A final bid of $75,000
purchased this Tiffany triptych.
Phone
Bidder Sees the Light through Tiffany "Wisteria" Windows at New
Jersey Auction
ORANGE, N.J. - At a recent Lincoln Galleries auction, furniture
selections began with two Nineteenth Century, single-door,
individual-mullioned corner cupboards of maple and cherry, both
of which drew hammer prices of $5,000. A Nineteenth Century
cherry individual-mullioned, two-door cupboard, with pair of
drawers in the apron and pair paneled doors in the base, brought
$3,750.
Two Windsor chairs - one a spindle-back saddle seat and the other
a spindle back plank seat armchair - sold for $1,200 and $900,
respectively, to floor bidders. A Chippendale mahogany Pembroke
drop-leaf table, with pierced X-stretcher supports and opposing
drawers in apron, brought $2,500, while a group of late Sheraton
maple, cherry and mahogany drop leaf tables sold for $300, $500
and $650 respectively.
A small Hepplewhite shield-shaped pole screen, with needlework on
silk insert, finished at a price of $1,300, and a lady's mahogany
kidney-shaped, crossbanded, gallery-edge dressing table sold for
$1,750.
A cylinder front bookcase secretary brought $2,800 and an Empire
bookcase secretary reached the hammer price of $1,300. A Dutch
style mirror back and mother-of-pearl inlaid bombè chest with
marquetry inlay sold for $3,250. Love seats in Victorian and
Sheraton were sought after and ended up bringing bids of $1,000
and $950 respectively. A French style mirror back and marquetry
inlaid and metal mounted vitrine sold for $2,250 and a similar
vitrine with Vernis Martin decoration went to the hammer price of
$2,800.
The pine tall-case clock with the painted enamel dial by William
Tait, Wicton, went to a happy bidder for $1,750 and a Regina
music box on a two door cabinet base with 25 discs captured the
interest of the crowd until the final bid of $4,250.
The highlight of this category was the satinwood and Vernis
Martin decorated furniture group, consisting of a large demilune
commode, which went to a floor bidder for $4,000 and a similar
smaller version, which sold for $3,250. After these, two pairs of
side cabinets, one with pink marble tops, sold for $1,400 and
$2,250 respectively. A lady's kidney shaped vanity was hammered
down at $3,750 and the shield back similar chair sold for $1,100.
An unusual piece, a graduated, oval, two-tiered, marquetry inlaid
side table, with X-stretcher supports, brought a final bid of
$5,000.
At noon all phones were occupied with eager bidders who vied for
three complementary Louis C. Tiffany signed windows in the
"Wisteria" pattern. All expectations were far surpassed as the
hammer came down on the final bid to a phone bidder for $75,000.
An oil on canvas, with sheep and figures by a brook, signed S.D.
Colkett, 1854, sold for $2,250, and an unsigned oil on canvas, a
landscape with waterfall, mountains and river in the foreground,
fetched $6,000. An oil on canvas depicting two ladies having tea,
entitled "A Bit of Gossip," by J.T. Peele, 1884, went to a
delighted floor bidder for $6,250.
And for a bidder who loved White Castle hamburgers, a stained
glass "White Castle" window was hammered down to that bidder for
$750.
The following day, an Art Nouveau copper base and art glass
pull-feather design central globe ceiling fixture, surrounded by
six floral shaped individual globes, sold for $19,500, after
which a reverse painted large art glass dome shaped ceiling
fixture sold to a phone bidder for $850.
A small Rookwood pottery green ground and floral decorated vase,
signed Valentine, sold for $2,700. A pair of putti-supported,
bronze and marble four-branch candelabrum sold for $5,500, and a
French bronze mantel garniture, consisting of a central ornate
clock with matching five branch candelabrum, was hammered down at
$2,500.
A pair of English sterling weighted base candleholders with three
branch candelabra attachments brought $2,650 and a pair of
English sterling rectangular tea caddies with ivory and sterling
leaf shaped finials delighted a bidder at the hammer price of
$2,000.
Prices do not include a 15 percent buyers premium.