 - 4,000
Overall: 12 3/4 x 34 3/4 inches.
Provenance: The Artist
Marlborough Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1992
$2,000 - 4,000
26
Dumpster, 1976 oil on canvas signed Marcote and dated (lower right) 25 x 31 inches.
Provenance:
Staempfli Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1983
$1,000 - 1,500
Carlos Marcote (Spanish, b. 1950) 27 Vincent Desiderio (American, b. 1955) Studio Triptych, 1992 oil on panel each panel signed Vincent Desiderio, dated, and titled (on the reverse)28
Claudio Bravo (Chilean, 1936-2011)
La Colombiana, 1978 oil on canvas signed CLAUDIO BRAVO and dated (lower right) 31 7/8 x 39 3/8 inches.
Provenance:
The Artist
Marlborough Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1989
$50,000 - 70,000
Virtuoso artist Claudio Bravo was influenced by the art of the Renaissance in its emphasis on portraiture that reflected both the social position and the temperament of the sitter, as well as Baroque light and the dream-like pastiches of the Surrealist movement, to hone a style both particularly searing and particularly his own. Born in Valparaíso, Chile, Bravo left his family ranch to study at the Colegio San Ignacio in Santiago, where he would gift portraits to his teachers to raise his grades. The school administration took notice, and far from punishing this cheeky behavior, in reflection of his talent, they instead paid for him to study art professionally from ages 11 to 20, the only formal training he would ever receive. His hyper-realist style developed, as Chile remained relatively untouched by the throes of Modernism that were concurrently spreading throughout Latin America.
Bravo had his first solo show at the age of 17—in which everything sold—and would go on to produce over 500 works throughout his six-decade career. A young Bravo dabbled in poetry, professional dancing, and acting, before deciding to dedicate himself to his art full time and beginning to produce the commissioned portraits that would help make his name. Bravo saved his earnings from these commissions and bought a ticket to sail to Paris, but the journey was fraught with storms and Bravo was forced to disembark in Barcelona, eventually making his way to Madrid, where he stayed. It was in Madrid that Bravo was able to establish himself as a society portraitist. He was in awe of designer Cristóbal Balenciaga, whose works he believed to have a Renaissance quality. He would even force the women of nobility he painted to purchase a Balenciaga piece before he agreed to paint them. The leader of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos, extended the invitation to paint him and his wife in 1968, and the six-month trip allowed for a transformation in Bravo’s work as he found the quality of light to be far more intense there than even his native Chile. Indeed, Bravo’s mastery of light and unerring eye for detail throughout his oeuvre has drawn comparisons to the works of classical masters, including Caravaggio, the father of chiaroscuro himself.
By the time he returned to Madrid, Bravo’s reputation had gained international renown, with his first exhibition in New York at the Staempfli Gallery in 1970. Seeking solitude away from his busy social life in Madrid, Bravo moved to Tangier, Morocco in 1972. The bold colors, geometric patterns, and deep history of the African town, so unfamiliar to him, was an inspiration and he painted just about anyone who would sit still for him—mostly workers on his house and their friends. Islamic women would not pose for him, however, prompting him to buy apartments in Madrid and New York to keep his options expansive.
It is during these years rotating through Tangier that Bravo painted the present work, La Colombiana, 1978, a close-cropped scene of a Colombian woman, one leg folded casually underneath her as she sinks into a yellow couch. Despite the ethnic origin of the woman defined by the work’s title, it is Morocco’s almost theatrical influence that can be seen in the richly hued yellow couch and crisp blues of her denim. With a collection of cards scattered next to her, and then clutched more loosely in her hand, she seems relaxed yet distant in thought. Bravo’s signature perspectival focus brings the gaze directly onto the plane, forcing the viewer to examine the subject without distraction and engage with her emotional state.
The Marlborough Gallery hosted its first exhibition of Bravo’s works in 1981, the first of dozens in the next twenty years. Collected internationally by renowned institutions, Bravo was arguably the most prestigious Chilean painter of his time, until his sudden death at his home in Taroudant, Morrocco in 2011. His legacy of especially introspective portraits in lush surroundings, deployed with a fascinating hyper-realistic style, emphasize that of a true Renaissance man.
29
Aaron Shikler (American, 1922-2015)
The Red Suspenders [Self Portrait], 1983 oil on canvas signed with initials AAS and dated (lower left) 11 x 9 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1988
Exhibited: New York, Davis & Langdale, 1983, Aaron Shikler: Small Studies (illus. on announcement)
Literature: Byron Dobell, “Artist of the Portrait,” New York, December 24-31, 1990, p. 99, illus.
$2,000 - 4,000
Lucian Freud (British, 1922-2011)
Woman on a Bed, 1991-92 etching
signed and numbered 19/30 in pencil 9 3/8 x 8 inches.
Provenance: The Artist James Kirkman, London, acquired from the Artist Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1998
Literature:
Matthew Marks Gallery, Lucian Freud Recent Drawings and Etchings, pl. 17 (another example illustrated)
$10,000 - 15,000
Aaron Shikler (American,
Provenance:
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1996
Exhibited: New York, Davis & Langdale, Aaron Shikler: Recent Work, October 1 - November 9, 1996, no. 27
$1,000 - 2,000
32
Aaron Shikler (American, 1922-2015)
Provenance:
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1983
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, Aaron Shikler: Small Studies, April 6 - 30, 1983, no. 32
$2,000 - 4,000
Figure Seated at Desk, 1983 oil on board signed with initials AAS and dated (lower left) 9 7/8 x 7 7/8 inches.34
Aaron Shikler
(American, 1922-2015)
Sleeping Figure II, 1974 watercolor and pastel
signed with initials AAS and dated (lower left) 8 1/8 x 14 inches.
Provenance:
Davis & Long, New York
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2012
Literature:
Davis and Langdale, Aaron Shikler Studies, 2009
$1,000 - 2,000
33
Aaron Shikler
(American, 1922-2015)
Reading (The Artist’s Wife), 1960 pastel on paper
signed with initials AAS and dated (lower left) 9 1/2 x 12 1/2 inches.
Provenance: The Artist
Davis Galleries, New York, 1960 Private Collection
Thence by descent, until 2004
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2004
$1,000 - 2,000
35
Aaron Shikler (American, 1922-2015)
Study in Gold III [Portrait of Cecily Langdale], 1977 oil on board signed AAS and dated (lower left) 20 x 7 1/2 inches.
Provenance:
Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1980
Exhibited: New York, Davis & Long, Aaron Shikler: Recent Works, October - November 1977, no. 13, illus.
$2,000 - 4,000
36
Gwen John (British, 1876-1939)
Young Woman Standing, c. 1910s gouache and graphite on paper 6 1/4 x 5 inches.
Provenance:
The Artist
John Quinn, New York, 1924
Sold: American Art Galleries, New York, John Quinn’s Estate Sale, Paintings and Sculpture: The Renowned Collection of Modern and Ultra Modern Art Formed by the late John Quinn, February 9 - 12, 1927, Lot 385 (part lot)
Julia Quinn Anderson, sister of John Quinn, until 1934
Thence by descent to Mary Anderson Conroy, daughter of the above, 1934-1970
Thence by descent to Thomas F. Conroy, husband of the above, 1970
Private Collection, until 1985
Davis & Langdale, New York
Private Collection, 1985-1991
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1991
Exhibited:
Stanford, Connecticut, Stanford University Museum of Art, Gwen John: Paintings and Drawings from the Collection of John Quinn & Others, April 27 - June 27, 1982, no. 34, p. 51, illus.
New York, Davis & Langdale, Gwen John (1876-1939) Watercolors and Drawings, February 26 - March 23, 1991, no. 7, illus.
Literature:
Cecily Langdale, Gwen John: with a Catalogue Raisonne of the paintings and a selection of drawings, New Haven, 1987, no. 223, pl. 299, p. 201, illus.
$10,000 - 15,000
The
, c.
Provenance:
Babcock Galleries, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1990
Literature:
Richard Muhlberger, Charles Webster Hawthorne: Drawings and Watercolors, Seattle, 2000, p. 47, cover illustration
$8,000 - 12,000
38
Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
Porch Bench with Seated Figure, c. 1967 oil on panel 9 3/8 x 10 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Provenance:
Mrs. Joyce Hemion
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1982
Exhibited:
Davis Galleries, New York, Albert York: A Selection of Oils, 1968
New York, Davis & Long, Albert York, February 22 - March 26, 1975, no. 27 (also exhibited October 12 - November 5, 1977)
New York, Davis & Langdale, Albert York Paintings, October 12 - November 6, 1982, no. 34, illus.
New York, Davis & Langdale, Albert York Paintings: 1963-1991, March 24 - April, 25, 1992
Oakland, California, Mills College Art Gallery, The Paintings of Albert York, February 4 - March 14, 1993
Literature:
New York Times, Sunday “The Guide” for October 24, 1982, illus.
$60,000 - 80,000
39
Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
Figures in a Field, c. 1963 oil on canvasboard signed A. York (on the reverse) 8 x 10 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
According to the Artist (conversation of October 26, 1977), this picture was painted at Sheepshead Bay. It was obviously painted outside as there is sand mixed into the paint. The two children are presumably the artist’s stepson and stepdaughter.
Provenance:
The Artist
Davis Galleries, New York, c. 1963
Private Collection, c. 1963-1977
Thence by descent, until 1998 Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1998
Exhibited:
New York: Davis Galleries, Paintings by Albert York, March 25 - April 13, 1963, no. 5
New York, Davis & Long, Albert York, October 12 - November 5, 1977, no. 2
New York, Davis & Langdale, Albert York: A Loan Exhibition, May 3 - June 9, 1995, no. 3
$60,000 - 80,000
40
Frederick Carl Frieseke (American, 1874-1939)
Paysage, (Moret) 1901 oil on canvas signed F C Frieseke and dated (lower left) 19 7/8 x 24 inches.
“Paysage, (Moret)” is included in the draft Frieseke Catalogue Raisonne compiled by Nicholas Kilmer, the artist’s grandson, with the support of the Hollis Taggart Galleries. That draft is now in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution, Archives of American Art. The work’s original title, Passage Moret, in what appears to be the artist’s hand, is inscribed on a damaged paper label verso.
Provenance:
Private Collection, Washington, DC
Hirschl & Adler Galleries, New York, acquired from the above, April 1978 (as Landscape with Picnic Scene) Acquired from the above by the present owners, October 1978
Exhibited:
Saginaw, Michigan, Saginaw Art Museum, Frederick Carl Frieseke: American Impressionist, September 11, 1983 - January 1, 1984 (as Landscape with Picnic Scene)
$40,000 - 60,000
In 1901, Carl Frederick Frieseke wrote to Sadie O’Bryan, who would soon become his wife, that “landscape is by far the most difficult thing I have tackled” (see Frederick Carl Frieseke: The Evolution of an American Impressionist. Princeton University Press, 2001, p. 21), Until then, Frieseke had indeed mostly focused on nudes and his early manner aligned with the French academic tenets he learned at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the mid1890s, and later at the Académie Julian in Paris, which he attended from 1897 until 1900. With the new century, however, Frieseke’s artistic horizon would broaden, thanks in large part to the teachings of James Abbott McNeill Whistler at the Académie Carmen, an art school in Paris targeting British and American students.
Whistler championed a very painterly aesthetic, bringing forth a style defined by the broad application of loose swaths of uniform tonalities, resulting in the suggestive arrangement of cursory forms, unconstrained by the strict delineation of drawing. The artist remained very much in control of the design, orchestrating a careful selection of natural details, while consciously omitting others. In her essay “Frieseke’s Art Before 1910,” H. Barbara Weinberg reminds us that Whistler’s ultimate advice to his students was to “judiciously [select] from nature rather than merely [transcribe] appearances” (see Frederick Carl Frieseke: The Evolution of an American Impressionist, p. 60). Weiner also identifies several other movements that may have influenced Frieseke at the turn of the century. Among them are the sinuous, curvilinear patterns of Art Nouveau, the attenuated and blurred contours of Pictorial photography, and the profuse, colorful, blending shapes and figures of the Nabis. According to Weiner, all evince the artifice in art, the fact that it is constructed, and underline the complex relationship artists and designers forged between their practice and the natural world around them.
In the summer of 1901, Frieseke is known to have spent time in Le Pouldu, a small village in Brittany near Pont-Aven, which was a major Impressionist art colony during the second half of the 19th century. Paysage is purported to be depicting Moret-sur-Loing, a village located southeast of Paris, and while such a visit is not documented, it may be that Frieseke visited the area on occasion, as it was a favorite locale of the previous generation of Impressionist painters, including Alfred Sisley and Gustave Loiseau. The present work splendidly augurs Frieseke’s forthcoming embrace of the landscape as a primordial artistic subject, displaying key Impressionist features such as a loosening, experimental brushwork, a thoughtful arrangement of details gleaned from nature, and a brilliant, colorful palette. Over the years, and especially after 1905, when he would visit Giverny every summer until 1919, Frieseke’s strand of Impressionism would evolve into a highly distinctive aesthetic, as he increasingly devoted himself to representing the outdoors, masterfully capturing the visual impact of sunlight on the landscape and the figures in it.
41
James Abbott McNeill Whistler (American, 1834-1903)
Peasant Women Standing Under a Tree, c. July/August 1893 watercolor on paper 8 1/2 x 5 inches.
Provenance:
The Artist (in Whistler’s studio at 8 Fitzroy Street, London, on February 16, 1901)
bequeathed to Rosalind Birnie Philip, the Artists’ sister-in-law, 1903 (still in studio)
(possibly) P. & D. Colnaghi, London, 1943 (as Breton Fisherwomen)
Private Collection, London, purchased from the above, 1943
Private Collection
P. & D. Colnaghi, London
Davis & Long, New York
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spencer, New York, purchased from the above, 1971 Davis & Long, New York
Private Collection, purchased from the above, 1977
Davis & Long, New York, 1981
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1982
Exhibited: London, P. & D. Colnaghi, Exhibition of English Paintings, Drawings, and Prints, February 23 - March 19, 1971, no. 107, pl. XXIX, illus. (as Peasant Women) New York, Davis & Long, American-English Drawings and Watercolors, March 4 - 31, 1977, no. 23, illus. (as Peasant Women)
Loaned to Museum of Art, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, 1984
New York, M. Knoedler & Co., Notes, Harmonies and Nocturnes, November 30 - December 27, 1984, no. 126, p. 87, illus. (dated to c. 1890)
Literature:
Margaret F. MacDonald, James McNeill Whistler Drawings, Pastels and Watercolors: A Catalogue Raisonné, New Haven and London, 1995, cat. no. 1366, p. 481, illus.
