:"An amazing auction" was how John Nye described the January 11-12
auction at Dawson & Nye where the largest number of bidders
in the company's history participated.
Collections from several sources attracted some 1,000 registered
bidders from around the United States to the two-day
standing-room-only event that offered something for every taste.
Two exceptional collections, that of George H. Morris, Chef
d'Equipe of the US Show Jumping Team, and Cape Cod dealer Gloria
Swanson, attracted strong attention. Other smaller collections
rounded out the 1,300-lot sale.
A selection of fine jewelry from a consignor identified by John
Nye as "a woman with a loving husband" and who had decided to
sell the jewels she was not using included the high lot of the
event. It was a Cartier diamond cluster ring comprising a round
diamond and 20 marquise diamonds of various weights that sold for
$17,700.
A bee-form pin by Buccellati in emeralds, diamonds and enamel and
18K gold brought $12,980. It was described in the catalog as "of
impressive size." An 18K gold "Florida" pin with coral and 14
diamonds, by Van Cleef & Arpels, realized $7,080.
An 18K gold ring with an 8.30-carat topaz, also by Buccellati,
sold for $8,260. The jewelry from a single collection realized
about $60,000 in four minutes, Nye said.
An unsigned American School portrait of a woman in a green dress
estimated at $1,5/3,000 that sold for $14,160 proved to be the
second highest grossing lot. The picture came from one private
collector and sold to another.
Ship paintings also proved popular: an oil on canvas portrait of
a ship under full sail in a rough sea was signed "R Hopkin" sold
for $3,835. A brass plaque revealed that the artist was Michigan
painter Robert B. Hopkin. A watercolor of the extreme clipper
Golden West entering New York Harbor was signed "J T
Dodge" and sold for $3,540 while a watercolor of the American
ship Edwina in a parcel-gilt and eglomise frame brought
$4,425.
The New York mahogany games table was thought to have been made
by Duncan Phyfe or a contemporary and sold for $10,030.
An unsigned portrait of Benjamin Franklin drew $3,540. A
vibrant abstract watercolor by Twentieth Century African American
artist Bradford Delaney was signed and sold for $3,245.
An oil on canvas view of two terriers signed "G. Armfield"
realized $2,950. George Armfield Smith was a Nineteenth Century
English painter of sporting subjects and he was known throughout
much of his life as George Armfield.
Two portraits signed by Benjamin Ferris Gilman crossed the block:
a woman with a corsage of yellow roses dated 1894 sold for $2,124
and an 1893 portrait of a boy holding a violin went for $2,006.
It was unsigned and unframed, but an oil on canvas view of a
woodsman smoking a pipe and his dog sold for $1,888. An oil on
canvas of the New York skyline made from the New Jersey Palisades
signed "Ruth Moore Williams" sold for $1,534.
Two signed Louise Nevelson drawings in black ink came from the
family of the artist. The first, an image of a seated woman
wearing a blouse drew $354 and the second, a woman in a dress
seated on a sofa was $560.
The leader of the interesting furniture across the block was a
late New York Federal mahogany games table thought to have been
made by Duncan Phyfe or a contemporary, which sold for $10,030.
The vibrant figured mahogany table had a swivel top with brass
inlay and a baize lined playing surface.
A pair of Federal inlaid and figured mahogany Pembroke tables
made in New York or New England with John Walton provenance
fetched $9,440. Each table was fitted with a false and operable
drawer.
A Federal-style inlaid mahogany breakfront secretary in the Salem
tradition bore the label "Hathaway's Furniture. Rugs.
Decorations. New York" and sold for $6,490.
A pretty Federal inlaid cherry wood candlestand made by a worker
of the Connecticut River Valley school of Eliphalet Chapin sold
for $1,298.
English furniture was consistently strong. An English Regency
cellarette in figured mahogany realized $4,425 and a caned
mahogany bergere drew $2,360.
An English provincial beechwood blanket chest had some interest
and brought $1,298 and a Jacobean carved miniature beechwood
blanket chest was $1,534, despite some losses and restoration. A
Jacobean figured oak one-drawer table realized $885 and a
Jacobean oak chest of drawers was $1,888.

An English mahogany cellarette from the Morris collection had a
divided interior and sold for $4,425.
One Georgian carved and figured oak Welsh dresser sold for
$2,950 while another similar one was $1,888.
A good-looking George III mahogany campaign map box with brass
mounts and fitted on a later stand was $2,655 and a George III
mahogany tray of a turned scissor-form stand was $1,652.
A two-part English oak corner cupboard with rosewood crossbanding
and blind doors sold for $1,770 and a George III Japanned and
faux tortoiseshell hanging corner cupboard was $1,003. A George
II pine chest of drawers with a dressing slide sold for $826.
Two English William and Mary oak gate leg dining tables on offer
brought $1,003 and $708, while a set of six Cromwellian-style
turned beechwood back stools with needlework upholstery was
$2,655.
A Charles II joint stool in turned oak brought $649 and a group
of English and American turned oak and maple joint stools fetched
$767.
