Neo-classical parcel-gilt
and cream painted pier tables, $35,350.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Furnishings from Europe, Asia and America
appealed to a wide range of tastes at Weschler's November 9 and
10 auction, with highlights in American silver, books and
letters, Chinese export porcelain and Italian furniture.
The most hotly contested lot of the two-day sale was a pair of
Italian Neo-classical parcel-gilt and cream painted pier tables.
The late Eighteenth Century tables carried a $5/7,000 pre-sale
estimate, which was quickly surpassed as bidders on the phone and
in the room pushed the final price to $35,350.
Other continental furniture that fared well includes an Italian
baroque walnut serpentine small commode which made $4,600 against
a $2/3,000 estimate. French furniture surpassing pre-sale
estimates include four Louis XVI style needlepoint tapestry
upholstered fauteils en cabriolet; they brought $11,500 against
an expected $4/6,000.
English furniture exceeding expectations include a George III
style mahogany slant-front secretary bookcase which realized
$8,050 against a $5/7,000 estimate.
American furniture that brought higher than expected results
includes a Chippendale walnut tall chest of drawers from Chester
County, Penn., which brought $8,050 against a $3/5,000 pre-sale
estimate; a Federal mahogany serpentine bureau sideboard made
$4,140, above the $2/3,000 pre-sale estimate; and a Classical
mahogany drop-leaf breakfast table from Philadelphia realized
$3,450, more than double the pre-sale estimate.
American decorations of note include a decorated leather fire
bucket which realized $1,955 against a $500/700 pre-sale
estimate; a needlework sampler dated 1836 from Danville, Va. made
$4,140, nearly four times the pre-sale estimate. A cased carved
bone and brass-mounted painted wood model of an American frigate
sailed to $3,680, three times the pre-sale estimate.
Tiffany & Co. center bowl, $11,500.
Silver collectors had more than 120 lots to choose from;
competition was keen for a Tiffany & Co. sterling center
bowl, which brought $11,500 against a $6/8,000 pre-sale estimate.
Another popular American piece was a Daniel Van Voorhis teapot.
The circa 1780-1782 Philadelphia piece reached $8,050, more than
treble the high pre-sale estimate. A four-piece tea service by
Andrew DeMilt of New York brought a within-estimate $3,910.
English silver was highlighted by four Elizabethan-Commonwealth
spoons from the mid-Seventeenth Century which brought an
above-estimate $5,290. A delicate George III silver teapot by
Hester Bateman realized $3,220, slightly above pre-sale
estimates. An exotic Russian silver gilt tankard also sold
slightly above expectations to bring $3,220. Other metalwork was
included in a collection of religious artwork from a local
estate.
Comprising ivory and wood carvings, chalices, reliquaries and
Eucharistic articles, all of the more than 30 pieces in the
collection found buyers. Of note were two pairs of continental
gilt and painted wood putti which brought $4,370 against a
$1/1,500 estimate; an ivory group of the crucifixion which sold
for a within-estimate $2,300; and an Austrian jeweled gilt silver
chalice which sold for $2,070, nearly double the pre-sale
estimate.
A collection of autographed books and letters from the estate of
Philip Bonsal, America's last ambassador to Cuba, drew the
attention Hemingway collectors. A signed first edition of
Death in the Afternoon, inscribed by Ernest Hemingway in
red lipstick, more than doubled its high pre-sale estimate to
bring $7,475. A letter to Bonsal from Hemingway discussing the
bullfighting season in Spain was knocked down at a
within-estimate $2,990.
Chinese ewer, $4,370.
Asian porcelain made a strong showing. A Chinese underglazed blue
and enamel painted covered ewer (Daoguang mark and seal,
1821-1850) made for the Persian market realized $4,370 against a
$1/1,500 estimate. Export was particularly popular, with all but
two of the more than 30 lots finding buyers.
Of note was a Mandarin palette 33-piece assembled tea service
which more than doubled its high pre-sale estimate to bring
$2,530 and a Qianlong period (1736-1795) Mandarin palette
assembled dinner service which sold slightly above estimate at
$5,750.
Other Asian pieces that exceeded expectations were a Gandharan
grey schist figure of a standing Buddha more than doubling
pre-sale estimates to realize $8,050 and a Japanese bronze figure
of a boar bringing $2,530 against a modest $500/700 pre-sale
estimate.
Continental decorations featured two lots of Derby pictorial
cabinet plates, which sold within estimate at $1,265 and $1,495.
A Meissen "nodding pagoda" figure brought $2,300; its modest
$400/600 pre-sale estimate was due to condition problems.
A Pierre-Jules Mène bronze figure of a stag attacked by three
hounds sold within estimate at $2,760; a piece after Mène, bronze
figure of the Derby winner, brought $2,530 against a $1/1,500
estimate.