:Paintings were the story at Kaminski Auctioneers' recent sale
where William Bradford's "Arctic Sunset" sold for $471,500. The
picture, which was signed and dated 1870, came from the Boston
area and went to a Northeast collector. Auctioneer Frank Kaminski
said the picture was black when he first saw it, but a careful
cleaning restored its brilliance.
"Misty Moonlight," an early Twentieth Century oil on panel by the
New Bedford born artist Albert Pinkham Ryder, sold for $120,750.
The picture has an extensive exhibit history and since 1981 has
been in the collection of John Whitaker Hollister of San Diego
who consigned it. The picture sold to a New York collector.
A desert landscape with mountains by Utah artist, John Hafen who
was born in Switzerland, drew a record $29,900. The canvas was
dedicated to Cyrus Dallin whose Arlington, Mass., address is on
the back and with whom Hafen studied. Four phone bidders from
Utah chased the picture until one was successful.
The Albert Pinkham Ryder oil on panel, "Misty Moonlight," sold
for $120,750. It came from a California collection.
William Sherman Potts' estimable "Portrait of a Young Woman
Wearing a Black Hat and Holding a Fan" was very desirable and
elicited yet another record when it sold for $25,150.
A William Lester Stevens Gloucester Harbor scene with fishing
boats was of interest and brought what may also be a record
$21,275.
It had some tears and craquelure and needed cleaning, but the
1889 "La Fille du Peche" by the Boston-born Francis Henry
Richardson attracted strong interest and sold for a record
$20,700 against its estimated $4/6,000. The picture was also
titled "Net Mender, Brittany" and was painted during the time
Richardson was active in the Paris Salon. The picture sold to an
agent bidding for the Richardson family.
An abstract in black, blue and white inscribed "Richard
Pousette-Dart 1950" was an attention getter and it brought
$36,800. Emile Gruppe's signed oil on canvas "Gloucester Morning"
realized $33,850 while his, "Surf Casting," sold for $9,775. In
an interview after the sale, Kaminski conceded, "I was pretty
thrilled!"
A portrait of Abraham Lincoln by David John Gue, who only began
to paint after he turned 50, was another picture that drew high
interest. It sold for $13,800.
Enoch Wood Perry's evocative ice skating scene with figures drew
$10,350.

Emile Gruppe's signed "Gloucester Morning" sold for a handsome
$33,850.
The coastal oil on canvas "A Pool at Low Tide" by Florence
Este bore a framer's label of the Parisian framers A. Guinchard and
F. Fourniret, from Robert Rollin, also of Paris, and from Vose
Galleries, Boston. The picture sold for $9,775, as did an
Eighteenth Century Dutch School still life of fruit and flowers in
an interior with a view of the landscape and buildings through an
open door.
A pen and ink drawing by Howard Pyle, "New York Colonial
Privateers," which is thought to have been made for a story by
Thomas A. Janvier, author of In the Sargasso Sea, sold for
$8,625. Abbott H. Thayer's Nineteenth or early Twentieth Century
portrait of a boy realized $7,475 and the Nineteenth Century
American School oil on canvas "Portrait of a Young Woman in
Elegant Dress" sold well above estimate at $8,625.
A mid Nineteenth Century Philadelphia School still life with
fruit sold for $8,625 to a Philadelphia buyer while a Nineteenth
Century Dutch School picture of sailboats that was indistinctly
signed sold for $5,988.
William J. Kaula's oil on board, "After a Shower," was unsigned
by inscribed on the back with the name of the artist, his address
in the Fenway Studios in Boston and the title and sold for
$5,750. Philadelphia artist Martha Walter's "A Beach Scene"
fetched $5,750.
A partial set of 392 prints of John James Audubon's "Birds of
America" printed at the Abbeville Press in 1985 drew $5,453.

"Ships at Dock" a Gloucester Harbor scene of fishing boats by
William Lester Stevens drew a record $21,275.
Martha Walter's jolly "A Beach Party" sold for $5,750.
"Beyond Thunder Hole," a 1998 view of Acadia National Park by Ken
Knowles, who was born in 1968, sold for $4,600.
A Twentieth Century oil on panel, "Horse and Drover along a River
at Sunset" by Dutch artist Evert Pieters (1856-1932 ) drew $6,275
as did "Sailing Ship at Sea" by Gordon Hope Grant.
Two oil on canvas nudes by Howard Everett Smith each bore a label
from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Each brought
$4,600.
The interesting "Autumn Landscape with a Fox in the Foreground"
by F. Mortimer Lamb sold for $4,025. The picture had been
deaccessioned by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
A Classical figure of a man poised for lift off from a variegated
black marble base was estimated at $800/1,200 and sold for
$10,875. The sculpture was cast at the Gorham Company Founders of
Vermont whose stamp was visible on the bronze base. A bronze nude
of a woman by Mario Korbel was $5,750 and another by Allan Clarke
went for $4,600.

The Handel table lamp was reverse painted with a landscape of
Mount Fuji and sold for $6,900.
An Art Deco figure of a woman signed "Menneville" on the
marble base realized $3,738.
Kaminski will offer the remaining inventory of some 7,000 pieces
from the venerable Haley & Steele gallery in Boston in a sale
slated for November. While the story really was about the
paintings, some furniture and decorative accessories brought good
money.
Among the furniture pieces that crossed the block an 85-inch
Eighteenth Century south German secretaire commode in walnut with
exotic wood inlay fetched $8,050. The piece was made with a two
door cupboard that opened to a compartment fitted with 13 drawers
over a serpentine three-drawer base.
A Handel table lamp reverse painted with a landscape of Mount
Fuji was a strong $6,900 and an 1883 Rookwood vase decorated with
an Oriental motif of birds and plum blossoms by A.H. Warren sold
also for $6,900.
A Nineteenth Century pair of gilt bronze chenets in the form of
slaves of antiquity with figural faces and paw feet sold for
$7,475.
An Eighteenth Century New England Chippendale maple and tiger
maple tall chest went for $5,750 while an Eighteenth Century
Chippendale mahogany tall chest with the original pierced brasses
and some restoration drew $4,025. A nice looking Nineteenth
Century English mahogany linen press drew $3,220.
A Tiffany Favrile punch bowl, signed L.C. Tiffany, was engraved
with a grape and leaf decoration and had a 7-inch crack around
the base brought $1,150.
All prices quoted reflect the 15 percent buyer's premium. For
more information, www.kaminskiauctions.com or 978-927-2223.