$80,000 - 120,000
James McNeill Whistler created watercolors throughout his life, beginning with a sketchbook he kept in his youth in St. Petersburg, Russia. However, he did not explore the medium in earnest—in salable works—until the 1880s. At the time, ceasing large-scale urban river views and ambitious studio pictures, he turned to watercolor to assert his originality, expand his market, and establish his place in the history of art, by challenging his predecessors in the venerable British watercolor tradition. He also took great pleasure in the medium, describing his watercolors in his writings as “delightful little things” and “amazing beauties.” Free of social commentary, and executed with fluidity, delicacy, subtlety, and vivacity, these works led critics to reconsider the accusations of slapdash carelessness that had led to his libel suit against John Ruskin in 1877 (which had forced him to declare bankruptcy). Whistler used watercolor in London (for figural images and Chelsea street scenes) and on travels to the English coast as well as across the Channel to Dordrecht, Brussels, Amsterdam, Dieppe, Calais, and Brittany. Peasant Women Standing under a Tree is among a group of works Whistler rendered in Brittany during a two-month summer trip in 1893. The trip—his third and last to Brittany—occurred during a period when he and his wife Beatrice were living in Paris.1 They sojourned in the Côtes-du-Nord region (now Côtes d’Armor), along Brittany’s northern coast, where they visited Vitré, Lannion, and Paimpol in July and Perros-Guirec in August. At one point they traveled to Isle de Bréhat, a mile off the north coast of Brittany, where Whistler kept a sketchbook featuring two drawings of peasant girls, perhaps related to this watercolor.2
This watercolor is among only a few instances in which Whistler addressed the popular subject of French peasant life. However, he avoided the romantic sentimentality captured in such works by other artists, focusing on the intriguing aesthetic opportunities before him, which he cleverly united in a deceptively simple arrangement. Drawing the viewer’s eye upward from his low vantage point, Whistler divided the vertical arrangement at the center, between earth and sky. The influence of Japanese prints is apparent in the juxtaposition of the twisting line of a bare tree intersecting the work’s horizontal axis, where figures of peasant women along a receding wall converse, perhaps while drawing water from a well. There is an intriguing connection between this image and one by Camille Corot, Wall, Côtes-du-Nord, Brittany, c. 1855 (Philadelphia Museum of Art), depicting a similar undulating barren plateau where peasant women gather at a wall. Whistler’s close observation of light effects verifies his plein-air method. He applied translucent washes throughout to convey the dappled effects of the broken, scudding clouds, while recording the somber browns and grays of the women’s clothing, which suggest their integral place within the similarly toned terrain. The brownish-gray shadows in which the women stand imply, tantalizingly, that the tree actually had a high canopy of leaves, omitted by Whistler due to his perspective. A darkening patch in the sky suggests that a storm is brewing but the liquid blues (probably created with the Antwerp blue in Whistler’s watercolor palette gives the work a glowing warmth. Paralleling the lone tree is a flagpole, perhaps rising from a distant fort. From it, a flag, rendered in saturated cobalt, seems to hover over the figure at the center of the composition, her red-toned face marking the work’s vanishing point and engaging the viewer, whom she faces. In conversation with her is a woman with her back to the viewer. Whistler silhouetted the triangle of her coif—the white head covering typically worn by French peasant women—against an area of vaporous turquoise sky. He made use of the exposed paper for the flaps and cones of the coifs of the other women in the scene as well as in spots, such as along the horizon, adding to the work’s luminosity.
In Whistler’s studio in 1901, and still there at the time of his death on July 17, 1903, Peasant Women Standing under a Tree was inherited by Rosalind Birnie Philip (1873–1958), the younger sister of Whistler’s wife Beatrice (1857–1896). Twenty-two at the time of Beatrice’s death, Rosalind became Whistler’s ward and secretary, managing his household in Chelsea, and Whistler made her the sole beneficiary and the executor of his will. Her holdings of Whistler’s art and correspondence are the core of the Whistler collection, given by Rosalind to the Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery, University of Glasgow. However, over the years Philip sold a number of Whistler’s works through Colnaghi, the London art gallery, established in 1760. This was probably the watercolor purchased from Philip by Colnaghi on June 28, 1943, and sold that day to a private collector, who sold it to another private collector shortly thereafter. It was back at Colnaghi in 1971 and included in an exhibition February–March of that year, with its former collection listed in the catalogue as “Miss Birnie Philip.” Most of Whistler’s extant post-1879 watercolors are in public collections (the largest groups of these works belong to the Freer Museum and the Hunterian); Peasant Women Standing under a Tree is among a small number of Whistler’s post-1879 watercolors still in private hands.
Lisa N. Peters, PhD42
Arthur
The Musicians, c. 1900 oil on canvas 18 x 30 inches.
Provenance:
Estate of the Artist
Birnbaum Galleries, New York
Roy Davis, New York, 1965-1983
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1984
$4,000 - 6,000
Study of a Girl in a White Gown, c. 1890s oil on canvas
signed Irving R Wiles (lower right) 17 1/8 x 11 1/2 inches.
The subject of the present lot is the Artist’s daughter, Gladys Wiles (1890–1984), and the painting was executed at Peconic, New York, where the Wiles family vacationed during the summers.
Provenance:
Estate of the Artist
James Abbe, New York, until 1967
Private Collection, New York, 1967-1981
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1981
$5,000 - 7,000
Bowen Davies (American, 1865-1928) 43 Irving Ramsey Wiles (American, 1861-1948)44 John Williamson (American, 1826-1885)
A December Sunrise, Glenwood on the Hudson, 1876 oil on canvas signed with initials JW and dated (lower left); titled, dated, and signed (on the reverse) 12 1/4 x 20 1/4 inches.
Provenance: Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1978
Exhibited:
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Bellefonte Collects, August 13 - October 22, 1989, no. 17, pp. 18-19, illus.
$8,000 - 12,000
45
Martin Johnson Heade (American, 1819-1904)
Calm Summer Day, 1863 oil on board signed MJ Heade and dated (lower left); inscribed On Long Island Sound/MJ Heade NY/Deceased (on the reverse) 7 3/8 x 14 3/8 inches.
This lot will be included in the forthcoming supplement to Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr.’s catalogue raisonné of the artist’s work. This artwork retains its original frame.
Provenance:
Dr. William Voorhees Colfer (1908–1976), Norwalk, Connecticut (in whose family the painting is said to have descended)
Estate of the above, until 1977 Davis & Long, New York (as Beach at Sunset)
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1977
Exhibited:
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Bellefonte Collects, August 13 - October 22, 1989, no. 13, p. 16, illus. (as Beach at Sunset)
$150,000 - 250,000
Among prominent mid-nineteenth century American painters, Martin Johnson Heade was probably the most intimately attentive to nuances of climate and environmental biodiversity, whether in his images of eastern wetland marshes (which make up onefifth of his output), still lifes of orchids, Brazilian hummingbirds in their natural habitats, or atmospheric marine and coastal views. Belonging to this last category, the present painting, signed and dated “1863,” has newly come to light. The painting will be included in the next edition of Theodore Stebbins’s catalogue raisonné of Heade’s work. Stebbins believes the painting to be a finished work rather than an oil sketch. He states in a letter accompanying the painting: “In 1862 and until September 1863 when he left for Brazil, Heade was living in Boston doing numerous marine pictures along the New England coast including Newburyport, Massachusetts; Rye Beach, New Hampshire, and Penobscot Bay, Rhode Island.” The painting is inscribed verso (not in the artist’s hand), “On Long Island Sound,” which Stebbins notes is “not an unreasonable guess because there are some related Long Island Sound views from 1875–76, but the location seems inaccurate.”
Heade’s initial seascapes, influenced by those of his close associate Frederic E. Church, whose work he came to know while living in New York’s Tenth Street Studio building from November 1858 through June 1860, often featured approaching thunderstorms, stormtossed waves, sunsets, and darkening skies in open-ended panoramic compositions. He also began to create more quiescent, light-filled shoreline views, in the mode of the Luminist-Transcendentalist images of John Frederick Kensett, Francis Silva, and Sanford Gifford, but with a softer, more mystical light, sharing, as noted by Stebbins, with the work of the German romantic landscapist Caspar David Friedrich “a sense of loneliness and isolation.” An example is Dawn, 1862 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston).
In 1863, a new clarity along with a calmer, more cheerful mood suggests that Heade became familiar at the time with the work of the Gloucester, Massachusetts, painter Fitz Henry Lane. An article in the Boston Evening Transcript on August 12, 1863, announcing Heade’s imminent departure for Brazil, described him as “the artist so well known for his landscapes, with rich sunsets and sparkling stretches of ocean.”
Such a description fits this work of Luminist mist and stillness, in which the sunset light, gathered in the dense atmosphere along the horizon line, is reflected across a glassy sea. Sailboats still on the water suggest that nightfall is not imminent, conveying a sense of unhurried, suspended time on an early summer evening. In the foreground, rock ledges echo the shapes of the cumulus clouds, still infused with the sun’s afterglow. Pointing upward and catching some of their light, the outcroppings at the shore evoke the solitude of works by Friedrich. In his letter, Stebbins comments: “This is a lovely little picture, with sophisticated use of related grays and gray greens in the water and sky. The haze on the horizon is effective, and the pink sky is typical of this period.”
Lisa N. Peters, PhD47
Thomas Bigelow Craig (American, 1849-1924)
Cows in a Landscape, 1878 oil on canvas
signed Thos. B. Craig and dated (lower right) 29 3/4 x 50 1/4 inches.
Provenance:
Alexander Walsh, South Woodstock, Connecticut
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1982
$1,500 - 2,500
46
William M. Hart (American, 1823-1894)
Cattle in a Landscape, 1884 oil on canvas signed WM HART and dated (lower right) 16 3/4 x 14 inches.
Provenance:
Alexander Walsh, South Woodstock, Connecticut
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1982
Exhibited:
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Bellefonte Collects, August 13 - October 22, 1989, no. 18, p. 19, illus.
$2,000 - 4,000
48
William Glackens (American, 1870-1938)
Nova Scotia, 1903 oil on panel inscribed WG/by EG [Edith Dimock Glackens] on the reverse, and dated and titled St. Pierre Michelin off coast of New Foundland on labels affixed to the reverse.
6 1/8 x 8 1/2 inches.
Provenance:
Estate of the Artist
Kraushaar Galleries, New York, 1955
Davis Galleries, New York, 1955-86
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, by 1989
Exhibited:
New York, Davis Galleries, An Intimate Collection, 1957, no. 7 University Park, Pennsylvania, The Art Museum of the Pennsylvania State University, Bellefonte Collects, August 13 - October 22, 1989, no. 21, p. 20
$3,000 - 5,000
49
Thomas Moran (American, 1837-1926)
Punting on the River Cam, England, 1885 oil on board
signed TMoran and dated (lower left) 14 3/8 x 11 1/2 inches.
This lot will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of the artist’s work being prepared by Stephen L. Good, Phyllis Braff, and Melissa Webster Speidel.
Provenance:
Isaac Arnold, Sr., Houston, Texas Berry-Hill Galleries, New York (as Punting on the River Cam, England)
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1979
Exhibited:
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Bellefonte
Collects, August 13 - October 22, 1989, no. 19, p. 20
$30,000 - 50,000
Though best known for his images of the American West, Thomas Moran visited many other farflung locales for artistic inspiration, including Mexico, Europe, and other regions across the United States. During these trips, the artist would execute numerous realistic, on-site sketches. After returning to the studio, the artist combined these views with his broad knowledge and experience of the known world to create pleasingly imagined compositions that widely appealed to his audience. Punting on the Cam, England, 1885, a depiction of a placid English river with a group of people in a punting boat, may be such an idealized amalgamation.
In 1882, Moran, his wife and fellow artist, Mary Nimmo Moran, and their children, traveled to Thomas’s hometown of Bolton, England, where he had emigrated from in 1844. While in Bolton, the artist and his wife mounted a large exhibition at Bromley’s Art Gallery. The exhibition proved to be a great success with the public, as well as with art critics. John Ruskin himself purchased two paintings and six etchings (including three by Mrs. Moran) and ordered a set of Moran’s Yellowstone chromolithographs. Moran greatly admired Ruskin’s writing and was probably elated by the approval of the critic. In addition to their time in Bolton, Thomas and Mary traveled to Strathaven, Scotland (Mary’s birthplace), Glencoe Pass, and Fingal’s Cave, Staffa (Gilcrease), where they both made numerous sketches.
Once back home in New York, the drawings done in England became inspiration for Moran in finished works, sometimes years later. The present artwork of lush, deeply shadowed greenery resembles the bucolic banks around Cambridge along the River Cam, which remains a popular place to punt. The distant church in the background, however, bears a strong resemblance to Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-Upon-Avon, the birthplace of William Shakespeare. It is unknown where the present title of the painting came from or if Moran visited either locale, but this does not reduce the painting’s virtuosity. The dynamic, light-filled composition, with its striking color effects and distinctive handling of light and air draws inspiration from Joseph Mallord Wiliam Turner, whose canvases Moran viewed on a trip to Europe in 1861. Like Turner, he did not intend his artworks to be literal records, but to be personal visions inspired by nature, once stating: “All my tendencies are toward idealization. A place as a place has no value in itself for the artist.”
Viaduct at Laricha, Italy, c. 1872-74 oil on canvas
signed G. Inness (lower right)
18 x 26 inches.
