Date: Fri 31-Jul-1998
Date: Fri 31-Jul-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: SHIRLE
Quick Words:
Fletcher
Full Text:
Pook & Pook Auction
w/cuts
By J.M.W. Fletcher
LUDWIGS CORNER, PENN. -- The Summer Antiques Sale on June 26 and 27 by Pook &
Pook, Inc, featured the personal collection from the estate of Robert E.
Ripley, founder of 27 Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not! museums. Other estate
collections were also included.
The auction catalogue, replete with hundreds of color and black and white
photographs detailing some 800 lots, was a required item for the
standing-room-only auction crowd.
In addition to more than 200 lots from the Ripley collection, the sale
featured American Indian baskets, several hundred pieces of Rose Medallion
porcelain, some 30 lots of handwoven rugs, as well as Philadelphia formal
furniture. Also sold was a large grouping of ethnographic items, such as
carved masks, canes, figures, and a collection of Pennsylvania folk art that
included six portraits by Jacob Maentel (American, 1763-1863). By late
Saturday afternoon, when auctioneer James Gibson brought the hammer down on
the last lot, the auction had grossed over $1,100,000.
The top -- and cover -- lot of the sale, a watercolor on paper portrait of a
gentleman standing in front of a schoolmaster's desk by Jacob Maentel sold to
the most persistent of two final floor bidders against two phone bidders for a
price of $39,000. So much for the $6/9,000 estimate.
"The piece opened with left bids up to $10,000 and the bidding subsequently
sent up from there in increments of $1,000," related Pennsylvania folk art
collector David Passerman. "It happened very, very quickly once it hit $20,000
-- all the way up. And actually the buyer, somewhere in the back of the room,
probably got a very good buy. It's museum quality. Probably belongs in a
museum and might end up in a museum one day. It's a great Maentel to have in
anybody's collection." Passerman was the underbidder at $38,000.
A rare family portrait grouping by Maentel, four watercolors on paper of a
father, wife, son and daughter, sold for $16,000 (est $13/18,000), and an
unusually large portrait of a gentleman by that artist sold for $5,000.
Other works in that section included an excellent Pennsylvania watercolor on
paper fraktur signed "Carl Munch," dated 1799, which sold at twice its low
estimate of $10,000. A needlework sampler by Sarah Michener, dated 1792, left
the block at $3,500 (est $1/1,500). A second phase Germantown weaving in a
pictorial chief's pattern, five by seven feet, made $4,750, (est $4,5/5,500).
Prices achieved for the seldom-seen Ripley items were surprisingly high: A
pair of narwhal tusks sold for 13 times its high estimate of $1,000. One of
the more macabre objects was a "facsimile" of an African shrunken head, which
left the block at 15 times its high estimate of $300, won by Tracey Wiser, the
general manager of Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not! museum in Atlantic City, one of
the active buyers of Ripley items in the crowd.
"I would love to get the hat," she confessed, referring to Ripley's ten-gallon
Stetson. The lot sold to another floor bidder, against Wiser and two phone
bidders, for $3,250 (est $400/500).
Ripley collected what are now legendary artifacts during visits to 198
countries, such as North Africa, Russia and China. "[The Ripley] estate is
fascinating because it represents sort of the last of a bygone era of
vaudeville," said Ron Pook of the gallery. "We had some of his [Ripley's]
cronies and some of the side-show people who hung out with him at Chicago
World's Fair of 1933 stop by the office to reminisce. And it was just
fascinating to see the very end of this great era of American history."
With extremely high bidder interest (and a high estimate of only $3,500), a
rare Pennsylvania Bucks County painted blanket chest from the "Deep Run Valley
School," early Nineteenth Century, sold at $16,000. Attributed to the
"Embroidery Artist," a rare Pennsylvania Lancaster County decorated dower
chest sold to the phone bidder at $16,000 (est $7/9,000). A late Seventeenth
Century item, identified as a Spanish walnut varguieno, the case concealing an
elaborate interior with extensive ivory and wrought-iron mounts (Ripley
collection), sold to the phones at $5,750 (est $2/3,000).
In the fine art category, Depicting a stormy coastal scene, an oil on board
depicting a stormy coastal scene, 9 by 16 inches, by Wm. T. Richards
(American, 1833-1905), made $10,500 (est $10/12,000).
Another highlight was a rare stoneware presentation bank of beehive form,
incised "R.G. Remmey" and made for "Oda A. Remmey," featuring floral blue
decoration. It made $10,500, (est $10/12,000). A Cowden and Wilcox
three-gallon stoneware crock with blue prancing horse decoration sold for more
than ten times its low estimate at $19,800.
Believe it or not! For those Ripley aficionados who were the underbidders at
this sale, on September 25 and 26 it will be deja vu all over again as Pook &
Pook offers yet more Ripley items, along with the famous Sussel collection.
All prices (and the sale total) quoted do not include a 10 percent buyers
premium.
