Date: Fri 28-May-1999
Date: Fri 28-May-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: LIZAM
Quick Words:
Ruggles-Ayers-Jackman
Full Text:
REVISED: Ruggles Auction Tops One Million
(with 24 cuts)
By Bob Jackman
BROOKFIELD, MASS. -- On May 1 and 2, David Ruggles Ayers of New England
Auctions offered the estate of Carrie and Ray Ruggles of Brookfield,
regionally prominent dealers who, over six decades, amassed a fine personal
collection. Strengths of their assemblage included tiger maple furniture and
smalls, Windsor chairs, Sandwich glass and Bennington Rockingham glazed
pottery.
Of the 600 people attending the event, more than 100 traveled from outside New
England. Total sales were $1.34 million, with all 1,070 lots finding buyers.
Ayers is Carrie Ruggles' grandson. Ruggles was matriarch of the family and its
antiques business, for which Carrie's son Ray worked full time. In addition,
Ray was an expert on glass.
The Ruggles Family Business
Ayers also grew up working in the business. At the age of eight, he became a
runner for local auctioneer Gordon Reid (the same Gordon Reid who founded the
first Brimfield Flea Market). Ayers has been conducting auctions since 1979,
and he now hosts six to eight estate events per year. His sales first
attracted national attention four years ago, when he offered the Frank Decker
estate.
"It's been a rough stretch," he admitted. "We lost Carrie in March and Ray in
October. Now we have all this to take care of. We each depended upon each
other, and now they're gone.
"[The auction] was a fun ordeal," he continued. "Bittersweet. Something I
hated to do and loved to do at the same time."
Ware, Mass. dealer Donna Lotuff recalled, "At 97, Carrie was still a
whirlwind. She remained active, running her business and doing shows up until
the last couple months. People half her age couldn't keep up with her."
The Ruggles collection included about 80 objects fashioned from highly
contrasting, tightly banded maple. In New England that wood is called tiger
maple, but since the Renaissance it has been internationally known as curly
maple. Violin makers in Baroque Venice imported it from Bosnia. In New England
an ample natural supply has been widely used by local cabinetmakers and
turners.
Tiger Maple Leads
At $58,650, the lead tiger maple lot was a Rhode Island tall chest won by
Wilmington, Del. dealer Ed Hinton, establishing, it is believed, a record for
a tiger maple tall chest with a clear surface. (The overall record for any
tall chest was set three years ago by Wayne Pratt when he paid $115,000 for a
Dunlap tall chest in salmon paint.)
After buying his chest, Hinton commented, "I've been after it for 20 years.
The consensus is that it was made in Providence. I was prepared to go to
$60,000 plus the premium [$69,000]. My wife told me: `Don't come home without
that chest.'"
Another highly successful tiger maple lot was a country Chippendale slant-lid
desk with a simple interior that sold for $24,150. Despite an old dark
surface, the strong figure of the wood showed clearly. The drawer fronts had
strong diagonal figure, and the sides had horizontal banning with a mild arch.
It sat on shaped ogee feet.
A tiger maple four-drawer chest sold for $16,675 to Arthur Liverant. The piece
had been refinished long ago, and the second varnish was aging with an
attractive reddish tint. The chest's wood was extraordinary. Beyond being
highly figured with narrow banning, it was consistently figured for its full
length and width. The cabinetmaker aligned all elements of the front with the
bans running vertically. The side boards had horizontal banning. He also won
some of the better Sandwich glass lots.
The most active Ruggles descendant buying at the auction was grandson Robert
K. Ruggles III, who is a partner in Price Waterhouse Coopers.
"We all love antiques. My grandmother really loved tiger maple, and I
developed that same love. I went after the better examples in tiger maple. I
won a number of them, but I also lost some."
Family Relics
While the Ruggles family conducted routine business in the barn, more complex
and costly transactions were negotiated in the kitchen or on the porch. The
focus point of those kitchen conferences was a 39-inch oval pine top table
with a Sheraton tiger maple base.
"That was where we did our planning," Ayers reminisced, "and a lot of deals
were completed there. I'd love to have a recording of all the deals made over
that table."
During the preview, various friends commented that the family relic should
remain in the family. Bidding was between Bob Ruggles and Ayers, and David won
the table for $6,900.
