Date: Fri 08-May-1998
Date: Fri 08-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: AMYD
Quick Words:
MidAtlantic
Full Text:
Remington Watercolor At Mid Atlantic
W/3CUTS SS
By Rita Easton
WILMINGTON, DEL. -- Approximately 320 bidding numbers were used at a March 22
auction by Mid-Atlantic Auctions & Appraisals, Inc, at the Newark Senior
Center. Ned Stinson auctioneered the 550-lot event, which grossed over
$400,000.
The most noteworthy and historic items were consigned from a direct descendant
of Tench Tilighman of Tilighman Island in Chesapeake Bay, and property from
Historic Annapolis, a group of historic properties that includes the William
Paca House. Tilighman was an aide-de-camp to George Washington.
Bringing the highest bid was a Frederic Remington, "The Fulfillment of the
Last Prophecy," published in the February 22, 1890 issue of Harpers , page
137, to a dealer at $19,000. The watercolor depicted a frontier scene with
American Indians.
A Pennsylvania dealer won a Regency breakfront with desk drawers at $9,000,
and a second Pennsylvania dealer purchased a mahogany Federal Maryland
sideboard for $7,750. A Francis Atkins Regency bracket clock with a peaked top
realized $2,950; a Federal Pembroke table with book inlay with a single drawer
fetched $4,750; and a pair of Thomas Birch engravings of sea battles, the
large images having some foxing, sold to a dealer at $1,500.
An E. Darch Lewis oil on canvas, painted in 1886, reached $5,500 and a
portrait of a seated Mrs Sperry of Baltimore went to one of her descendants at
$4,750.
Two Heriz rugs were offered: a 10 by 12 foot example brought $3,400, while a
slightly larger one made $3,700. An eight foot long Welsh dresser with four
drawers brought $2,750, going to a Virginia buyer; an Eighteenth Century
corner cupboard, restored and newly painted a peach shade, with an arched top
opening revealing shaped shelves, over a single cupboard door, sold at $3,750;
and an I. Twiss of Montreal rosewood grain painted clock with broken arch, the
case by a Connecticut maker, went out at $2,750.
A group of five pieces of American Indian beadwork went to a Virginia dealer
on the phone at $650; a rosewood Regency what-not, with four shelves over a
single drawer, was snapped up at $1,800 by a Long Island dealer who will
return it to England; and an important cherry tallcase clock with broken arch
surmounted by three finials, having a 30-hour movement, made circa 1770 in the
Reading, Penn., area, fetched $6,250 from a private collector.
A Regency rosewood teapot with brass inlay achieved $3,200; a Dutch Eighteenth
Century oval tea table in satinwood with chinoiserie decoration, on tapering
Hepplewhite legs, realized $2,100; a Regency canterbury reached $1,700; and a
New England Sheraton chest of four drawers with bird's-eye maple veneer, the
deck top mounted with a mirror, made in Boston, circa 1815, achieved $3,750,
selling to a private Philadelphia buyer.
An American School oil on canvas, circa 1825, depicting a seated young lady
with mandolin, having some restoration, garnered $1,100; a group of guitars
and mandolins made in the 1920s and 30s ranged from $400 to $625, the highest
bid going to a National, metal-bodied four string guitar; an Art Nouveau open
armchair reached $1,500; a Tunbridge tea caddy went to a private New York
collector on the phone at $1,300; and an E. Howard rosewood regulator clock
reached $4,250.
Prices quoted do not reflect a required ten percent premium.
