:Bonhams & Butterfields offered jewelry and timepieces,
automobilia and collectors' motorcars on Friday, August 15, from
the grounds of Quail Lodge in Carmel, Calif.
The sale brought more than $2.5 million and featured a famous hot
rod and motorcars from the collection of Robert Hood - all of
which found new owners. Strong prices were paid for rare Lalique
mascots of the 1920s.
A classic example of an American street rod, a 1932 Ford roadster
achieved the highest sale price, bringing $192,000. The Ray
Defillipi-built Deuce roadster has an illustrious past. It was
featured in multiple magazine layouts, made appearances in
several feature films, as well as appearances on television's
The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet - driven on screen by
the Nelson boys. This car became known over time as the "Ricky
Nelson Roadster" and sold to a delighted fan and collector of
Ricky Nelson memorabilia.
Hood, head of an aerospace company, amassed and cared for his
collection with the assistance of the late noted restorer John
Swaisland. A buyer paid $50,600 for Hood's 1937 Alvis Speed 20 SC
Tourer, coachwork by Charlesworth. The tourer is one of few
pre-war UK saloons capable of achieving 100-mph. His 1956 Austin
Healy 100 Roadster, awarded first in class at the Palos Verdes
Concours d'Elegance in 2000, sold just-above estimate for $31,050
and bidding more than doubled the estimate for his 1931 Ford
Model A Roadster. Hood's 1948 right-hand drive Jaguar MkIV
21/2-liter Drophead Coupe had won awards at past concours and
sold above estimate for $48,300 while his 1971 Mercedes-Benz
280SE brought $52,900.
A 1926 Rolls-Royce Phantom I Newmarket convertible sedan,
featuring coachwork by Brewster from the Hood Collection sold
above estimate for $115,000 while a buyer paid $137,000 for
Hood's fully restored 1938 Lagonda LG6 Drophead coupe.
Additional strong sellers include $157,500 paid for a fire red
1965 Ferrari 275GTS convertible, one of only 200 models produced;
and $170,000 was paid for a 1957 Mercedes-Benz 300SL Roadster. As
well, a special limited edition 2001 Bentley Arnage Le Mans
four-door saloon, one of just 150 models manufactured, was
offered with a number of special features such as a route
navigation system and XM satellite radio. The Bentley sold for
$117,200. A 1967 Aston Martin DB4 Series IV brought $89,700 while
a classic Ford Woodie, a 1947 Ford V8 Model 799A Deluxe station
wagon, brought $71,300.
Lalique opalescent glass mascot "Vitesse," $51,750.
Collectors and enthusiasts took great interest in a series of
rare and beautiful glass mascots by Rene Lalique, each introduced
in the 1920s and '30s. Lalique introduced a magnificent opalescent
example named Vitesse in September of 1929. Considered quite rare,
it was offered in absolutely pristine condition and sold for
$51,750. An earlier Lalique opalescent glass mascot featuring a
mermaid brought $3,680 while additional Lalique works depicting a
horse's head (sold at $6,670), peacock's head (sold at $8,625), a
female nude (sold at $3,795) and several birds each found buyers.
Nearly doubling its estimate was a fine and rare tinted glass
dragonfly mascot introduced in the spring of 1928. Lalique's Petit
Libellule brought $46,000.
Other strong selling lots within the automobilia section of
Friday's auction included whimsical mascots in silvered and
nickeled bronze, many by noted makers, many incorporating Art
Deco design elements. An Art Deco squirrel mascot by Le Verrier
more than doubled its estimate, selling for $2,530 while a rare
polar bear mascot signed, stamped and numbered by Ch. Soudant
brought $4,025 ($2,800/3,200).
An Austrian-made puss-in-boots mascot sold for $2,875 and a
superb Bleriot monoplane mascot, French, 1910, sold for more than
three tines its estimate, bringing $4,025. A rare Henri Payen
mascot sold far above estimate for $4,025. Wired for electricity,
it features an elephant, its trunk raised and holding a lantern.
A bronze baby elephant emerging from a silvered bronze egg
delighted a bidder who paid $1,265 for the lot. An exceptionally
rare Maurice Guiraud Riviere sculpture "La Comete," circa 1925,
signed and bearing a Paris foundry mark sold for $28,750.
The auction opened with lots of jewelry and timepieces. Bidders
paid strong prices for watches by noted makers including $14,100
paid for a Cartier Swiss gold and diamond wristwatch and $12,338
paid for a Harry Winston Swiss gold and diamond integral lady's
wrist watch. A three stone platinum ring centering a 10.26 carat
oval-shaped sapphire flanked by two half moon-cut diamonds sold
for $18,800 while a natural fancy yellow diamond and 18K gold
ring, the cut-cornered rectangular stone weighing 10.62 carats,
sold for $64,500.