Provenance:
The Artist’s Estate
Sold: Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, New York, George Inness executor’s sale, February 12 - 14, 1895, Lot 62 (dated to 1872)
George E. Tewksbury, acquired at the above sale
Sold: Fifth Avenue Auction Rooms, New York, Tewksbury and Purton sale, January 17 - 19, 1900, Lot 211
Senator Frederick S. Gibbs, New York, by 1902
Sold: American Art Association, New York, Gibbs sale, February 24 - 26, 1904, Lot 178
S. Chait, England, acquired at the above sale, until 1976
Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1977
Exhibited:
New York, American Fine Arts Society, Exhibition of the Paintings Left by the Late George Inness, December 27, 1894, no. 120
Literature:
Montezuma, “My Notebook: The Inness Paintings,” The Art Amateur, vol. 32, no. 3, February 1895, p. 77
Brush and Pencil, vol. 9, no. 4, January 1902, p. 199, illus.
LeRoy Ireland and Robert G. McIntyre, The Works of George Inness; an illustrated catalogue, Austin, Texas, 1965, no. 570, pp. 137-138, illus.
Theodore E. Stebbins, The Lure of Italy: American Artists and the Italian Experience, 1760-1914, 1992, p. 314, n. 5
Michael Quick, George Inness: a catalogue raisonne, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 2006, vol. 1, no. 413, p. 392, illus.
$50,000 - 70,000
In the 1895 review of the George Inness retrospective at the Fine Arts Building in New York, Montezuma of The Art Amateur described Viaduct at Laricha, Italy as, “a view from a rocky height in shadow over a broad valley and distant hills, all in sunlight. The foreground rises boldly to the right, with trees and buildings; in front it is dotted with figures. It is rather thinly painted, but with decision. The tones are all grayish, but with no lack of color…He [Inness] had a lively imagination and was fond of experimenting…in which these qualities make themselves more or less apparent in efforts to render the glow of sunset, the mystery of moonlight, startling bursts of light through dark clouds, violent contrasts of color.”
This experimentation came as a result of the artistic and spiritual influences that shaped Inness early in his career. He came of age during the height of the Hudson River School, a group comprised of artists that viewed nature as a manifestation of the divine and strove to represent it as faithfully as possible. He also gained most of his knowledge of compositional structure by studying landscapes of the old masters, especially Claude Lorrain and Salvator Rosa, while working first at the engraving company Sherman & Smith and then at N. Currier (later Currier & Ives). However, Inness distinguished himself by applying the tenets of Swedenborgian religion to his art, which stresses the oneness of man, nature, and the universe. As a result, he became the leading American artist-philosopher of his generation.
In 1851, Inness followed the path of earlier American landscape painters and made his first trip to Italy. From this and a subsequent trip from 1870 to 1874, the artist produced many of his most memorable and renowned paintings. As noted by the nineteenth century art historian, Henry T. Tuckerman: “A visit to Italy is perhaps more of an epoch in the life of an American artist than in that of any other. The contrast between the new and old civilization, the diversity in modes of life, and especially the kindling associations which the enchantment of distance and long anticipation occasion, makes his sojourn there an episode in life.” (quoted in Theodore Stebbins, The Lure of Italy, American Artists and the Italian Experience, 1760-1914, New York, 1992, p. 19)
Executed during Inness’s second trip to Italy, the present work depicts the recently erected viaduct between Albano and Ariccia, looking toward Ariccia, southeast of Rome on the Alban Hills. Built between 1847 and 1854 on the order of Pope Pius IX and planned by the architect Ireneo Aleandri, at 312 meters long and 59 meters high, the structure is considered one of the most important engineering works of the nineteenth century. In contrast to his American predecessors, Inness was more willing to pursue Italian subjects less familiar to an educated public, such as the viaduct. Theodore Stebbins writes that the artist “was one of the first to go far afield, painting both traditional subjects such as Albano and Nebi, but also depicting anonymous Umbrian hillsides and bridges near Perugia.” (ibid., p. 57)
The dramatically foreshortened perspective of the viaduct as it cuts through the Alban Hills attests to the strong compositional geometry that Inness developed during his second Italian sojourn. At the same time, a luminosity emanates from the sky and bathes the surrounding landscape and the striking architectural structure. It is a scene that is both literal and imaginary, building on the traditions of early academic painting in America, but uniquely expressive, offering the viewer a gateway to the artist’s theological beliefs. Viaduct at Laricha, Italy reveals Inness’ individualistic, expressive style and commitment to the visual representation of Swedenborgian principles, which reinvented the landscape genre and ushered in a new era of American art.
51
Philips Wouwerman (Dutch, 1619-1668)
A hawking party halting by a gypsy encampment, after 1650 oil on panel signed with artist’s monogram (lower left) 14 x 16 1/4 inches.
We are grateful to Fred G. Meijer for endorsing the attribution to Philips Wouwerman, based on digital photographs.
Provenance:
Newhouse Galleries, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1976
Exhibited:
Loaned to Palmer Museum of Art, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, August 4November 19, 1993
$40,000 - 60,000
Philips Wouwerman, a luminary of the Dutch Golden Age, left an indelible mark through his equestrian scenes and dynamic landscapes. Born in 1619, his career unfolded amidst Europe’s transformative era. Wouwerman’s prowess lay in capturing horses with unparalleled authenticity, portraying their grace and power in every brushstroke. His equestrian subjects, whether soldiers or travelers, establish a profound connection with viewers.
Central to Wouwerman’s artistry are the meticulously rendered landscapes that backdrop his narratives. These settings are not mere backdrops but integral components, enriching stories with contextual depth. Wouwerman’s attention to detail and ability to infuse narratives influenced succeeding generations, setting a benchmark for authenticity and dynamism.
Philip Wouwerman’s A Hawking Party Halting by a Gypsy Encampment encapsulates the essence of his artistry. The painting, a testament to his mastery, captures a fleeting moment where equestrian figures, adorned in opulent attire, pause by a vibrant gypsy settlement. Wouwerman’s skill in rendering horses and the intricacy of the scene shines through, while the interplay of light and the natural setting showcases his landscape finesse. In this vignette, Wouwerman intertwines human leisure with the transient harmony of the encampment, offering a glimpse into a rich narrative suspended in time. Per email correspondence with Dr. Fred Meijer, this painting is closely related to a work in the National Gallery, London, Two Horsemen at a Gipsy Encampment, both thematically, and in style and handling.
Provenance: Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1982
Exhibited: New York, Davis & Langdale, English Oil Sketches, November 10 - December 4, 1982, no. 11, illus.
$4,000 - 6,000
53 David Cox the Elder (British, 1783-1859)
A Woman Walking on a Coastal Path, North Wales, 1850 oil on panel signed David Cox and dated (lower left) 6 3/4 x 9 3/4 inches.
Provenance:
Malcom Young Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1982
Exhibited:
New York, Davis & Langdale, English Oil Sketches, November 10 - December 4, 1982, no. 6, illus.
$1,500 - 2,000
54
Edwin Dickinson (American, 1891-1978)
Stone Tower, 1940 oil on canvas signed EW Dickinson (upper right); signed, dated later by the artist, and illegibly inscribed (right edge) 40 x 50 inches.
The present lot is recorded and illustrated in the online catalogue raisonné of Edwin Walter Dickinson’s work by Helen Dickinson Baldwin as number 363.
Provenance:
The Artist
Wife of the Artist
Babcock Galleries, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1994
Exhibited:
New York, Whitney Museum of American Art, Edwin Dickinson. Major retrospective, October 20 - November 28, 1965, no. 67, pp. 16; 50 Chicago, Gilman Galleries, Edwin Dickinson, Paintings, January 8 - ?, 1966
Katonah, New York, Katonah Gallery, Paintings and Drawings by Edwin Dickinson, June 12 - July 12, 1966
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Peale House Gallery, Edwin Dickinson and Homer Johnson: Paintings, April 21 - May 29, 1966
New York, Graham Gallery, 1967
San Francisco, California, San Francisco Art Institute, Untitled 1968*, November 9 - December, 29, 1968
Provincetown, Massachusetts, Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Edwin Dickinson Retrospective, August 14 - September 7, 1976
Syracuse, New York, Everson Museum of Art, Provincetown Painters: 1890’s to 1970’s, April 1 - June 26, 1977 (also traveled to Provincetown, Massachusetts, Provincetown Art Association [?], August 1977) [exhibited only in Provincetown and not listed in catalogue]
New York, American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, Memorial exhibition: Edwin Dickinson, Charles Eames, Eugene Francis Savage, Edward Durell Stone, Stow Wengenroth, November 9 - December 30, 1979, no. 21
Washington, DC, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Edwin Dickinson: Selected Landscapes, September 18 - November 14, 1980, no. 39, p. 14, illus. (also traveled to Louisville, Kentucky, J.B. Speed Art Museum, January 19 - March 1, 1981)
New York, National Academy of Design Galleries, Art Students League Benefit Sale, May 18 - July 4, 1982 (also traveled to Springfield, Massachusetts, July 3 - August 15, 1982; West Palm Beach, Norton Gallery of Art, September 10 - October 17, 1982)
New York, Hirschl & Adler Galleries, Realism and Abstraction: Counterpoints in American Drawings, 1900-1940, November 12December 30, 1983
Boston, Alpha Gallery, Edwin Dickinson, March 9 - April 3, 1985 Babcock Galleries, Edwin Dickinson: Revelations, October 15 - November 22, 1996, no. 25
$15,000 - 25,000
As a painter who defies categorization, Edwin Dickinson’s work sits at the intersection of modernism, romanticism, and symbolism. Known as a “painter’s painter,” Dickinson has long been celebrated by fellow artists and befriended the likes of Willem and Elaine de Kooning, Esther Hoyt Sawyer, and Jack Tworkov. Perhaps most wellknown for his psychological self-portraits, Dickinson also veered into landscapes, both imagined and real. In 1939, the artist moved to Wellfleet, Massachusetts, where he soon constructed his own studio and started a period of great artistic output from between 1940 and 1943. It was during this time that Stone Tower was created. Although Dickinson regularly used the technique of premier coup, or first strike, for his summer landscapes, he abandons premier coup in Stone Tower. The painting fits naturally into Dickinson’s shadowed and sometimes eerie worlds. To create the imposing tower, Dickinson used, in his own words, a “violent angular perspective above the eye.” This unusual angle of the tower is indicative of Dickinson’s love of and his experimentation with perspective. The tower itself is imagined, and Dickinson chose to craft it using various shades of lilac, reportedly his favorite color.
(French, 1850-1924)
En Bretagne, l’église et le cimetière, 1877 oil on panel signed J.F. Raffaelli and dated (lower left) 13 1/4 x 9 3/8 inches.
We are grateful to Galerie Brame & Lorenceau for kindly confirming the authenticity of this lot, which will be included in their forthcoming Jean-François Raffaëlli digital catalogue critique currently in preparation.
Provenance:
Sold: Christie’s, London, date unknown
Alexander Morten Esq., acquired at the above sale
Sold: American Art Association, New York, May 10, 1916, Lot 93
Charles Adams Platt, acquired from the above sale
Thence by descent to William and Geoffrey Platt, sons of the above
Jeffery R. Brown Fine Arts, Lincoln, Massachusetts, 1979
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1983
$6,000 - 8,000
Shops on Boulevard Montparnasse, Paris, 1898 oil on panel signed Robert Henri (lower right); titled (on the reverse)
3 11/16 x 6 1/16 inches.
Provenance:
Estate of the Artist, until c. 1957
Hirschl & Adler Galleries, New York, c. 1957
Davis & Long, New York, 1957-86
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1986
Exhibited:
New York, Davis Galleries, 1957, An Intimate Collection, no. 12 (as Shop, Montparnasse)
Syracuse, New York, Everson Museum of Art, American Paintings and Drawings from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Davis of New York City, 1960, no. 8
New York, Davis & Long, Charles Conder, Robert Henri, James Morrice, Maurice Prendergast: The Formative Years: Paris 1890s, May 13 - 31, 1975, no. 16, illus.
University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Bellefonte Collects, August 13 - October 22, 1989, no. 24, p. 22
$3,000 - 5,000
The “Yards,” Weehawken N.J., An Autumn Afternoon oil on panel signed George Luks and titled (on the reverse)
8 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches.
Provenance:
Estate of Baron Cassel Van Doorn
Lock Galleries, New York, by 1958
Davis Galleries, New York, 1958-1986
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, by 1989
$2,000 - 4,000
58
Francis Speight (American, 1896-1989)
White House with Variations, 1930 oil on canvas signed Francis Speight and dated (lower right) 50 x 40 inches.
Provenance:
The Artist
Acquired from the Artist by the present owners, 1975
Exhibited:
Washington, DC, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Thirteenth Exhibition of Contemporary American Oil Paintings, December 4, 1932 - January 25, 1933, no. 148 University Park, Pennsylvania State University Art Museum, Manayunk and Other Places: Paintings and Drawings by Francis Speight, September 8 - October 27, 1974, no. 11, pp. 9; 38, illus.
$20,000 - 40,000
Born and raised in rural North Carolina, Francis Speight began his formal art education in 1920 at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, but, after seeing an exhibition of Daniel Garber’s landscapes, he enrolled to study at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia. Thereafter he remained at the Academy--first as a student, then as a teacher-for more than forty years. For most of this time, Speight’s major subject was Manayunk, the subject of White House with Variations, 1930. Manayunk was an industrial area set above the Schuylkill River on the edge of Philadelphia. The hills, the light, and the architecture were endlessly fascinating to the artist, and he returned again and again to paint the same subject, often the same viewpoint, in all kinds of weather and at various times of day.
According to a 1975 letter written by Speight to Philip Sieg, who purchased the painting directly from the artist, the present painting was executed from the front porch of Mrs. McHenry’s home, 57 Jefferson Street in West Manayunk (now Belmont Hills), Pennsylvania. The artist lived in Manayunk for three or four years, while also sharing a studio part time in Philadelphia with the brothers Walter and Cyril Gardner. The studio had a Victrola and records of classical music, which Speight listened to. He particularly liked Johannes Brahms’ Variations on a Theme by Joseph Haydn, a work in the form of a theme and variations. Inspired by the musical piece, the artist writes in the letter, “I decided to try to do a painting with variations in white using the white house across the street from Mrs. McHenry’s.” These “variations” can be seen in the white house, composed of warm, glowing whites highlighted by rose and yellow hues, which contrast against the deep blue-purple shadows cast by the overhanging eves and shrubbery to the left.
