"I Mannetie," Karel Appel,
$106,825.
GREENWICH CONN. -- "Spring is springing, the war is over, things
are looking good," said an optimistic Gene Shannon prior to his
Fine American and European Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture
auction on Thursday afternoon, April 24.
Come sale time, Shannon's optimism proved infectious spilling
over into the auction room. As the first painting headed for the
podium, several of the runners were extremely busy, not getting
the paintings ready for the block, but setting up additional
seating to accommodate an enthusiastic crowd estimated to be in
excess of 300.
The auction, consisting of 230 lots, grossed an impressive $2.2
million and saw at least ten record prices at auction established
for individual artists.
"Youth," Frank Townsend Hutchens, $70,500.
While the gallery had expressed some apprehension prior to the
auction regarding the sale of its anticipated top lot, the Karel
Appel modern abstraction portrait, all was for naught as it came
off without a hitch. The piece, entitled "I Mannetje," measured
311/2 by 173/4 inches and was one of the earliest known works
from Appel's "Personages" group of paintings, a style referred to
by the gallery as "astonishingly brutal and childlike in their
expressionism." The "Personages" group of paintings established
Appel's reputation and led many to compare his work to Willem de
Kooning and Jackson Pollock.
Shannon referred to the Appel as a "seminal work from the early
50s by one of the CoBrA Groups founding members" and commented
that the painting was "extremely important historically."
Estimated at $100/150,000, the painting opened for bidding at
$55,000 and moved steadily between the room and a telephone
bidder with the lot eventually selling to a European buyer on the
phone for $106,825, including premium.
Shannon commented that the sale overall was "better than any
other sale we have had to date. Middle market paintings, say from
$5,000 to $50,000, were extremely strong." Paintings in that
bracket included a small Levi Prentice unframed oil depicting a
basket of cherries that sold well above estimates at $22,325,
while the attractive impressionistic cover lot, a Frank Townsend
Hutchens oil on canvas entitled "Youth" and depicting a young
girl with a basket of flowers, doubled estimates at $70,500,
shattering Hutchens' previous record auction price of $11,000.
A complete review will appear in a future issue.