Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Charlton
Full Text:
Charlton Hall Yields Philadelphia Chest
w/4cuts
By Rita Easton
COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Following a five-day pre-auction exhibit, 770 lots of
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century American, English, and Continental
furniture, paintings and decorative arts were offered September 26 and 27 by
Charlton Hall Galleries, Inc.
Two hundred twenty-seven registered buyers were present, in addition to 80 on
the phones and absentees. Headlining the event was a circa 1770 Philadelphia
walnut tall chest of three-over-two-over-four drawers, measuring 62« inches
high by 42¬ inches wide by 23⹠inches deep, having replaced brasses. It sold
at $20,000. The lot went to the trade.
A rosewood armchair, upholstered in salmon damask, with deeply tufted oval
back surrounded by a heavily carved pierced frame, in the style of Meeks,
circa 1855, estimated at $2,5/3,500, brought $4,000 from a California
collector.
David Acheson Woodward's (American, 1823-1909) full-length portrait of a
Confederate officer, oil on canvas measuring 48« inches high by 32« inches
wide, signed and dated, reached $5,250, and a long horizontal matte with four
oval openings surrounding four miniature pencil on paper drawings of members
of the Skottowe family of South Carolina, monogrammed "C.V.L." and dated 1780,
late Eighteenth Century British school, fetched $4,000, going to a South
Carolina State Museum.
A Continental bronze figural group, Nineteenth Century, standing 21« inches
high, depicting a nude figure of a Mideast Indian about to slay a tiger, made
$2,900; and one of the most amusing oils to be offered was passed, an Allen
Tucker (American, 1866-1939), "Jule," signed and dated, depicting a scene in a
dental office, a large shepherd-like dog sitting in the dental chair, and a
small boy looking into his mouth with a dental mirror.
An Irish Chippendale mahogany stool, late Eighteenth Century, upholstered in
mint green damask, standing 18 inches high, which generated many inquiries,
was purchased at $2,700; a three-inch-long platinum amethyst and diamond bar
pin reached $3,100; an English hand-chased silverplated urn, circa 1895,
standing 20 inches high, achieved $2,200; a local private buyer went home with
an American lyre back chair (est $800/1,200) for $5,000; an oil on canvas
after John Frederick Herring, Jr, of animals in a barnyard fetched $3,600; an
oil on canvas by American Impressionist artist Alberta Rehm Schultz (est
$1/1,500) realized $3,000; and an oil on board by Elisee Maclet went under the
money at $1,900, most likely due to the subject, a floral still life. The
artist is best known for his Paris street scenes.
A Chinese export tilt-top table, circa 1860 (est $3/5,000), brought $7,500; a
set of six Irish Chippendale chairs in excellent condition sold at $7,000; a
Persian Serapi, 8'10" by 11'10", reached $8,000; an Oriental hardwood and
mother-of-pearl opium bed, with marble inserts, garnered $1,000; an American
cherry Pennsylvania cupboard, circa 1830 (est $1,5/2,000), with glass
mullioned doors above raised panel cupboard doors, went privately at $3,400; a
mahogany Chippendale secretary bookcase, Nineteenth Century, achieved $7,500.
The daughter of famed actor Leslie Howard consigned a George III mahogany
bookcase, which went within estimate at $4,200; a Fried Pal
(Hungarian-American, 1893-1976) oil on canvas, a portrait of a ballerina (est
$1/1,500), brought $2,300; an English red lacquered secretary bookcase, late
Nineteenth Century, realized $6,250; a Rose Medallion porcelain urn in an
unusual shape brought $1,550; and two Nantucket nesting lightship baskets went
out at $1,300.
Prices quoted do not reflect a required 12 percent buyer's premium