Speight primarily concerned himself with depictions of quotidian life and focused his efforts in rural and suburban landscapes around Philadelphia, finding beauty in the industrial. In White House with Variations, figures walk along a steep hill in front of the house, emphasizing the daily routines of Pennsylvanians. The high horizon line allows the town to sprawl behind the subject, and the blue sky complements the red tones of the buildings clustered on the rolling hills of the landscape. Although the artwork is representational, it embodies the “lyrical interpretation” Speight’s oeuvre was often described as. He would often paint the sky to portray a specific mood rather than strictly adhering to the weather conditions in which he painted the scene. In this way, the artist imbues his work with a sense of calm and transforms the everyday into visual poetry.
59 Ben Kamihara
(American, 1925-2004)
Stream in Cuenca I, 1968 oil on canvas signed KAMIHIRA (lower right) 23 x 26 inches.
Provenance: Forum Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1976
$1,000 - 2,000
60 Everett Shinn
(American, 1876-1953)
Promenade, c. 1905-08 oil on canvas 10 x 12 inches.
The view in the present lot may be of the Fifth Avenue side of Central Park in New York.
Provenance: The Artist’s son
Rip Van Dam Antiques, Hyde Park, New York, before 1957
Private Collection, until 1981 Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1981
Exhibited: University Park, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Museum of Art, Art from Pennsylvania, May 28 - August 13, 1989
$3,000 - 5,000
61
Charles Prendergast (American, 1858-1924)
Fantasy watercolor and graphite on paper inscribed CP per E.P. (lower center) 10 1/4 x 13 1/4 inches.
This watercolor is inscribed by Eugénie (Mrs. Charles) Prendergast, widow of the Artist. She sometimes did this for identification purposes.
Provenance:
Mrs. Charles Prendergast, widow of the Artist, until 1963 Davis Galleries, New York, 1963
Joan (Mrs. Edward) Patterson (later Roberts), until 1974-75 Davis & Long, New York
Private Collection, acquired from the above, 1975-2006
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 2006
Exhibited:
New York, Davis Galleries, Charles Prendergast, 1963, no. 19 New York, Davis & Long, American Paintings and Drawings, 1975
Literature:
Noel Frackman, “American Paintings and Drawings,” Arts Magazine (March 1975), p. 9
Carol Clark, Nancy Mowll Mathews, and Gwendolyn Owens, Maurice Brazil Prendergast, Charles Prendergast: a catalogue raisonné, Williamstown, Massachusetts, 1990, no. 2438
$8,000 - 12,000
Fantasy with Three Figures (Allegory), 1921 tempera and gold leaf on incised, gessoed panel signed with initials CP (lower left), signed C. Prendergast and dated (etched on verso). 16 x 22 inches.
Bears a frame carved by the Artist
Provenance:
Joseph Brummer, New York, by 1922
Mrs. B. Cohane
Hirschl & Adler Galleries, New York, 1962
Fletcher
Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1977
Exhibited:
(possibly) New York, Joseph Brummer, Exhibition of Works by Maurice B. Prendergast and Charles E. Prendergast, April 4 - April 23, 1921
New York, Davis & Long, American-English: Paintings, Watercolors and Drawings, November 9 - December 3, 1977 (not included in catalogue)
Literature:
“Her Vagaries,” International Studio, May 1921, p. 77, illus.
Carol Clark, Nancy Mowll Mathews, and Gwendolyn Owens, Maurice Brazil Prendergast, Charles Prendergast: a catalogue raisonné, Williamstown, Massachusetts, 1990, no. 2254, p. 679, illus.
$150,000 - 250,000
Born in Newfoundland and raised in Boston, the artist-craftsman Charles Prendergast was close to and often collaborated with his older brother, the well-known post-impressionist Maurice Brazil Prendergast (1858–1924). After working from a young age, first as a traveling salesman and then as a woodworker, Charles established a frame-making career in 1894. Spurning commercial frame-making methods, he embraced an Arts and Crafts ethic, producing hand-crafted, gilded frames carved in low relief, with original designs based on pattern books and nature. On a trip to Italy in 1911, he visited churches and museums, where he was drawn to the gold—symbolic of heaven and sacred events—in Trecento and Quattrocento paintings and cassone. Shortly after his return, he created his first panel paintings. Influenced by a technical manual (c. 1400) by the Florentine artist Cennino Cennini, he developed a distinctive method, consisting of cutting into damp gesso, which he painted, incised, gilded, and burnished. Another influence was Japanning (a Western imitation of oriental lacquer work), for which Prendergast developed his own variation, building his forms with additional plaster coatings, their roughness removed with sandpaper and pumice stone. Although he based his first panels on religious prototypes, he soon broadened his sources to encompass many artistic traditions, including Egyptian, Persian, Chinese, Roman, Etruscan, Hindu, and Coptic. He studied these sources on visits to museums in Boston as well as in New York, where he and Maurice moved together in 1914.
Signed and dated on its verso, “C. PRENDERgast / 1921,” Fantasy with Three Figures / Allegory belongs to the first of three phases in Prendergast’s art, which he named the “Celestial” or “Oriental” (the later phases were the “Transitional” and the “Modern”). Demonstrating a lavish and glistening use of gold leaf, the image depicts the kind of idyllic Arcadian setting and enigmatic allegorical subject matter that characterizes this phase. The mythical place of abundance with blossoming trees, floating rosettes, a flower garden, wildlife (waterfowl and two quadrupeds in overlapping profile, with the S-curves of greyhounds) has seemingly been reached by an ancient sailing vessel (at the apex of the composition), while mountains on the far shore are in the distance. The three figures in the scene—a woman stepping forward and a man and woman riding sidesaddle on a mule—wear Renaissance attire but their simplified features give them a distinctly modern aspect. Evoking the escapist tradition of Watteau’s voyages to Cythera (1717) and medieval millefleur tapestries at the Cloisters, the image is a modified, cropped, and more frontal representation of the scene depicted in Prendergast’s somewhat larger panel, Figures and Mules (or Greyhounds), c. 1921 (Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia), which was purchased by Albert C. Barnes (1872–1951) from the March 1921 Society of Independent Artists Exhibition. In the present work, the burnished gold leaf, set against the dark blues and greens of the land and water, is far more pronounced, while Prendergast monumentalized the imagery within a condensed and cohesive design, which he tied together with a hand-carved baguette-style frame, patterned with a loose version of the classical egg-and-dart.
Prendergast completed the present painting by May 1921, when it was illustrated in an article in International Studio, with a caption that reads “Carved Wood Panel, courtesy Joseph Brummer.” The Hungarian-born Brummer (1883–1947)—who studied with Rodin and Matisse and previously ran a prestigious Paris gallery with his brother Ernest, specializing in medieval art—was the work’s first owner. It can be presumed he included it among the eight carved wood panels by Prendergast included in the exhibition of his work, and that of Maurice, held in April 1921, which was the inaugural show at his New York gallery. The Brooklyn Eagle reported: “In choosing the Prendergasts for his opening exhibition, Mr. Brummer has shown both taste and judgment. The paintings show off the beauty of his galleries and are an excellent foil to the antiquities which Mr. Brummer has in the rooms on the ground floor, wonders from Greece, from Egypt, and gothic works from France” (April 10, 1921, p. 40). This would certainly have been an appropriate context for Charles’s work. A review of the show in the New York Evening Herald commented on Prendergast’s “incised and illuminated wood panels [which] show a facile command of gold leaf, relying on an underlay of red in lowering the glare” (April 20, 1921, p. 7).
Lisa N. Peters, PhD63
Bill Traylor (American, 1854-1947)
Fierce Dog, c. 1939-42 graphite and poster paint on cardboard 9 1/2 x 13 3/4 inches.
Provenance:
Betty Cunningham Gallery, New York
Hirschl and Adler Modern, New York
Davis & Langdale, New York
Exhibited:
Davis & Langdale, New York, Summer
Exhibition, June 15 - September 18, 2015
$40,000 - 60,000
Bill Traylor was born into slavery with an uncertain birthday of around 1853-54, on the cotton plantation of George Hartwell Traylor. Though he was legally emancipated in 1865 at the end of the Civil War, he continued to work as a sharecropper until he was 75, when, following a change of circumstances that enabled him to escape this backbreaking form of legal slavery, he settled in Depression-era Montgomery, Alabama.
Several years later, it would be on the sidewalks of Montgomery that he finally began making art: cardboard renderings of vibrant figures in motion. He would produce nearly 1,500 works in his brief career before his death in 1949. Among these is Fierce Dog, c. 1939-42, a drawing of an imposing, dark creature with bared teeth and flattened ears.
Though little is known about Traylor’s early life, the years between moving to Montgomery and the start of his artistic practice were challenging. He supported himself at a job at a shoe factory, living in a rented room and then a small shack, before rheumatoid arthritis cost him his job and housing. He spent his nights in the back room of a funeral home, and his days on Monroe Street with cardboard and pencil. Each of his compositions are of what Traylor would refer to as his exciting events, both drawn from memory and completely made up, figural and active, and attention-grabbing.
It was on the sidewalks of Monroe Street that he was first noticed by a young Charles Shannon—a leader of New South, a progressive group of white artists in Montgomery, and later his foremost champion – who, amid a budding friendship, began to supply him with materials. Shannon arranged Traylor’s first exhibition at New South: Bill Traylor: People’s Artist. None of the works sold, but it was the only exhibition Traylor would see in his lifetime.
Traylor’s visual lexicon is one of ubiquitous patterns and returning focus, changing from complicated memories of individuals working on a farm to singular reflections on a dog or snake. It is from within this constant stream of Traylor’s visual language that Fierce Dog belongs With nervously defensive body language, this dog is different from Traylor’s other subjects, who are usually more aggressive--on their haunches for attack, ears perked up and alert. Fierce Dog’s gaze is penetrating and unnerving, and Traylor’s careful mapping of the beast is visible in the pencil sketch underneath, while the depth of the animal’s stance belies his developing concern for perspective.
After the inaugural exhibition, Traylor traveled through the East Coast and to Chicago, living with relatives and his children before losing a leg to gangrene and returning to Montgomery in 1945. He died in 1949 and was later buried at Mount Moriah Cemetery. In 2019, a historic marker was placed on the corner of Lawrence and Monroe Streets, where Traylor had made his most prolific works.
Shannon, left with Traylor’s entire oeuvre, kept the works in storage until 1974, when he and his wife began to organize the collection into subject matter and shared imagery. As Traylor began to catch the attention of the broader art world in the late 1970s and 1980s, Shannon finally found the audience he always knew the artist deserved. Thirty-six of Traylor’s works were included in the Corcoran Gallery of Art’s landmark exhibition, Black Folk Art in America 1930-1980. MoMA included Traylor’s drawings in the exhibition A Century of American Drawing from the Collection in 1996, six weeks after Shannon’s death.
Traylor has more recently been accepted among the ranks of the most prominent self-taught artists and become widely esteemed. The largest exhibition of Traylor’s work took place at the Smithsonian Museum of American Art in 2019: Between Worlds: The Art of Bill Traylor – this exhibition was also the first retrospective presented for an artist born into slavery. The complicated legacy of Traylor and the visual record he created in its reflection has been at the center of the conversations unpeeling aestheticism from lived brutality in contemporary art history. Fierce Dog is a small testament to this duality, outwardly ferocious while also at the same time seemingly scared, an honest and stark figure on a scrap of cardboard.
64
John Marin (American, 1870-1953)
Autumn, Castorland, 1913 watercolor on paper signed Marin and dated (lower right) 18 3/4 x 15 5/8 inches.
According to Sheldon Reich’s catalogue raisonné on the artist, John Marin Jr. stated that this picture has been incorrectly dated 1919 and titled Deer Isle Stonington Maine. In reality, he notes, it was done in Castorland in 1913.
Provenance:
Estate of the Artist
Marlborough Gallery, New York
Vandervelde McKinney Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1980
Literature:
Sheldon Reich, John Marin: A Stylistic Analysis and Catalogue
Raisonné, Tucson, 1970, Volume II, no. 13.6, p. 374
$15,000 - 25,000
John Marin’s modern watercolors take inspiration from nature but are not intended to faithfully portray specific views. His true goal was to explore color, shape, and vision, making him a true modernist who played with the limits of watercolor as a medium. As a result, his watercolors are abstract, but always maintain a sense of the subject matter. Marin traveled throughout the Northeast of the United States, including trips to Castorland, in upstate New York. The present watercolor highlights the first tree in a grove to change leaf color, marking the beginning of autumn. Marin crafts the trees loosely to reduce the grove to patches of color that are contained with strong, broad strokes. This treatment of the subject matter allows for his hallmark abstraction and individual interpretations of the striking scene.
What I attempt to do in my own work is to put down objects – a kind of mind-picture in suspended motion— so that when one of my pictures is called abstract it is only because I leave it to the imagination to supply whether what I have painted is a gull, or a ship, or a person.
(Dorothy Norman, “John Marin,” College Art Journal, 14:4, pp. 320-331)
65
Max Weber (American, 1881-1961)
Trees in Central Park, 1911 oil
10 1/4 x 8 inches.
Provenance:
Forum Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1976
$8,000 - 12,000
on board signed Max Weber (lower left); signed Max Weber and dated (lower right); bears MW stamp and Forum Gallery label on backing.66 Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
Landscape, late 1960s
watercolor on paper laid to board signed Albert York (lower left)
9 x 12 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Provenance:
The Artist
Davis Galleries
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1991
$3,000 - 5,000
67
Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
Seascape with Sailboat, c. 1970 oil on board 7 x 10 1/4 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Provenance:
Davis Galleries, New York
Davis & Long, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1980
Exhibited:
Davis & Long, New York, Albert York, October 12 - November 5, 1977 (as lent by Antonia Keiser)
$60,000 - 80,000
68
Albert York (American, 1928-2009)
Landscape with Three Trees and Pond, June 1984 oil on panel 13 1/4 x 12 inches.
