Date: Fri 08-May-1998
Date: Fri 08-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: DAVIDS
Quick Words:
Cold
Full Text:
Cold Spring Postsale
w/cuts
BEACON, N.Y. -- A New York Empire sideboard and a Pembroke table, consigned to
Cold Spring Galleries' most recent sale with barely enough time to advertise
the pieces, became the highlight of the April 13 auction.
The two pieces had been consigned from a local home so close to the auction's
date, according to auctioneer Neil Vaughn, that there was no time to get them
photographed for an advertisement and barely enough time to get them printed
in the text of the final ad.
Word spread quickly, however, of the two outstanding examples and numerous
interested parties were among those in the standing-room-only crowd, along
with several phone bidders.
The sideboard was described as being a rare form with bronze capitals on the
columns, a back splash and interior mirror. Rumor amongst those examining the
piece during the preview was that there was a strong possibility that the
sideboard could be attributed to the workshop of Phyfe.
Vaughn opened the lot at $2,000 with three phone bidders on the line. A flurry
of bids immediately followed. Bidding moved in $250 increments with a final
bid of $11,000 coming from a local furniture collector who bid by telephone.
The early inlaid Pembroke table also did well with several bidders getting
into the action as the piece was being hammered down at $5,500.
The top lot of the sale was a huge walnut and burl regulator clock that had
hung in a New Jersey furniture store for the past 30-plus years. The unsigned
clock, which measured more than seven feet in length, had a pinwheel movement.
It caused some concern among the American purists because of the possibility
of it being European. The walnut case was definitely of American origin,
according to Vaughn, and it sold after active bidding to the trade for
$12,650.
One item that attracted a great deal of pre-sale interest was an 11-piece set
of cast-iron lawn furniture. The set, in stag horn form, had been the subject
of numerous calls from around the country, a direct result of its profound
Western flair or Adirondack appeal. During preview, however, bidders learned
that the sets were still being produced, although these pieces were termed as
being "older."
"Word got out during preview that you can still get this stuff," commented
Vaughn. "They are still manufacturing it. It was a great set, and was
definitely an older set," he said. Others in the gallery shared Vaughn's
sentiments. The lot was bid to $5,610.
Another of Vaughn's finds was a group of paintings he rescued from a trip to
the dumpster. Discovered in the basement of a newspaper building in Warwick,
N.Y., were five paintings by D.C. Grosse. "They were in a basement which
flooded every year, and they had so much silt on them that you couldn't even
tell they were paintings. They looked like blank canvases," commented Vaughn
after the auction. The astute auctioneer gave each of the paintings a sponge
bath and discovered four landscapes and a seascape by the desirable artist.
Prices on the various pieces ranged from $385 to $2,475.
Other items of interest included an L&JG Stickley hexagonal dining table,
which was hammered down at $6,050; an Eighteenth Century Dutch marquetry
dresser with desk drawer, $3,850; a landscape painting signed Sword, $3,300;
and a bronze chandelier with crystal drops, $1,650.
A Gothic armchair was sold after a prolonged bidding battle. It fetched
$2,200, while a Gothic bench realized $825. A pair of marble-top iron consoles
with mirrors brought $935, an Eighteenth Century carved chest of drawers also
went out at $935, an oak library table took $1,760, and a nice Chesterfield
sofa sold for $990.
A set of nine enameled goblets went for $990; a pair for bronze sconces,
$1,430; and a pair of Art Deco bronze wall dividers in a corn stalk motif,
$2,090.
Prices include the 10 percent buyer's premium charged. For information,
contact Cold Spring Galleries, 344 Main Street, Beacon, N.Y. 12508,
914/831-6800.
The next auction at Cold Spring will be a general sale on May 11.
A benefit Memorial Day auction will be May 25. A portion of the proceeds will
benefit roof restoration work at the art center housed in the Howland Center.
The building is an intact William Morris Hunt designed home that is basically
in original condition. Cold Spring is currently accepting donations of
furniture and accessories for the auction, with the proceeds being forwarded
to the Howland Center under the name of the donor.
-David S. Smith
