Date: Fri 15-Jan-1999
Date: Fri 15-Jan-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Burchard-Easton
Full Text:
Auction Mania At Burchard
By Rita Easton
ST PETERSBURG, FLA. - Burchard Galleries held an "Auction Mania" event in two
sessions on November 21 and 22. The first session featured dolls, toys, banks,
radios, and related items, while the second day offered estate, antiques, and
investment art.
A preview was held prior to each session. The capacity crowd on the floor was
in sharp competition with phone bidders.
Art was the driving force of the sale, with a 26-piece serigraph suite
entitled "The Alphabet Suite" by Erte (de Tirtoff, Romain-Russian/French,
1892-1990), garnering the top bid of $12,000.
A phone bid from France won the next highest lot, an oil on canvas, believed
to be School of Van Dyck, at $7,500. The subject was a portrait of Queen
Isabella in an interior, done in the Eighteenth Century, inscribed "Herr
Florscheim" and "Einlargen" written in chalk, circa 1938/1946 verso.
Prior to the most recent owner, artist Frances Norris Streit of Long Island,
in 1938, the painting belonged to the Florscheim family in Munich. It was
believed to have been confiscated by Nazi party official Gerom late that year
for the Bavarian National Museum under the direction of Nazi art adviser
Professor Loehr, and returned to the Florscheim family circa 1946 by the
Office of Military Government Reparations. The lot fell within estimate.
A French School theater scene "The Theatre Box," unsigned, with an "A.
Dellafosse, Paris" canvas stamp verso (est $8/12,000), went for $4,800; an oil
on canvas by Eliza Barchus fetched $4,000; an Arthur Woelfle oil on canvas
realized $3,500; and a Cirilo Martinez-Novillo oil on canvas garnered $3,250.
A Nineteenth Century marble grouping after Canova's "The Three Graces," having
fine detail, 23 inches high, signed illegibly on the base (possibly "O.
Pucci"), brought $2,750; an oil on canvas by Francis Streit (American,
1918-1997), depicting a seated boxer, signed verso, achieved $2,200.
"Circulation," an oil on cardboard with acrylic/steel reinforced synthetic
paper, monogrammed verso by Mark Kostabi (American, b 1960), rang up $1,200;
and a Venetian School oil on canvas of Madonna and Child, with no visible
signature, in a magnificent eight-inch gilt frame, reached its low estimate of
$2,000.
Period furniture reached a high bid of $3,500 for an early German inlaid
vanity; a Victorian three-piece walnut bedroom suite went out at $3,250; an
antique nine- by 12-foot Bidjar sold at $2,500; a Herman Miller large chest of
drawers reached $1,650; and two more Miller pieces brought $750 for a small
chest and $700 for a desk.
Jewelry commanded $5,000 for an emerald and diamond necklace (9.07 carats of
emerald, 15.08 carats of diamond) and a .93 carat diamond ring finished at
$2,250.
Prices quoted do not reflect a 13 percent buyer's premium (ten percent for
payment by cash or check).