The present lot will be included in the forthcoming Catalogue Raisonné of the artist’s work being compiled by Cecily Langdale, of Davis & Langdale Company, Inc., New York. We wish to thank Cecily Langdale for her kind assistance in cataloguing this work.
Provenance:
Davis & Langdale, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owners, 1984
$80,000 - 120,000
Gertrud Vasegaard (Danish, 1913-2007)
Monumental Cylindrical Vessel (kumme), 1976 glazed stoneware with artist monogram H 13 1/4 x Dia 15 1/4 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1987
$5,000 - 7,000
Large Bowl, 1984
glazed stoneware signed ‘alev ‘84’
H 7 1/2 x Dia 12 3/4 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1987
$10,000 - 15,000
Alev Siesbye (Turkish/Danish, b. 1938)
Bowl, 1984 glazed stoneware signed ‘Alev’ and dated H 4 x Dia 7 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1985
$6,000 - 8,000
porcelain with impressed artist’s seal
H 3 1/4 x Dia 6 1/2 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1998
$15,000 - 25,000
Lucie Rie (Austrian/British, 1902-1995)
Footed Bowl, 1982
glazed stoneware with impressed artist’s seal
H 3 1/2 x Dia 7 1/2 inches
Provenance: Westminster Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts, 1986, Selected by William Hull
$10,000 - 15,000
Footed Bowl glazed porcelain with impressed artist’s seal
H 2 1/2 x Dia 5 3/4 inches
Provenance: Bonham’s London, 1989
$10,000 - 15,000
75
Jane Reumert (Danish, 1942-2016)
Ovoid Planter, 1988
glazed stoneware signed ‘JANE’ and dated H 7 1/4 x W 14 1/4 x D 10 3/4 inches
Provenance:
William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1988
$2,000 - 4,000
76
Kawase Shinobu (Japanese, b. 1950)
Fluted Dish porcelain with celadon glaze
H 2 1/8 x Dia 8 3/4 inches
Provenance:
Toyobi Far Eastern Art, Inc., New York, New York, 1982
$1,000 - 2,000
77
Kawase Shinobu (Japanese, b. 1950)
Flower Shaped Bowl, c. 1980 porcelain with celadon glaze
H 3 x W 9 7/8 x D 9 7/8 inches
Provenance:
Toyobi Far Eastern Art, Inc., New York, New York, 1984
$1,000 - 2,000
78 Axel Salto (Danish, 1889-1961)
Budding Vase, c. 1935
Royal Copenhagen, Denmark glazed stoneware signed ‘Salto’ with factory marks
H 3 1/2 x Dia 4 3/8 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1986
$1,000 - 2,000
79 Carl Halier (Danish, 1873-1948)
Lidded Vessel, 1939 glazed stoneware, bronze signed ‘CH’ with stamped manufacturer’s mark and date
H 9 1/2 x Dia 9 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1985
$1,500 - 2,500
(Danish, b. 1942)
Cylindrical Bowl glazed stoneware signed ‘Dorte Schierup Heide’
H 4 3/4 x W 10 1/4 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1986
$1,000 - 2,000
81
Carl Halier (Danish, 1873-1948)
Lidded Vessel, c. 1925 glazed stoneware, bronze signed ‘CH’ with stamped manufacturer’s mark and numbered ‘3524’ H 11 x Dia 6 1/2 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1985 $1,000 - 2,000
82
Patrick Nordstrom (Danish, 1870-1929)
Lidded Vase, 1922 glazed stoneware, bronze with artist’s monogram and date H 9 x Dia 5 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 2001
$1,500 - 2,500
83
Wilhelm Kåge (Swedish, 1889-1960)
Tall Cylindrical Vase, c. 1950
glazed stoneware signed ‘Kåge’ with impressed factory marks, and cypher
H 10 1/2 x Dia 4 3/4 inches
Provenance:
William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1999
$2,000 - 3,000
84
Stig Lindberg (Swedish, 1916-1982)
Flattened Bottle-Form Vase, 1967
Gustavsberg, Sweden
glazed stoneware signed ‘Stig L’ and with studio mark
H 13 x W 5 x D 5 inches
Provenance:
William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1988
$1,000 - 2,000
85
Joanna Constantinidis (British, 1927-2000)
Tall Vase, 1976 glazed stoneware with impressed artist’s seal H 12 3/4 x W 7 1/2 x D 6 3/4 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1988
$1,000 - 2,000
86 Bente Hansen (Danish, b. 1943)
Large Flattened Vase Form, 1987 glazed stoneware with artist’s monogram and dated H 24 1/2 x W 10 1/4 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1988
$1,000 - 1,500
87
Kati Tuominen-Niittylä (Finnish, b. 1947)
Monumental Vessel, 2001
stoneware H 14 1/4 x W 11 1/2 x D 10 inches
Provenance: William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 2002
$2,000 - 4,000
88
Berndt Friberg
(Swedish, 1899-1981)
Collection of Eight Vessels, c. 1960 glazed porcelain with signature and studio mark
Largest | 2 1/4 x Dia 4 3/4 inches
Provenance:
William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut
$1,000 - 1,500
89
Berndt Friberg
(Swedish, 1899-1981)
Collection of Seven Vessels, c. 1960 glazed porcelain with signature and studio mark
Largest | H 4 3/4 x Dia 5 1/4 inches
Provenance:
William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut
$1,500 - 2,500
90
Bodil Manz (Danish, b. 1943) Vessel, 1991 porcelain signed ‘Bodil Manz’ with artist monogram H 4 3/4 x Dia 5 3/4 inches
Provenance:
William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1992
$1,500 - 2,500
91
Gertrud Vasegaard (Danish, 1913-2007)
Lidded Jar, c. 1949 Bing & Grondahl, Denmark glazed stoneware, brass signed with artist’s monogram, impressed factory marks, and numbered H 7 x Dia 7 inches
Provenance:
William Hull, Woodbury, Connecticut, 1993
$1,000 - 2,000
Weber, Max 65
Whistler, James Abbott McNeill 41
Wiles, Irving Ramsey 43
Williamson, John ................. 44
Wouwerman, Philips 51
York, Albert 1-3, 10, 38, 39, 66-68
ADRIAEN JANSZ VAN OSTADE
This work, in our best opinion, is by the named artist.
ATTRIBUTED TO ADRIAEN JANSZ VAN OSTADE
To our best judgment, this work is likely to be by the artist, but with less certainty as in the aforementioned category.
To our best judgment, this unsigned work may or may not have been created under the direction of the artist.
CIRCLE OF ADRIAEN JANSZ VAN OSTADE
To our best judgment, a work by an unknown but distinctive hand linked or associated with the artist but not definitively his pupil.
STYLE OF . . .
FOLLOWER OF ADRIAEN JANSZ VAN OSTADE
To our best judgment, a work by a painter emulating the artist’s style, contemporary or nearly contemporary to the named artist.
MANNER OF ADRIAEN JANSZ VAN OSTADE
To our best judgment, a work in the style of the artistand of a later period.
AFTER ADRIAEN JANSZ VAN OSTADE
To our best judgment, a copy of a known work of the artist.
The term signed and/or dated and/or inscribed means that, in our opinion, a signature and/or date and/or inscription are from the hand of the artist.
The term bears a signature and/or a date and/or an inscription means that, in our opinion, a signature and/or date and/or inscription have been added by another hand.
Dimensions are given height before width.
SALE 1237
POST WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART
SEPTEMBER 28 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1225
ASIAN WORKS OF ART ONLINE
SEPTEMBER 29 | CHICAGO | TIMED ONLINE
SALE 1218
FALL FASHION & ACCESSORIES
OCTOBER 3 | CHICAGO | TIMED ONLINE
SALE 1226
AMERICAN FURNITURE, FOLK & DECORATIVE ARTS
OCTOBER 4 | CINCINNATI | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1228
EUROPEAN FURNITURE & DECORATIVE ARTS
OCTOBER 10 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1246
PRE-COLUMBIAN & ETHNOGRAPHIC ART
OCTOBER 12 | CHICAGO | ONLINE
SALE 1232
EUROPEAN ART
OCTOBER 17 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1231
AMERICAN ART
OCTOBER 17 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1267 TIME AND SPACE: WATCHES FROM THE COLLECTION OF GLEN DE VRIES
OCTOBER 18 | NEW YORK | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1230
WATCHES
OCTOBER 18 | NEW YORK | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1274
FOREVER YOUNG: PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE JOE BAIO COLLECTION
OCTOBER 19 | NEW YORK | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1293
ARMS, ARMOR & MILITARIA
OCTOBER 24 | CINCINNATI | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1283
CANVAS & CLAY: THE COLLECTION OF JUDITH AND PHILIP SIEG, BELLEFONTE, PENNSYLVANIA
OCTOBER 26 | NEW YORK | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1279
HAVING A BALL
OCTOBER 30 | CHICAGO | TIMED ONLINE
SALE 1239
WESTERN & CONTEMPORARY
NATIVE AMERICAN ART
NOVEMBER 1 | DENVER | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1242
FINE BOOKS FROM THE DORROS FAMILY COLLECTION
NOVEMBER 9 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1241
FINE PRINTED BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
NOVEMBER 10 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1244
MODERN DESIGN
NOVEMBER 14 AM | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
SALE 1243
EARLY 20TH CENTURY DESIGN
NOVEMBER 14 PM | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE
MONICA BROWN VICE PRESIDENT, DIRECTOR PRINTS & MULTIPLES
303.825.1855 MONICABROWN @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
ZACK WIRSUM VICE PRESIDENT, DIRECTOR POST WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART
312.600.6069 ZACHARYWIRSUM @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
PAULINE ARCHAMBAULT SPECIALIST AMERICAN ART 513.871.1670 PAULINEARCHAMBAULT @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
HUDSON BERRY DIRECTOR, SENIOR SPECIALIST DESIGN
312.334.4217 HUDSONBERRY @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
SABRINA GRANADOS ASSOCIATE SPECIALIST DESIGN 312.447.3269
SABRINAGRANADOS @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
MADALINA LAZEN DIRECTOR, SENIOR SPECIALIST EUROPEAN ART 561.833.8053
MADALINELAZEN @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
LAURA PATERSON DIRECTOR, SENIOR SPECIALIST PHOTOGRAPHS 312.280.1212 LAURAPATERSON @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
AARON CATOR SENIOR SPECIALIST POST WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART 646.864.1746 AARONCATOR @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
ALEXANDRIA DREAS SPECIALIST, HEAD OF SALE WESTERN & WILDLIFE ART
303.825.1855
ALEXANDRIADREAS @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
ANGELA WHITAKER SENIOR APPRAISER, FINE ART 872.270.3105 ANGELAWHITAKER @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
JULIANNA TANCREDI SENIOR RESEARCHER 312.334.4228 JULIANNATANCREDI @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
KATHERINE HLAVIN CONSULTANT, FINE ART 303.825.1855 KATHERINEHLAVIN @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
THEA ANDRUS CATALOGUER
872.270.3120
THEAANDRUS @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
CHRISTINA KIRIAKOS CATALOGUER 312.334.4216
CHRISTINAKIRIAKOS @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
JOHN MARTINEZ DEPARTMENT COORDINATOR 312.600.6064
JOHNMARTINEZ @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
& CLAY: THE COLLECTION OF JUDITH AND PHILIP SIEG, BELLEFONTE, PENNSYLVANIA
SARAH GRAY DEPARTMENT COORDINATOR 312.334.4234 SARAHGRAY @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
Updated 9.19.23
ATLANTA KRISTIN VAUGHN VICE PRESIDENT 404.800.0192 KRISTINVAUGHN @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
CHICAGO MIRANDA MAXFIELD 312.334.4208 MIRANDAMAXFIELD @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
CINCINNATI VAUGHN H. SMITH 513.666.4987 VAUGHNSMITH @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
CLEVELAND CARRIE PINNEY 216.292.8300 CARRIEPINNEY @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
DENVER
NAPLES
ALLISON DURIAN 239.643.4448
ALLISONDURIAN @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
NEW YORK
CAROLINE BAKER SMITH 212.243.3000 CAROLINEBAKERSMITH @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
PALM BEACH ELIZABETH MARSHMAN 561.621.8461 ELIZABETHMARSHMAN @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
SAN DIEGO KATIE GUILBAULT, G.G. VICE PRESIDENT 858.442.6104
KATIEGUILBAULT @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
MOLLYLIMMER
MARON HINDMAN 303.825.1855 MARONHINDMAN @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
DETROIT PAM IACOBELLI 313.774.0900 PAMELAIACOBELLI @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
MIAMI
ELIZABETH RADER, PHD 239.643.4448 ELIZABETHRADER @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
GEMMASUDLOW
561.833.8053
TIMLUKE @HINDMANAPPRAISALS.COM
MILWAUKEE SARA MULLOY 414.220.9200 SARAMULLOY @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
SCOTTSDALE LOGAN BROWNING 480.546.5150 LOGANBROWNING @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
ST. LOUIS ANNA SHAVER 314.833.0833
ANNASHAVER @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
WASHINGTON, D.C.
