Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Pook&Pook
Full Text:
Pook And Pook Auction
(W/Cuts) - EWM
By J.M.W. Fletcher
LUDWIGS CORNER, PENN. -- Pook & Pook, Inc, held its Spring Antiques Auction at
the local fire company's Griffith Hall on Saturday, April 11.
The event started at 10 am to a standing-room-only crowd of 500 registered
bidders.
Auctioneer James Gibson had a full plate of more than 510 lots of period
Continental and American furniture, silver, frakturs, hand-woven rugs and
accessories to move across the block by the end of the one-day sale; needless
to say, having one of the illustrated catalogues as a bidding guide was a
must.
Of more than 70 lots of paintings and watercolors by some 45 artists, a marine
summer seascape set the record for the artist John P. Benson (1865-1942).
Gibson opened bidding for the signed and dated 29 by 85 inch oil on canvas, in
need of minor restoration, at $6,000 (est $2/3,000), and continued in
increments of $500 and then $1,000. At a bid of $16,000, the Benson sold to a
persistent out-of-state dealer on the floor, despite heavy phone competition.
In their original Newcomb-Macklin frames, three small (18 by 14 inch) oil on
board and Masonite works by Walter Farndon (1876-1964) sold. Two fetched
$3,500 and one, $4,500. A relined marine oil on canvas of a ship by Clement
Drew (1806-1889) sold within its estimate at $3,300. Attributed to William L.
Lathrop, a 20 by 24 inch oil on Masonite sold to a phone bidder at its high
estimate of $1,800. A fine Jacob Maentel (1763-1863) portrait of a lady, a
watercolor on paper, sold just below its high estimate of $3,800.
Depicted on the front cover of the catalogue, a silk on linen needlework
sampler wrought by "Sarah Ann Shemella born July 27, 1804" sold at $13,000
(est $8/10,000). Signed "Margret Jane Taylors work" and detailing a colonial
home, an American silk on linen needlework sampler, circa 1820, made $3,200
(est $2/2,500).
The back cover of the catalogue featured an ornately carved, two-part French
neo-Renaissance cabinet, inscribed "Commerce 1878 fini 1882. rue Oudinot,
Paris, Boyer." Its carved double sarcophagus lift lid lay over two paneled
doors, each with three painted panels, all enclosing a velvet lined interior
with hidden compartments. With a conservative high estimate of $15,000, this
unusual piece climbed to a respectable $21,000.
Included in the large variety of collectibles were more than a dozen lots of
American Indian artifacts. Twined and coiled baskets by Papago, Apache, Pima,
Iroquois and Southern tribes brought active bids from the phones and the
floor. One large coiled California Mission basket, circa 1900, sold at $2,000.
A fine Nex Perce corn husk bag, early Twentieth Century, made its low estimate
of $1,200.
An interesting, large group of more than 40 lots of miniature furniture was
actively sought after, and included a diminutive Hepplewhite style inlaid tall
chest with four graduated drawers, which sold to the floor over two phone
lines at $7,000 (est $5/6,000). A miniature American mahogany and maple
blanket chest, in the form of an Empire sideboard, circa 1830, made $2,000
(est $700/900).
A featured Connecticut shallow long-drawer cherry tray-top tea table, circa
1750 (ex-collection Electra Webb Bostwick), went off at its low estimate of
$25,000. Several lots of other Eighteenth Century New England furniture
surpassed their auction estimates: exceeding its high estimate of $6,000, a
Rhode Island Queen Anne mahogany corner chair, circa 1765, made a strong
$9,250. A diminutive Queen Anne highboy in birch, circa 1760, sold well at
$12,000 (est $8/10,000).
Among several tallcase clocks in the sale, a Scottish Wm. Young Dundee
eight-day mahogany inlaid case went to $4,000 (est $2,4/2,800).
Prices quoted do not include a 10 percent premium.
Pook & Pook, Inc's next auction on June 26-27 will feature many items from the
New York estate of Robert Ripley.