Date: Fri 25-Jun-1999
Date: Fri 25-Jun-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: SARAH
Quick Words:
Rousseau-Doyle
Full Text:
Rousseau View At Doyle
(with 4 cuts)
NEW YORK CITY -- William Doyle Galleries' auction of European and American
paintings and Sculpture on Wednesday, May 26, featured a selection of European
and American artists, including an array of Nineteenth Century European
Orientalist works, traditional landscapes, genre scenes, sporting art and
Impressionist canvases.
Theodore Rousseau's (1812-1867) "Les Marais" was the top seller of the day.
After being in a private collection in the Midwest for almost 80 years, the
country landscape, featuring a sweeping view of farmland with cows coming to
drink at the water's edge, achieved $82,250 from a New York buyer.
Another pair of works by Rousseau, "Sous Bois" more than doubled the pre-sale
estimate at $11,500. Another Barbizon painter, Emile van Marcke de Lummen, was
represented by a (1827-1890) vignette of "Cows Resting in a Stream," which
brought $10,350 from a Georgia bidder.
Orientalist works also fared well, with spirited bidding sending prices over
estimate on several items. Competitive bidding sent American expatriate
Frederic Arthur Bridgman's (1847-1928) exotically attired "Reclining Woman"
over estimate to a final sale price of $36,800 from a California buyer.
Italian artist Antonio Rivas' (b. 1840) colorful "Harem Scene" also went over
estimate, yielding $18,400.
Landscapes were especially attractive to bidders among the strong showing of
works by American artists. Early Hudson River School artist William Guy Wall's
(1792-circa 1864) "View of the Hudson Near West Point" featuring a placid view
of the Hudson River from a wooded bank achieved $19,550. A Florida bidder
picked up the snow-capped winter scene "Storm Clearing, Winter" by George
Henry Durrie (1820-1863) for $18,400.
There was much interest in Herman Herzog's (1832-1932) "Leading the Way,"
depicting a woman leading her cow down a country lane. This country landscape
more than tripled the pre-sale estimate at $10,350 from a Florida buyer.
Roswell Morse Shurtleff's (1838-1915) tranquil "Adirondack landscape with
Black Bear" brought $12,075; a watercolor of canoes on the water's edge, "Rest
by the Lake," by Alfred T. Bricher also more than doubled the pre-sale
estimate at $18,400; Albert Bierstadt's "Study of a Forest Interior,"
displaying a fiery autumn landscape, sold for $16,100; and heated bidding over
"Schooners in Rough Seas," a stormy seascape by James Edward Buttersworth
(1817-1894), brought the final sale price to $34,500.
Genre scenes were also represented. "Baby's Sleeping" by Leon Caille
(1836-1907) doubled the pre-sale estimate at $14,950 from a British buyer.
Nineteenth Century Turkish artist Sarkis Diranian's soft portrayal of "Women
in a Field of Poppies" achieved $9,200 from a New York bidder.
A scene of a woman feeding birds, "He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not," by Adriano
Cecchi, (1850-1936), went for $18,400, tripling the pre-sale estimate. James
Charles (1851-1906) "In the Orchard," a portrait of a young boy resting and
enjoying the fruits of his labor saw fierce bidding, bringing the final price
up to $15,525.
Several sculptural works also found buyers. A rendering of "Pocahontas" in
white marble, by Joseph Mozier (1812-1890), focusing on the religious future
the heroine would encounter in her life in England, yielded $39,100 from a new
York bidder. Bessie Potter Vonnoh's (1872-1955) "Enthroned," a portrait of a
mother with her children gathered around her, sold for $24,150.
For information, 212/427-4141, extension 238.