Date: Fri 05-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 05-Feb-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Caddigan
Full Text:
Concord Tall Clock Strikes $35,000 At Caddigan
(with 5 cuts)
DEDHAM, MASS. -- The Holiday Inn was the site for Caddigan Auctioneers annual
Martin Luther King Holiday sale, conducted January 18. A preview and
inspection, held Sunday night, drew a steady flow of dealers and collectors; a
crowd of approximately 500 attended Monday morning's event.
In the audience 286 bidders hailed from all over the US and each of the New
England states. A wealth of telephone and absentee bidders also participated,
competing for 500 lots of American and Continental antiques and decorative
arts from the Eighteenth through early Twentieth Century.
Highlighting the auction was a Federal mahogany tall case clock by Joseph
Mulliken, one of the earliest and finest clock makers in Concord, Mass.
Despite some damage to the bracket feet and some splitting and veneer loss to
the lower case, the Eighteenth Century example remained in an untouched and
restorable state of preservation and yielded $35,000.
Caddigan acquired the clock while on a routine house call less than one mile
from the firm's home offices in Hanover, Mass. The firm was originally called
to price a custom mahogany dining room suite.
After several weeks of private inspections by major American dealers and
institutions, the clock received an opening bid of $8,000 on sale day, setting
the pace as floor bidders battled in $1,000 increments to its final price. The
piece was purchased by West Townsend, Mass. clock dealer John Delaney.
Many ornate pieces from the collection of the late Marion Drake of Scituate,
Mass. were featured including a fine antique Kermin carpet measuring 11 by 16
feet. This large example had, unfortunately, eight inches of its borders
removed at some time, keeping its price moderate, just surpassing its high
estimate of $12,000, having been purchased by a New York City merchant for
$13,750. The same buyer claimed a room-size Twentieth Century Sarouk for
$4,290.
Also from the Drake's estate, a Nineteenth Century English portrait of a young
man was claimed for $3,300 by a Boston dealer. Other works included a pair of
whimsical Art Nouveau oil paintings by Boston artist Gregory Gifford, which
rang up $1,210, selling to an Atlanta, Ga. area gallery. An early Tibetan oil
on canvas depicting a Kali also sold well, realizing $2,090, purchased by a
telephone bidder from New York City.
American furniture included a pair of Eighteenth Century carved cherry
Chippendale side chairs, with finger carved crests, pierce cut-out splats
having elongated heart cut outs and slip seats, which commanded $3,300 for the
pair. A Centennial Hepplewhite bow front chest, with cross-banded and paneled
drawers, drew a winning bid of $2,200, selling to an astute floor bidder from
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. A custom mahogany highboy made in the Philadelphia style
rang up $3,960, and a set of six late Sheraton fancy chairs, made of
bird's-eye maple, realized $1,650.
Other offerings included a paint-decorated Nineteenth Century tricycle, which
sold to a New Hampshire dealer for $1,870; a tin wind-up toy "Jazzbo Jim" the
dancer on the roof, which rang up $880; a Paris porcelain dinner service for
12, which sold for $2,640; an electrified Argand lamp by Johnston & Brooks of
London, which reached $1,595; a Fitzhugh export platter, which garnered
$2,310; and a ladies 18 karat yellow gold by-pass style diamond ring with a
European cut 1.10 carat stone, which realized $3,025.
For information, 781/826-8648.