MAURA ROSS VICE PRESIDENT 202.853.1638
MAURAROSS @HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
Updated 9.5.23
LEADERSHIP
Alyssa D. Quinlan Chief Executive Officer alyssaquinlan @hindmanauctions.com
Jay Frederick Krehbiel Executive Chairman
Leslie Hindman Founder & Chairman Emeritus
Wes Cowan Vice-Chair
Maron Hindman Vice-Chair
Andrew Seltzer Interim Chief Operating Officer andrewseltzer @hindmanauctions.com
Molly Morse Limmer Executive Vice President, Deputy Chairman mollylimmer @hindmanauctions.com
AUCTION OPERATIONS, CLIENT SERVICES
Rita Swanberg Manager, Client Experience ritaswanberg @hindmanauctions.com
Dawnie Komotios Operations Director Cincinnati dawniekomotios @hindmanauctions.com
Nicole Joy Regional Manager Auction Operations nicolejoy @hindmanauctions.com
FINANCE
Marco Gusella Vice President, Finance marcogusella @hindmanauctions.com
TRUSTS, ESTATES & PRIVATE CLIENTS Molly E. Gron, J.D. Managing Director mollygron @hindmanauctions.com
Miranda Maxfield Senior Manager mirandamaxfield @hindmanauctions.com
Hannah Unger Manager hannahunger @hindmanauctions.com
Kathryn Hodge Senior Associate, West kathrynhodge @hindmanacutions.com
Erin Madarieta Associate, East erinmadarieta @hindmanauctions.com
APPRAISALS Tim Luke, CAI, BAS, MPPA, ISA-AM Managing Director timluke @hindmanappraisals.com
LaGina Austin Senior Director, Appraisals & Valuations laginaaustin @hindmanappraisals.com
Margaret Cece Appraisals Supervisor margaretcece @hindmanappraisals.com
MUSEUM SERVICES
Timothy Long Director, Museum Business Development & Corporate Client Services timothylong@ hindmanauctions.com
Briar Koehl Oleferchik Senior Manager, Museum Services briarkoehl@ hindmanauctions.com
FINE ART Monica Brown Vice President, Director Prints & Multiples monicabrown @hindmanauctions.com
Zack Wirsum Vice President, Director Post War & Contemporary Art zacharywirsum @hindmanauctions.com
Madalina Lazen Director, Senior Specialist European Art madalinalazen @hindmanauctions.com
Laura Paterson Director, Senior Specialist Photographs laurapaterson @hindmanauctions.com
Aaron Cator Senior Specialist Post War & Contemporary Art aaroncator @hindmanauctions.com
Katherine Hlavin Consultant Fine Art
Pauline Archambault Specialist, American Art
Alexandria Dreas Specialist, Head of Sale Western & Wildlife Art
Angela Whitaker Senior Appraiser, Fine Art
Julianna Tancredi Senior Researcher
Thea Andrus Cataloguer
Christina Kiriakos Cataloguer
John Martinez Department Coordinator
Sarah Gray Department Coordinator
EUROPEAN FURNITURE & DECORATIVE ARTS
Corbin Horn
Vice President, Senior Specialist corbinhorn @hindmanauctions.com
Nick Coombs Senior Specialist nickcoombs @hindmanauctions.com
Donna Tribby Senior Specialist
Sam Cowan National Head of Sale, The Collected Home
Nicholas Gordon
Associate Specialist
Alison Lynch
Associate Cataloguer
Tyler Wilson Department Coordinator
AMERICAN FURNITURE, FOLK & DECORATIVE ARTS
Ben Fisher Vice President, Senior Specialist benfisher @hindmanauctions.com
Leah Vogelpohl Specialist
Katie Benedict Associate Specialist
ANTIQUITIES & ANCIENT ART
Jacob Coley Director, Senior Specialist jacobcoley @hindmanauctions.com
Sean Galvin Associate Cataloguer
DESIGN
Hudson Berry Director, Senior Specialist hudsonberry @hindmanauctions.com
Sabrina Granados
Associate Specialist
John Martinez Department Coordinator BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS
Gretchen Hause
Vice President, Senior Specialist gretchenhause @hindmanauctions.com
Katie Horstman Senior Specialist katiehorstman @hindmanauctions.com
Emily Payne Specialist
Kaylan Gunn Specialist
Leslie Winter Associate Specialist
Joshua McCracken Department Coordinator
ASIAN ART
Annie Wu Vice President, Senior Specialist anniewu @hindmanauctions.com
Flora Zhang Specialist
Megan Sadler Associate Specialist
JEWELRY & WATCHES Reginald Brack Senior Vice President, Director, Jewelry & Watches reginaldbrack @hindmanauctions.com
April Matteini, G.G. Associate Director, Jewelry Senior Specialist, Jewelry & Watches aprilmatteni @hindmanauctions.com
Karina Hammer, G.G. Senior Specialist karinahammer @hindmanauctions.com
Katie Hammond Guilbault, G.G. Senior Specialist San Diego katieguilbault @hindmanauctions.com
Sean Johnson Senior Specialist, Watches seanjohnson @hindmanauctions.com
Leslie Roskind, G.G. Senior Specialist, New York leslieroskind @hindmanauctions.com
Ruth Thuston, G.G. Senior Specialist ruththuston @hindmanauctions.com
Marisa Palmer, G.G. Senior Appraiser marisapalmer @hindmanauctions.com
Madeline Schroeder, G.G. Associate Specialist
Gina O’Connor Cataloguer
Camille Michelotti Department Coordinator
LUXURY HANDBAGS & COUTURE Tanner Branson Specialist, Head of Sale tannerbranson@ hindmanauctions.com
Brett Heeley Department Coordinator brettheeley@ hindmanauctions.com
NATIVE AMERICAN, PREHISTORIC & TRIBAL ART
Danica Farnand Vice President, Senior Specialist danicafarnand @hindmanauctions.com
Erin Rust Specialist
William Norwood
Department Coordinator
ARMS, ARMOR & MILITARIA
Tim Carey
Director, Senior Specialist timcarey @hindmanauctions.com
Emma Fulmer
ATF Manager and Senior Coordinator
Barrett Sharpnack Cataloguer
Tucker Etnoyer Cataloguer
SPORTS MEMORABILIA
James Smith Director, Senior Specialist jamessmith @hindmanauctions.com
Joshua McCracken Department Coordinator
MARKETING & DESIGN
Ashley Galloway Vice President, Marketing
Zoë Bare Director, Photography
David Jackson Supervisor, Photography
Photographers:
Eston Baumer*
Tyler Chumney*
Carmen Colome
Marisa Fabiilli
Chad Feierstone
Jared Hefel
Kristen Hudson
Tyler Leiby
Deogracias Lerma
Roberto Martinez
Libby Moore
Elizabeth Phillips
Mike Reinders
Bill Ross
Maddie Scarpone
Rachel Smith
Dallas Tolentino
Leanne Uzelac
Brian Maslouski Senior Designer
Jennifer Castle* Graphic Designer
*Lead Photography and Design for Sale 1283
Updated 9.27.23
Evaluation of Property
Hindman is pleased to provide complimentary auction estimates for items you’re considering consigning. You are welcome to submit items electronically (consign@hindmanauctions.com) or to contact any of our offices directly.
Our specialists are eager to help you learn more about your collection and current auction sale estimates.
To begin an estimate, our specialists will need:
• At least 3 photos
• Detailed description
• Details on signatures or marks
Shipping Arrangements
Buyers assume full responsibility for the packing and shipping of lots won at auction. Our Recommended Shippers offer a wide variety of local, domestic, and international shipping options.
In the interest of our clients, Hindman requires a written authorization from the buyer in order to release property to anyone other than the purchaser of record (including but not limited to our recommended shippers). You may submit the Shipping Release Form via fax to 312.280.1211 or email to shipping@hindmanauctions.com
Appraisals
Our exceptional team of specialists regularly appraises property by analyzing market trends and conducting comprehensive research. Specialists evaluate thousands of objects each year for auction, allowing them to closely monitor the nuances of the current market.
Professional appraisals are prepared for estate tax, gift tax, charitable contribution, insurance and for equitable distribution purposes.
• Estate Tax
• Gift Tax
• Charitable Contribution
• Insurance
• Appraisals for Corporate Valuation Needs
Our trust and estates department recognizes that each client and appraisal situation is unique and often involves multiple asset categories and residences. Fees for appraisals are determined by the number of specialists, hours involved and the necessary travel and expenses. Our competitive fees are negotiated based upon the express needs of each client and are competitive within the marketplace.
Please contact our Appraisals Department (appraisals@ hindmanauctions.com) for more information.
Estate Services
Estate settlement is a meticulous and multi-faceted process. Hindman provides executors, fiduciaries and beneficiaries throughout the country with confidential and customized appraisals and disposition services. All appraisals are prepared fully in accordance with USPAP guidelines and meet all current requirements set forth by the IRS.
We recognize that each client and appraisal situation is unique and often involves multiple asset categories and residences. Our Trusts and Estates department offers services that are tailored to meet our clients’ timelines and specifications.
Our specialists offer complimentary walk-through services with the goal of providing an accurate representation of each items’ value based on the current auction market. A detailed proposal outlining the manner in which a sale will be conducted from the initial value assessment to removal of the property and settlement is provided to all parties involved.
Please contact our Estate Services (inquiries@hindmanauctions.com) team for more information.
Conditions of Sale
All bidders with Hindman LLC must read and agree to Conditions of Sale posted in this catalogue prior to bidding at an auction.
Viewing Auction Items
It is highly recommended that all prospective bidders either view the sale via our online catalogue or contact Hindman LLC for further images or to schedule an appointment to view objects in person.
Estimates
Hindman LLC provides catalogue descriptions and pre-auction estimates for each lot included in the sale. These estimates are a guide for prospective bidders. They are not definitive. All pre-sale estimates are subject to revision.
We are happy to provide a condition report for lots with a low estimate of $300 and above. Nevertheless, intending buyers are reminded that condition reports are statements of our opinion only, and that each lot is sold “AS IS,” per our Conditions of Sale, as outlined in the back of this catalogue. All lots should be viewed personally by prospective buyers or their agents to evaluate the condition of the property offered for sale due to the highly subjective nature of condition reports.
The highest bidder acknowledged by the auctioneer will be the purchaser. In addition to the hammer price, the buyer agrees to pay Hindman LLC a buyer’s premium as well as any applicable taxes.
Bidding generally opens at half the low estimate and advances in the following order, although the auctioneer may vary the bidding increments during the course of the auction.
The standard bidding increments are:
Our auctions are free and open to the public with no obligation for attendees to bid. Registration requires your full contact information, photo identification, credit card information, your signature and agreement to the Conditions of Sale.. If you are the successful bidder, your paddle number and the hammer price will be announced by the auctioneer.
Hindman LLC allows absentee and live bidding through our website at hindmanauctions.com as well as absentee and live bidding through third party online bidding providers which vary by sale. For more information regarding online bidding please visit our website at hindmanauctions.com.
If you are unable to attend an auction, you may place an absentee bid, either through our website at hindmanauctions.com or through the bid form provided at the back of this catalogue. An absentee bid is the highest price you are willing to pay exclusive of buyer’s premium and applicable sales tax. Hindman LLC will exercise absentee bids at no additional charge. Absentee bids are always confidential, and bids are executed at the lowest price possible by the auctioneer according to reserves and competing bids.
Telephone Bidding
You may register telephone bid requests either through our website at hindmanauctions.com or through the bid form provided at the back of this catalogue. Upon registering for a telephone bid, you will be called on the day of the auction by a Hindman representative approximately five lots before your item is scheduled to be sold. They will communicate to you the bidding activity and will relay your bids to the auctioneer at your discretion. Please note we can only accept telephone bids for lots with a low estimate of $500 or above unless otherwise noted online. Telephone bids may be requested up to 2 hours prior to the auction start time.
Updated 1.13.23
These Conditions of Sale set out the terms upon which Hindman LLC (“we,” “us,” or “our”) sells property by lot in this catalogue. You agree to be bound by these terms by registering to bid and/or by bidding in our auction.
A. BEFORE THE AUCTION
1. LOT DESCRIPTIONS AND WARRANTIES
Our description of a lot, any statement of a lot’s condition, and any other oral or written statement about a lot—such as its nature, condition, artist, period, materials, dimensions, weight, exhibition or publication history, or provenance— are our opinion and shall not to be relied upon by you as a statement of fact. Except for the limited authenticity warranty contained in paragraphs E and F below, we do not provide any guarantee of our description or the nature of a lot.
2. CONDITION
The physical condition of lots in our auctions can vary due to age, normal wear and tear, previous damage, and restoration/repair. All lots are sold “AS IS,” in the condition they are in at the time of the auction, and we and the seller make no representation or warranty and assume no liability of any kind as to a lot’s condition. Any reference to condition in a catalogue description or a condition report shall not amount to a full accounting of condition and may not include all faults, inherent defects, restoration, alteration, or adaptation. Likewise, images in our catalogue may not depict a lot accurately, as colors and shades may appear different in print or on screen than on physical inspection. We are not responsible for providing you with a description of a lot’s condition in the catalogue or in a condition report.
We offer pre-auction viewings, either scheduled or by appointment, that are free of charge. If you believe that the catalogue description or condition reports are not sufficient, we suggest you inspect a lot personally or through a knowledgeable representative before you bid on a lot to make sure that you accept the description and its condition. We recommend you hire a professional adviser if you are not familiar with how to address the nature or condition of an object. Hindman has several salerooms throughout the country and the location of sales, or individual items may vary. It is important to check with our website and be aware of where each lot is located, for both viewing and for shipping purposes.
4. ESTIMATES
Estimates of a lot account for the condition, rarity, quality, and provenance of the object and are based upon prices realized for similar objects in past auctions. Neither you nor anyone else may rely on our estimates as a prediction or guarantee of the actual selling price of a lot or its value for any other purpose. Estimates do not include the buyer’s premium, any applicable taxes, and any other applicable charges.
5. WITHDRAWAL
We may, in our sole discretion, withdraw a lot from auction at any time prior to or during the sale and shall have no liability to you for our decision to withdraw.
1. GENERAL
We reserve the right to reject any bid. By participating in the sale, you represent and warrant that:
(a) The bidder and/or purchaser is not subject to trade sanctions, embargoes or any other restriction on trade in the jurisdiction in which it does business as well as under the laws and regulations of the United States, and is not owned (nor partly owned) or controlled by such sanctioned person(s) (collectively, “Sanctioned Person(s)”); (b) Where you are acting as agent, your principal is not a Sanctioned Person(s) nor owned (or partly owned) or controlled by Sanctioned Person(s); and
(c) The bidder and/or purchaser undertakes that none of the purchase price will be funded by any Sanctioned Person(s), nor will any party be involved in the transaction including financial institutions, freight forwarders or other forwarding agents or any other party be a Sanctioned Person(s) nor owned (or partly owned) or controlled by a Sanctioned Person(s), unless such activity is authorized in writing by the government authority having jurisdiction over the transaction or in applicable law or regulation.
New bidders must register at least twenty-four (24) hours before an auction and must provide us with documentation of their identity.