Two mahogany microscopes and a "Simpli-trol" portable
electrocardiograph device sold for $1,180. Each retained the
original box. The Simpli-trol is considered the first portable
electrocardiograph instrument.
An embroidered silkwork picture of an eagle above two American
flags with a centered shield went to $4,140. A Masonic silk apron
was imprinted from an engraved plate with the inscription "The
Master's Carpet Compleat" and the identification "T. Kensett,
Cheshire. Connect." It sold for $2,006.
Staffordshire ware from the collection of Cape Cod dealer Gloria
Swanson appealed to collectors from all over.
A blue and white transfer ware pierced drain insert with a camel
and palace decoration with a pitcher in a similar pattern and a
blue and brown pitcher decorated with urns was $501. A blue and
white stoneware platter in the "Regina" pattern with a transfer
ware divided platter and four other bowls sold for $708.
Three green and white transfer ware serving pieces including a
Minton covered and footed vegetable dish, a covered vegetable
dish and underplate and a footed compote went for $826.
A Staffordshire blue and white floral coffeepot with a beehive
finial, along with two teapots, a covered sugar and a creamer in
various patterns sold for $796.
Brown transfer ware was deemed choice: a platter in the Tyrolean
pattern, along with two water pitchers, a teapot and covered
sugar bowl, a covered sauce tureen and two sauce boats drew
$1,534. Four brown transfer ware covered serving pieces brought
$944.
A Flow Blue soup tureen realized $2,124 as did an oval platter
with the printed image of Christianburg made by Enoch Wood &
Son.
Some 44 lots of millefiore glass from a New Jersey collection
drew interest also. Four millefiore vases sold for $767 and a
12-inch pair of millefiore candleholders with gilt decoration was
$472. A lot of five millefiore vases went for $649. A two-piece
parlor lamp with a mushroom-form shade and a baluster-form stem
reached $442.
A group of six millefiore table articles comprising two toothpick
holders, small bowl with a frosted handle, a pitcher with a
frosted handle and a wine glass drew $236 and a lot of seven
toothpick holders was $147.
A diverse selection of lighting included a Hampshire pottery
table lamp with a leaded glass shade decorated with stylized lily
pads and dogwood blossoms that was $4,130. A silvered metal solar
fluid lamp that was stamped "Patented by J.G. Webb, NY Oct. 14,
1851" sold for $2,655 and a pair of gilt metal and molded glass
girandole fluid lamps on marble bases sold for $295.

A nicely executed watercolor of the extreme clipper Golden West
entering New York Harbor was signed "J T Dodge" and sold for
$3,540.
Style trumped substance, however, when a neoclassical-style
gilt metal six-light gas chandelier was missing some globes and
sold for $6,785 and a neoclassical-style gilt metal six-light solar
chandelier fetched $5,310.
The 1883 catalog of the New York Etching Club that included
etchings by William Merritt Chase, Frederic E. Church, Robert
Swain Gifford and others, along with the 1855 partial book,
The Ferns of Great Britain and Ireland, by Thomas Moore,
sold for $3,450.
A selection of Nineteenth Century books by Sir Walter Scott
realized $1,652 and the 20-volume History of the Consulate and
the Empire of France under Napoleon I by M.A. Thiers was
$885.
Equestrian articles from the Morris collection attracted wide
interest. Morris, whom John Nye described as the '"the Derek
Jeter' of show jumping" has an interesting collection and a very
good eye.
Jeter aside, Morris has amassed a grand selection of trophies,
decorative items and furniture at his New Jersey farm that he is
selling. Over the course of his impressive coaching and riding
career he acquired such items as a leather-bound demilune trunk
decorated with a hunt scene was deemed highly desirable and
reached $6,490.
A 30-inch cast bronze figure of a horse and rider on a green
marble base stamped "I Bonheur" was $1,770. A four-panel screen
decorated with equestrian scenes was $1,003.
A 61/2-inch brass top hat that was engraved to commemorate the
1984 Almaden Vineyards Grand Prix went for $1,062 while a
Baccarat figure of a horse taking a jump went for $1,180.
Horse show posters also commanded attention. Two posters for the
National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden, one advertising the
100th year (1983) and the other for the 105th year sold for
$1,888. Two posters by Michel Paraskevus advertising the 1988
Winter Equestrian Festival in Palm Beach and Tampa, Fla., and the
1989 Volvo World Cup at Tampa drew $1,416 as did a lot of five
posters advertising jumping shows in Europe between 1981 and
1985.
Antiques from the Morris collection included an 11-by-9-foot
Oushak carpet that was described as "distressed" but realized
$8,850.
A Colorado collection of pen and ink drawings for Puck
magazine was broken into nearly 40 lots, each of which brought
prices ranging from $413 for several drawings by F. M. Hutchings
to $354 for four pen and ink drawings by Samuel D. Ehrhart.
All prices quoted reflect the 15 percent buyer's premium. For
information, www.dawsonandnye.com or 973-984-6900.