Date: Tue 28-Jul-1998
Date: Tue 28-Jul-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: SHIRLE
Quick Words:
Blackwood
Full Text:
Blackwood March Quickie
w/3 cuts
By Rita Easton
ESSEX, MA. -- Three hundred twenty lots of estate antiques and fine art were
auctioned in two hours and 50 minutes by Blackwood March at Woodman's Function
Hall on June 23.
Michael March estimated attendance at 225, an even mix of dealer and retail
buyers. The speedy auction grossed $60,000.
A remnant of a New England flat-top mahogany highboy reached the high bid of
the day, $3,400. "I call it a `remnant' because the legs were cut off at the
knees," said March, "but it was a very attractive piece. People thought it was
restorable." The finish was described by March as "semi-old," and brasses were
replaced. The lot went to a New Hampshire dealer.
Cape Ann painter Harrison Cady was represented by a watercolor depicting a
lighthouse on a rocky coast. The artist was active in the 1920s, 30s, and 40s,
and was noted for painting humorous subjects. A second water by Cady featured
characters in a circus. Each lot garnered $1,500. Cady was also well known for
his renderings of Peter Rabbit, Bugs Bunny, and many other children's book
characters.
An Enneking scene of a European village brought $1,000; A T.V.C. Valenkamph
depicting a square rigged ship at sea, painted in 1822, achieved $900; and an
oil on canvas by Sidney Yates Johnson, of a serene shoreline with rock
outcroppings under a big sky, all bathed in a luminous light, fetched $1,100.
The traditional subject of fruit in a bowl was done on velvet for an
attractive framed theorem painting at $1,250, purchased by a private buyer,
and a Robert Gruppe harbor oil went out at $1,100 for the Gloucester scene.
The artist is the son of painter Emile Gruppe.
A Gorham sterling silver tea set consisting of six pieces, in an ornate
pattern, sold at $1,550; a pair of German sterling silver mounted horn wall
sconces made $400; a Chinese embroidered lightweight summer robe, late
Nineteenth Century, in blue with gold threads, brought $550; a collection of
books on magic from the 1930s and 40s achieved $550; and a Victorian
mechanical bank in the form of a trick dog reached $660. A coin put in the
mouth of the dog is then tossed through a hoop, held by a jester, into a
barrel.
The sleeper of the auction was a copy of Don Quixote de la Mancha by
Cervantes, in Latin, with illustrations, a second printing, done in 1705. It
was purchased at $150. The original printing was done in 1610. A French
mechanical bird in a cage, in poor condition and needing work but nonetheless
singing a faint song, sold at $375; a Victorian mahogany settee fetched $400;
a bunch of decorative glass grapes attributed to Lalique reached $250, and 30
feet of Turkish Revival fringe went at $400.
The fringe had provenance of John Hammond, who was a noted Cape Ann resident
who built Hammond's castle, a 1920s reproduction of a European castle. In the
1920s and 30s, Hammond designed guidance systems in power boats, which
eliminated the need for a captain or even passengers, to the astonishment of
onlookers.
The next Blackwood March sale is slated for August 18 and will feature
Eighteenth Century French furniture and more than 100 Cape Ann paintings.
Prices quoted do not reflect a required 10 percent buyer's premium.