(a) Individuals must provide photo identification (driver’s license, non-driver ID card, or passport) and, if not shown on the photo identification, proof of current address (a current utility bill or bank statement). (b) Corporate clients must provide a Certificate of Incorporation or its equivalent bearing the company’s
name and registered address, together with documentary proof of directors and beneficial owners. (c) Trusts, partnerships, offshore companies, and other business entities must contact us in advance of the auction to discuss our requirements. If we are not satisfied with the information you provide us in our bidder identification and other registration procedures, we may refuse to register you to bid, and if you make a successful bid, we may cancel the contract for sale between you and the seller. New bidders may be required to provide us with a financial reference and/or a deposit before we allow them to bid.
3. RETURNING BIDDERS
If you have not bought anything from us recently, then we may require you to register as a new bidder, as described in the paragraph above. Please contact us at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to the auction.
4. BIDDING FOR ANOTHER PERSON
If you are bidding as an agent on behalf of another person, your principal must be a registered bidder and must provide us with written authorization allowing you to bid. You, as the agent, shall accept personal liability to pay the purchase price and all other sums due unless we have agreed in writing before the auction that you are acting as an agent on behalf of your principal and that we will only seek payment from your principal.
5. BIDDING IN THE SALEROOM
If you wish to bid in the saleroom, you must first acquire a bidding paddle at least thirty (30) minutes before the auction.
6. OUR BIDDING SERVICES
We offer the following bidding services as a convenience to our clients, subject to these Conditions of Sale. We shall not be responsible for any error, omission, or failure, human or otherwise, in providing these services.
(a) Phone Bids: You must contact us at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to the auction to arrange a phone bid. We will accept bids by telephone for lots only if our staff is available to take the bids. We agree that we may record telephone bids.
(b) Internet Bids: You can bid in our live sales via our bidding platform or through third-party bidding sites.
(c) Written Bids: You can find a Written Bid Form at the auction location, or online at www.hindmanauctions.com. We must receive your completed Written Bid Form at least twenty-four (24) hours before the auction. We will endeavor to execute written bids at the lowest possible price consistent with the reserve. If you make a written bid on a lot that does not have a reserve and there is no higher bid than yours, we will bid on your behalf at approximately fifty percent (50%) of the low estimate or, if lower, the amount of your bid. The first written bid we receive of those for identical amounts will be given priority over other bids.
7. CREDIT CARD AUTHORIZATION HOLD
When you register to bid you may be asked to provide us with a valid credit card number. You authorize us to verify the validity of the credit card by placing a temporary authorization hold on the card that will remain until it falls off, usually within 2 to 7 days.
C. DURING THE AUCTION
1. BIDDING IN THE AUCTION
(a) Live Auctions. We will appoint an individual auctioneer to administer a live auction. The auctioneer may accept bids from (a) written bids left with us by bidders before the auction; (b) bidders in the saleroom; (c) telephone bidders; and (d) Internet bidders, including bidders through third-party bidding sites. Bidding generally starts below the low estimate and increases in steps, called bid increments. The auctioneer will decide at his/her sole option where the bidding should start and the bid increments. Bid increments may vary from auction to auction. You shall comply with all laws and regulations in force that govern your bidding.
(b) Online Auctions. The auctioneer will accept bids from Internet bidders, including bidders through third-party bidding sites. Bidding generally starts below the low estimate and increases in steps, called bid increments. The auctioneer will decide at his/her sole option where the bidding should start and the bid increments. Bid increments may vary from auction to auction. You shall comply with all laws and regulations in force that govern your bidding.
(c) Timed Auctions. Bids may only be submitted on our website between the dates and times specified in the lot’s description. Your bid is submitted once you place and confirm your bid amount. You agree that a bid is final once it is placed and that you may never amend or revoke your bid. You are fully responsible for any errors you make in bidding. Bidding generally opens at or below the low estimate and increases in steps (bidding increments) to be determined in Hindman’s sole discretion.
2. AUCTIONEER’S DISCRETION
The auctioneer shall have absolute discretion to (a) admit a bidder into or remove a bidder from the saleroom or online auction; (b) accept or refuse any bid; (c) change the order of the lots in the auction; (d) move the bidding backward or forward; (e) withdraw any lot from the auction; (f) divide any lot or combine any two or more lots; (g) reopen or continue the bidding even after the hammer has fallen; and (h) continue the bidding, determine the successful bidder, cancel the sale of the lot, or reoffer and resell any lot in the event that there is an error or dispute related to bidding or the application of the reserve, whether during or after the auction. You must provide us with written notice within three (3) business days of the date of the auction if you believe that the auctioneer has accepted the successful bid in error. The auctioneer will consider the claim and decide in good faith if the sale of the lot is final, whether he/she will cancel the sale of the lot, or whether he/she will reoffer and resell the lot. The auctioneer’s decision in exercise of this discretion is final. This paragraph does not in any way affect our ability to cancel the sale of a lot under other applicable provisions of these Conditions of Sale, including the rights of cancellation set forth in sections B(1), D(6), E(2), and G(1).
3. BIDDING ON BEHALF OF THE SELLER
The auctioneer may, at his/her sole option, bid on behalf of the seller up to one bidding increment before the reserve by making either consecutive or responsive bids. The auctioneer will not identify these as bids made on behalf of the seller. If a lot is offered without reserve, the auctioneer will open the bidding at a set increment lower than the lot’s low estimate and will solicit higher bids from that amount. If there are no bids on a lot, the auctioneer may deem the lot unsold.
4. SUCCESSFUL BIDS AND INVOICES
Subject to paragraph C(2), the contract of sale between the seller and the successful bidder is formed when the final bid is accepted and the auctioneer’s hammer strikes. The successful bid price is the hammer price, and we will issue an invoice only to the registered bidder who made the successful bid. While we send out invoices by mail and/or email after the auction, we shall not be responsible for telling you whether your bid was successful. You should contact us immediately after the auction to find out the success of your bid in order to avoid having to pay storage charges. Please note that Hindman will not accept payments for purchased lots from any party other than the purchaser, unless otherwise agreed between the purchaser and Hindman prior to the sale.
1. THE BUYER’S
In addition to the hammer price, the successful bidder agrees to pay us a buyer’s premium on the hammer price of each lot sold. On all lots except for those in Coins, Medals & Banknotes; Sports Memorabilia; and Arms, Armor & Militaria auctions we charge twenty-six percent (26%) of the hammer price up to and including $1,000,000; twenty percent (20%) of any amount in excess of $1,000,001 up to and including $5,000,000; and fifteen percent (15%) of any amount in excess of $5,000,001. For all lots offered in Coins, Medals & Banknotes we charge a buyer’s premium of twenty percent (21%) of the hammer price. Sports Memorabilia; and Arms, Armor & Militaria auctions we charge a buyer’s premium of twenty percent (20%) of the hammer price. If the bidder bids through a third-party platform the bidder agrees to pay us a surcharge equal to the fee levied by the third-party platform. The third-party platform fee is in addition to the buyer’s premium.
2. TAXES
The successful bidder is responsible for any applicable taxes, including any sales or use tax or equivalent tax wherever such taxes may arise on the hammer price, the buyer’s premium, and/or any other charges related to the lot. A sales or use tax is dependent upon a number of factors, including, but not limited to, our volume of sale and the place of delivery of the lot, regardless of the nationality or citizenship of the successful bidder. The applicable sales tax rate will be determined based upon the state, county, or locale to which the lot will be shipped or where it is picked-up in person. We collect sales tax in states where legally required.
3. MAKING PAYMENT
(a) Immediately following the auction, you must pay the purchase price, consisting of the hammer price, plus the buyer’s premium, plus any applicable duties and sales, use, or other applicable taxes. Payment is due no later than by the end of the seventh (7th) calendar day following the date of the auction, which we refer to as the due date.
(b) We will only accept payment from the registered successful bidder. Once issued, we cannot change the buyer’s name on an invoice or reissue the invoice in a different name.
(c) You must pay for lots in US dollars in one of the following ways:
(i) Wire transfer.
(ii) Bank checks: You must make these payable to Hindman LLC, and we may impose other conditions. Once we have deposited your check, property cannot be released until five (5) business days have passed.
(iii) Personal checks: You must make these payable to Hindman LLC, and they must be drawn from US dollar accounts from a US bank. The property will not be released until the check has cleared and the funds are received by us.
(iv) Credit card: Credit card payments may not exceed $10,000 and a convenience fee of 3% will be added to each credit card payment.
(v) ACH Bank Transfer
(d) You must quote your invoice number when making a payment. All payments sent by post must be sent to Hindman LLC, 1338 West Lake Street, Chicago, IL 60607, ATTN: Client Accounting Department.
4. TRANSFERRING OWNERSHIP TO YOU
You will not own the lot and title will not pass to you until we have received full payment in good funds of the purchase price, even in circumstances where we have released the lot to you.
5. TRANSFERRING RISK TO YOU
Unless we have agreed otherwise with you, the risk in and responsibility for the lot will transfer to you from whichever is the earlier of the following: (a) when you collect the lot; or (b) the end of the thirtieth (30th) day following the date of the auction or, if earlier, the date the lot is taken into care by a third-party warehouse.
6. YOUR FAILURE TO PAY
If you fail to pay us the purchase price in full in good funds by the due date, we will be entitled to do one or more of the following (as well as enforce any other rights and remedies we have by law) at our sole discretion:
(a) We can charge interest from the due date at a rate of up to one and one-half percent (1.5%) per month on the unpaid amount due.
(b) We can cancel the sale of the lot and sell the lot again, publicly or privately, on such terms as we believe appropriate, in which case you must pay us any shortfall between the amount you owe us and the resale price, plus all costs, expenses, losses, damages, and legal fees we incur due to the cancellation.
(c) We can pay the seller the amount due to them, in which case you acknowledge and understand that we will have all the seller’s rights to pursue you for such amount.
(d) We can hold you legally responsible for the amount you owe us and bring legal proceedings against you to recover the amount owed by you, plus other losses, interest, legal fees, and costs as allowed by law.
(e) We can reveal your identity and contact details to the seller.
(f) We can reject any bids made by or on behalf of you in future auctions or require you to provide us with a deposit before accepting any bids.
(g) We can exercise all the rights and remedies of a person holding security over any property in our possession owned by you, whether by way of pledge, security interest, or in any other way as permitted by the law of the place where such property is located. You will be deemed to have granted such security to us and we may retain such property as collateral security for your obligations to us.
(h) We can take any other action we deem necessary or appropriate.
(a) You must collect purchased lots within thirty (30) days of the auction. We can assist in making shipping arrangements by suggesting art handlers, packers, transporters, or experts, but you must arrange all transport and shipping with them, and we are not responsible for their acts, failure to act, or neglect. Hindman has several salerooms throughout the country and the location of sales, or individual items may vary. It is important to check with our website and be aware of where each lot is located, for both viewing and for shipping.
(b) If you do not collect any purchased lot within thirty (30) days following the auction, we may, at our sole option, (i) charge you storage and insurance costs; (ii) move the lot to another Hindman location or to a third-party warehouse, whereupon we will charge you transport costs, insurance costs, and administration fees for doing so, and you will be subject to the third-party storage warehouse’s standard terms and responsible for paying its standard fees and costs; or (iii) sell the lot in any commercially reasonable way we think appropriate.
(c) In accordance with applicable state law, if you have paid for the lot in full but you do not collect the lot within the time specified by the law of the state where the auction takes place, we may charge you state sales tax for the lot.
(d) Nothing in this paragraph is intended to limit our rights under paragraph D(6).
(a) The shipping of a lot is affected by United States export laws or the import laws of other countries. If you are outside the United States, then local laws may prevent you from importing a lot. You alone are responsible for seeking advice prior to bidding and meeting the requirements of any law or regulation applying to the export or import of a lot.
(b) Lots made of or including (regardless of the percentage) endangered and other protected species of wildlife—such as, among other things, ivory, tortoiseshell, crocodile skin, rhinoceros horn, whalebone, certain species of coral, and Brazilian rosewood—may be subject to export controls in the US and import controls in other countries. You should check the relevant wildlife laws and regulations before bidding on any lot containing wildlife material if you plan to export the lot from the United States, import the lot into another country, or ship the lot between states. Your purchase of a lot containing endangered and other protected species of wildlife is at your own risk, and you shall be
responsible for any scientific test or other reports required for export from the United States or for shipment between states. We will not cancel your purchase and refund the purchase price if your lot may not be exported, imported, or shipped between states, or if it is seized for any reason by a government authority. It is your responsibility to determine and satisfy the requirements of any applicable laws or regulations relating to import, export, and/or interstate shipping of a lot containing endangered and other protected species of wildlife.
E. WARRANTIES
1. SELLER’S WARRANTIES
For each lot, the seller gives a warranty that the seller (a) is the owner of the lot or a joint owner of the lot acting with the permission of the other co-owners or, if the seller is not the owner or a joint owner of the lot, has the permission of the owner to sell the lot or the right to do so by law; and (b) has the right to transfer ownership of the lot to the buyer without any restrictions or claims by anyone else. If either of the above warranties are incorrect, the seller shall not have to pay more than the purchase price (as defined in paragraph D(3) above) paid by you to us. The seller will not be responsible to you for any reason for loss of profits or business, expected savings, loss of opportunity or interest, costs, damages, other damages, or expenses. The seller gives no warranty other than as set out above, and as far as the seller is allowed by law, all warranties from the seller to you, and all other obligations upon the seller that may be added to this agreement by law, are excluded. No employee or agent of Hindman is authorized to make a representation or provide other information, whether orally or in writing, that amends the seller’s warranties or creates an additional warranty on behalf of the seller with respect to a lot. Any such representation, other information, or additional warranty shall be null and void.
2.
Our limited authenticity warranty, which lasts for one (1) year from the date of a live auction or three (3) months from an online only auction, is that the lots in our sales are authentic as defined in paragraph H, below. You must notify Hindman regarding concerns of authenticity in writing within one (1) year of the date of a live auction or within three (3) months of the date of an online only auction. Following receipt of that written notification, subject to the terms below, Hindman will refund the purchase price paid by the client. The terms of this limited authenticity warranty are as follows:
(a) It will be honored for claims notified in writing within a period of one (1) year from the date of a live auction or three (3) months from an online only auction. After such time, we will not be obligated to honor the limited authenticity warranty.