A number of bidders had personal associations with Carrie, Bob or Ray Ruggles.
For example, a few decades ago a high school student and part-time picker
named Wayne Pratt drove up to the shop with a pair of Windsor chairs painted
in red and yellow. At the time he was delighted to sell them $850. At the
auction he reacquired them for $20,700.
"I dealt with Carrie since I was 12 years old," Pratt recalled. "I knew Carrie
and Ray well, and they were great dealers. We last spoke at great length a
couple years ago in New Hampshire."
A Windsor Record?
The Ruggles' collection of Windsor chairs had been extensively studied by
Nancy Evans for her book on American Windsors. The lead Windsor was a sack
back armchair in green paint with one replaced spindle, which dealer
Marguerite Riordan won for $36,800.
"I think that was a record," Pratt later commented. "I sold it to Carrie in
the early 1970s for $1,500."
Windsors by famous makers included a D. Danforth fanback, which sold for
$20,125, and an E. Tracy braced bow back, which rang up $9,488.
There were also the heartbreaks. In the early years of the Ruggles business, a
prized possession was a Chippendale bonnet-top chest on chest with an old nut
brown surface. When money got tight, they sold the chest to a collector.
After a couple decades, the buyers were downsizing, and they sold the chest
back to Carrie. In the interim, however, the collectors had had the chest
stripped and refinished. Fifty years later, it retains a honey maple color. At
auction the lot brought $28,750, about $100,000 less than its value in grungy
nut brown.
A surprisingly high number of furniture lots had damaged surfaces, and a large
contingent of restorers attended the auction. Sandy Doig of Somers, Conn., was
perhaps the most aggressive bidder among that group, and won a flat-top Queen
Anne highboy for $13,225 in good condition, along with half a dozen other
damaged lots. Most damaged pieces either went to restorers or to Bob Ruggles
III.
Connecticut dealer Arthur Liverant purchased a distinct tilt-top candlestand
with strong tiger maple figure.
"It has great shapely legs," quipped Liverant, "and I'm a legs man. It has
great toes, and I love toes."
Sandwich Glass
Approximately 443 glass lots included about 240 lots of Sandwich glass, and 80
lots in the "Ashburton" pattern made by Sandwich and other manufacturers. One
major Sandwich glass collector from beyond New England purchased five lots
bidding by phone. Those included a rare amethyst open fruit basket for
$20,700, two cobalt blue tulip vases for $5,520 and $5,175, and two amethyst
tulip vases for $2,875 and $2,530. Collector Jim Carusello won 18 lots with a
tab of $36,000.
Many people opined that the single-owner estate auction was a smart move, one
which produced higher prices than the same merchandise would have brought if
sold anonymously at multiple auctions.
Pottery
Rockingham glazed Bennington pottery had a strong day. The auction featured
about 100 lots variously cataloged as signed Bennington, Rockingham glazed
Bennington, and Rockingham glazed pottery. The signed Bennington works brought
strong prices, and the Rockingham glazed pieces thought to be English
appropriately sold for shorter money.
Two couples seated near each other contested most of the major Bennington
lots. At times these couples from Michigan and Vermont appeared to exchange a
few spirited words that fed competitive fires.
Bennington collector Cindy Motta enjoyed watching the competition, and
eventually her persistence was rewarded. "Overall the prices make me think
there is a resurgence in Rockingham Bennington," she predicted.
Highlights of the Bennington field included a rare astral lamp with a
Bennington stem and base which sold for $5,060; a huge, ten-inch-tall book
flask which brought $6,325; a candle dish, which reached $4,600; a green
glazed, Ben Franklin six-inch-tall pitcher, which garnered $4,255; a restored
poodle which fetched $3,565; and a pair of relishes which realized $2,530.
An Atmosphere Of Goodwill
The huge outpouring of goodwill and support demonstrated by the trade during
the several weeks surrounding this auction bears testament to the many
friends, supporters and colleagues David Ayers has in the antiques community.
"I know I'll succeed," Ayers said. "[My family] taught me well, and I have a
lot of friends in this business. It will be lonelier, but I'm sure things will
work out."
Prices quoted include a fifteen percent buyer's premium.