:A rare Charles Rohlfs drop front desk on a swivel base was the
top attraction at David Rago's Craftsman Arts and Crafts Auction
Weekend this past Saturday, January 15.
The two-day sale was attended by a standing-room-only crowd that
bid actively against a huge number of absentee bidders, an even
larger mob of phone bidders, and untold numbers of Internet
bidders.
The desk, carved in 1900 and marked with a signed and numbered
Rohlfs paper label, was in exceptionally clean condition and
needed - in the words of one collector who thoroughly looked the
piece over - "no excuses."
In original finish with original green, varnished drawer
interiors and even retaining the original fabric on the desk
interior, the piece carried a presale estimate of $50/70,000.
Bidding opened to the floor at $40,000, with a bidder on the
telephone hitting the lot immediately. Robert Kaplan countered
from the side of the room and it was off to the races, with the
action never slowing until it hammered at $165,000, selling to
Kaplan, a partner in Manhattan Arts and Crafts mogul dealers
Cathers and Dembrosky.
The final price paid for the desk, including premium, was
$193,875. When asked if the desk would be seen in their booth at
The Winter Antiques, Beth Cathers commented that would not, as it
was purchased for a client.