(b) It is given only for information shown in UPPERCASE type in the first line of the catalogue description (the Heading). It does not apply to any information other than that in the Heading, even if it is shown in UPPERCASE type.
(c) It does not apply to any Heading or part of a Heading that is qualified.
“Qualified” means limited by a clarification in a lot’s catalogue description or by the use in a Heading of one of the terms listed in the definition of “qualified” provided in paragraph H, below. Qualified Headings are not covered at all by this limited authenticity warranty.
(d) It applies to the Heading as amended by any saleroom notice.
(e) It does not apply where scholarship has developed since the auction, leading to a change in generally accepted opinion. Further, it does not apply if the Heading either matched the generally accepted opinion of experts at the date of the auction or drew attention to any conflict of opinion.
(f) It does not apply if the lot can only be shown not to be authentic by a scientific process that, on the date we published the catalogue, was not available or generally accepted for use, was unreasonably expensive or impractical, or was likely to have damaged the lot.
(g) Its benefit is only available to the original buyer shown on the invoice for the lot, issued at the time of the sale, and only if, on the date of the notice of claim, the original buyer is the full owner of the lot and the lot is free from any claim, interest, or restriction by anyone else. The benefit of this limited authenticity warranty may not be transferred by the original buyer to anyone else.
(h) In order to make a claim under the limited authenticity warranty, you must
(i) give us written notice of your claim within one (1) year of the date of a live auction or three (3) months from an online only auction ; (ii) at our option, pay for and provide us with the written opinions of two recognized experts in the field, mutually agreed upon by you and us, confirming that the lot is not authentic (we reserve the right to obtain additional opinions at our expense); and (iii) return the lot at your expense to the saleroom from which you bought it in the condition it was in at the time of sale.
(i) Your only right under this limited authenticity warranty is to cancel the sale and receive a refund of the purchase price paid by you to us. We will not, under any circumstances, be required to pay you more than the purchase price, nor will we be liable for any loss of profits or business, loss of opportunity or value, expected savings or interest, costs, damages, other damages, or expenses.
(j) No employee or agent of Hindman is authorized to make a representation or provide additional information, whether orally or in writing, that amends the limited authenticity warranty or creates an additional warranty with respect to a lot. Any such representation, other information, or additional warranty shall be null and void.
If the lot is a book, then we give an additional warranty to the original buyer shown on the invoice for the lot issued at the time of the sale in the following circumstances:
(a) We will refund the purchase price to the original buyer if we, in our sole discretion, are convinced that the book is defective in text or illustration, subject to the following terms:
(i) This additional warranty does not apply to (A) the absence of blanks, half titles, tissue guards, or advertisements; or damage in respect of bindings, stains, spotting, marginal tears, or other defects not affecting the completeness of the text or illustration; (B) drawings, autographs, letters or manuscripts, signed photographs, music, atlases, maps, or periodicals; (C) books not identified by title; (D) lots sold without a printed estimate; (E) books that are described in the catalog as sold not subject to return; or (F) defects stated in any condition report or announced at the time of sale.
(ii) To make a claim under this additional warranty, you must give written details of the defect within twenty-one (21) days of the date of the sale and return the lot within twenty-one (21) days of the date of the sale to the saleroom at which you bought it in the same condition as at the time of sale.
(iii) Paragraphs E(2)(b), (c), (d), (e), (h), and (i) also apply to a claim under this additional warranty. (c) No employee or agent of Hindman is authorized to make a representation or provide other information, whether orally or in writing, that amends the additional warranty for books or creates an additional warranty with respect to a lot. Any such representation, other information, or additional warranty shall be null and void.
4. JEWELRY
(a) Colored gemstones (such as rubies, sapphires, and emeralds) may have been treated to improve their appearance through methods such as heating and/or various clarity enhancements. These methods are considered common by the international jewelry trade but may make a gemstone more fragile and/or cause the gemstone to require special care over time.
(b) All types of gemstones may have been improved by some method. You may request a gemological report for any item that does not have a report if the request is made to us at least three (3) weeks before the date of the auction and you pay the fee for the report.
(c) We do not obtain a gemological report for every gemstone sold in our auctions. When we do get gemological reports from internationally accepted gemological laboratories, such reports are described in the catalogue. Reports from American gemological laboratories describe any improvement or treatment to the gemstone. Reports from European gemological laboratories describe any improvement or treatment only if we request that they do so, but they do confirm when no improvement or treatment has been made. Because of differences in approach and technology, laboratories may not agree on whether a gemstone has been treated, the amount of treatment, or whether that treatment is permanent. The gemological laboratories only report on the improvements or treatments known to them at the date they make the report.
(d) For jewelry sales, estimates are based on the information in any gemological report. If no report is available, assume that the gemstones may have been treated or enhanced.
5. WATCHES AND CLOCKS
(a) Almost all clocks and watches are repaired in their lifetime and may include parts that are not original. We do not give a warranty that any individual component part of any watch is authentic. Watchbands described as “associated” are not part of the original watch and may not be authentic. Clocks may be sold without pendulums, weights, or keys.
(b) As collectors’ watches often have very fine and complex mechanisms, you are responsible for any general service, change of battery, or further repair work that may be necessary. We do not give a warranty that any watch is in good working order. Certificates are not available unless described in the catalogue. (c) Most wristwatches have been opened to find out the type and quality of movement. For that reason, wristwatches with water-resistant cases may not be waterproof, and we recommend you have them checked by a competent watchmaker before use.
(d) Many of the watches offered for sale in this catalogue are pictured with straps made of endangered or protected animal materials such as alligator or crocodile skin. When straps are shown for display purposes only and are not for sale. We may remove and retain the strap prior to shipment from the sale site. Please check with the department for details on a lot with such a strap.
6. YOUR WARRANTIES
You warrant to us and the seller that (a) the funds you use for payment are not connected with any criminal activity, including tax evasion, and neither are you under investigation, nor have you been charged with or convicted of money laundering, terrorist activities, or other crimes; (b) where you are bidding on behalf of another person, (i) you have conducted appropriate customer due diligence on the ultimate buyer(s) of the lot(s) in accordance with all applicable anti-money
laundering and sanctions laws, you consent to us relying on this due diligence, you will retain for a period of not less than five (5) years the documentation evidencing the due diligence, and you will make such documentation promptly available for immediate inspection by an independent third-party auditor upon our written request to do so; (ii) the arrangements between you and the ultimate buyer(s) in relation to the lot or otherwise do not, in whole or in part, facilitate tax crimes; (iii) you do not know, and have no reason to suspect, that the funds used for payment are connected with or the proceeds of any criminal activity, including tax evasion, or that the ultimate buyer(s) are under investigation for, or have been charged with or convicted of, money laundering, terrorist activities, or other crimes.
F. OUR LIABILITY TO YOU
(a) We give no warranty in relation to any statement made, or information given, by us or our representatives or employees about any lot other than as set out in the limited authenticity warranty or in the additional warranty for books, and as far as we are allowed by law, all warranties and other terms that may be added to this agreement by law are excluded. The seller’s warranties contained in paragraph E(1) are their own, and we do not have any liability to you in relation to those warranties.
(b) We are not responsible to you for any reason (whether for breaking this agreement or for any other matter relating to your purchase of, or bid for, any lot) other than in the event of fraud or fraudulent misrepresentation by us, or other than as expressly set out in these Conditions of Sale.
(c) WE DO NOT GIVE ANY REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY, OR GUARANTEE OR ASSUME ANY LIABILITY OF ANY KIND IN RESPECT OF ANY LOT WITH REGARD TO MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, DESCRIPTION, SIZE, QUALITY, CONDITION, ATTRIBUTION, AUTHENTICITY, RARITY, IMPORTANCE, MEDIUM, PROVENANCE, EXHIBITION HISTORY, LITERATURE, OR HISTORICAL RELEVANCE. EXCEPT AS REQUIRED BY LOCAL LAW, ANY WARRANTY OF ANY KIND IS EXCLUDED BY THIS PARAGRAPH.
(d) Our written and telephone bidding services, online bidding services, and condition reports are free services, and we are not responsible to you for any error, omission, or failure of these services.
(e) We have no responsibility to any person other than a buyer in connection with the purchase of any lot.
(f) If, despite the terms in paragraphs F(a)–(e) or E(2)–(3) above, we are found to be liable to you for any reason, we shall not have to pay more than the purchase price paid by you to us. We will not be responsible to you for any reason for loss of profits or business, loss of opportunity or value, expected savings or interest, costs, damages, or expenses.
1. OUR ABILITY TO CANCEL
In addition to the other rights of cancellation contained herein, we can cancel a sale of a lot if (i) any of your warranties in paragraph E(4) are not correct; (ii) we reasonably believe that completing the transaction is, or may be, unlawful; or (iii) we reasonably believe that the sale places us or the seller under any liability to anyone else or may damage our reputation.
2. RECORDINGS
We may videotape and/or audio record proceedings at any auction. We will keep any personal information confidential, except to the extent that disclosure is required by law. If you do not want to be videotaped, you may decide to make a telephone or written bid or bid online instead. Unless we agree otherwise in writing, you may not videotape or record proceedings at any auction.
3. COPYRIGHT
We own the copyright in all images, illustrations, and written material produced by or for us relating to a lot, including the contents of our catalogues, unless otherwise noted therein. You cannot use them without our prior written permission. We make no representation and offer no guarantee that the buyer of a lot will gain any copyright or other reproduction rights.
4. ENFORCING THIS AGREEMENT
If a court finds that any part of this agreement is invalid, illegal, or impossible to enforce, that part of the agreement will be treated as being deleted, and the rest of this agreement will not be affected.
5. TRANSFERRING YOUR RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
You may not grant a security over or transfer your rights or responsibilities under these terms unless we have given our written permission. This agreement will be binding on your successors or estate and anyone who takes over your rights and responsibilities.
6. PERSONAL INFORMATION
We will hold and process your personal information in line with our privacy policy at www.hindmanauctions.com.
7. WAIVER
No failure or delay to exercise any right or remedy contained herein shall constitute a waiver of that or any other right or remedy, nor shall it prevent or restrict the further exercise of that or any other right or remedy. No single or partial exercise of such right or remedy shall prevent or restrict the further exercise of that or any other right or remedy.
8. LAW AND DISPUTES
This agreement, and any noncontractual obligations arising out of or in connection with this agreement, or any other rights you may have relating to the purchase of a lot will be governed by the laws of Illinois. You and we agree to try to settle the dispute by mediation submitted to JAMS, or its successor, for mediation in Illinois. If the dispute is not settled by mediation within sixty (60) days from the date when mediation is initiated, then the dispute shall be submitted to JAMS, or its successor, for final and binding arbitration in accordance with its Comprehensive Arbitration Rules and Procedures or, if the dispute involves a non-US party, the JAMS International Arbitration Rules. The seat of the arbitration shall be Illinois, and the arbitration shall be conducted by one arbitrator, who shall be appointed within thirty (30) days after the initiation of the arbitration. The language used in the arbitral proceedings shall be English. The arbitrator shall order the production of documents only upon a showing that such documents are relevant and material to the outcome of the dispute. The arbitration shall be confidential, except to the extent necessary to enforce a judgment or where disclosure is required by law. The arbitration award shall be final and binding on all parties involved. Judgment upon the award may be entered by any court having jurisdiction thereof or having jurisdiction over the relevant party or its assets. This arbitration and any proceedings conducted hereunder shall be governed by Title 9 (Arbitration) of the United States Code and by the United Nations Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of June 10, 1958.
H. GLOSSARY
authentic: a genuine example, rather than a copy or forgery of (a) the work of a particular artist, author, or manufacturer, if the lot is described in the Heading as the work of that artist, author, or manufacturer; (b) a work created within a particular period or culture, if the lot is described in the Heading as a work created during that period or culture; (c) a work of a particular origin or source, if the lot is described in the Heading as being of that origin or source; or (d) in the case of gems, a work that is made of a particular material, if the lot is described in the Heading as being made of that material.
buyer’s premium: the charge the buyer pays us along with the hammer price. catalogue description: the description of a lot in the catalogue for the auction, as amended by any saleroom notice.
due date: has the meaning given to it in paragraph D(3)(a).
estimate: the price range included in the catalogue or any saleroom notice within which we believe a lot may sell. Low estimate means the lower figure in the range, and high estimate means the higher figure. The mid estimate is the midpoint between the two.
hammer price: the amount of the highest bid the auctioneer accepts for the sale of a lot.
Heading: has the meaning given to it in paragraph E(2).
limited authenticity warranty: the guarantee we give in paragraph E(2) that a lot is authentic other damages: any special, consequential, incidental, or indirect damages of any kind or any damages that fall within the meaning of “special,” “incidental,” or “consequential” under local law.
purchase price: has the meaning given to it in paragraph D(3)(a). provenance: the ownership history of a lot. qualified: has the meaning given to it in paragraph E(2), subject to the following terms:
(a) “Cast from a model by” means, in our opinion, a work from the artist’s model, originating in his circle and cast during his lifetime or shortly thereafter.
(b) “Attributed to” means, in our opinion, a work probably by the artist.
(c) “In the style of” means, in our opinion, a work of the period of the artist and closely related to his style.
(d) “Ascribed to” means, in our opinion, a work traditionally regarded as by the artist.
(e) “In the manner of” means, in our opinion, a later imitation of the period, of the style, or of the artist’s work.
(f) “After” means, in our opinion, a copy or after-cast of a work of the artist. reserve: the confidential amount below which we will not sell a lot. saleroom notice: a written notice posted next to the lot in the saleroom and on www.hindmanauctions.com, which is also read to prospective telephone bidders and provided to clients who have left commission bids, or an announcement made by the auctioneer either at the beginning of the sale or before a particular lot is auctioned.
UPPERCASE type: type having all capital letters. warranty: a statement or representation in which the person making it guarantees that the facts set out in it are correct.
Updated 8.1.23