“Even the most exciting and personally fulfilling adventures must  come to an end.”   Those are the words of Jon and Becky Zoler, taken from the short  piece they wrote about their collection of American folk art that  was sold at Sotheby’s on Saturday, January 22.   They went on to say, “We bought from a large and diverse group of  dealers…” and that is evident after reading the provenances  listed with the objects. A great many of our prominent present  day dealers are there and, for some of us “old timers” in the  business, it had to shake a few cobwebs loose when we came on  names of those who had handled many of the pieces over the years.  Names ringing a familiar bell include Mary Allis, Jean Lipman,  Stewart Gregory, Edward Grosvenor Paine, John Bihler and Henry  Coger, Maura Wallace, Roland Hammond, Nina Fletcher Little,  Hillary Underwood, Edmund Fuller and David Pottinger.   “With a clear emphasis on rarity and distinctiveness, as well as  visual qualities to dazzle the eye, the Zolers also share an  aesthetic preference for simplicity. The preference runs through  their collection, regardless of medium, and helps give it a rich  cohesiveness,” so writes Gerard Wertkin, director emeritus of the  American Folk Art Museum. Without a doubt many other dealers and collectors share thedirection the Zoler collection has taken and a standing room onlyaudience was in the gallery to vie for the pieces.   The first lot of the sale, a watercolor, pen and ink on paper of  eight black Tom cats sitting on a fence, American School, circa  1920-30, probably done in Virginia, 103/8 by 23 inches, original  black frame, went for $8,400, over a $½,000 presale estimate,  setting the pace for the one-owner sale. Two lots later a hooked  rug showing three cats and two birds, probably Pennsylvania,  Nineteenth Century, 20 by 31 inches, sold for $1,680, more than  twice the high estimate. A wrought iron heart design door mat,  Pennsylvania origin, Nineteenth to Twentieth Century, flexible,  221/2 by 291/2 inches, estimated to sell for $3/500, went for  $2,700.   Among the many pictures was a double mourning watercolor, ink and  pen on paper for the Fletcher family, sold together with a family  record. The watercolor, by Harriet Moore, circa 1820, measures 13  by 14 inches and sold just over the high estimate at $66,000.  J.H. Davis was represented by several works, including a portrait  of two boys, Charles Henry Furber and Edwin Peirce Furber, and  their dog, watercolor, ink and pen on paper, 8 by 10 inches, that  sold for $24,000 to David Wheatcroft, who is also listed in the  provenance.   Furniture was, for the most part, painted, but that was not the  case of a Federal inlaid and figured mahogany Pembroke table  attributed to Matthew Egerton Jr, New Brunswick, N.J., circa  1795. The table appears to retain the original cast brass  hardware and measures 28 inches high and 21 inches wide closed.  The high presale estimate was $30,000, and the table sold for  $48,000 to a phone bidder. Lot 635, a miniature turned maple rush  seat great chair, New York, last quarter of the Eighteenth  Century, rich brown color, 81/4 inches high, appears to retain  the original rush seat, sold for $27,600 against a high presale  estimate of $6,000. A number of pieces of stoneware was offered, the first lot aone-gallon salt glazed cobalt blue, slip decorated “Bird withdotted breast and floral spray,” J&E Norton, Bennington, Vt.,circa 1850-59. According to Leder and Cesana, only about three ofthis design are known and this one, 111/2 inches high, came fromthe personal collection of Betty and Joel Schatzburg. The highestimate was $10,000, and it sold for $20,400.   A portrait of a young girl with black braids, wearing a gray  dress and holding a green apple, Sturtevant Hamblin, oil on  academy board, circa 1840, 133/8 by 91/4 inches, sold to a phone  bidder for $36,000, in the middle of the presale estimate. Also  selling within estimate was a portrait of a dark-haired,  blue-eyed gentleman wearing a frilled white stock, posed before a  red drape with yellow fringe, Sheldon Peck, 241/2 by 20 inches,  for $84,000. This portrait, oil on poplar panel, was painted in  Vermont and is in a period frame.   From the collection of Howard and Jean Lipman was a carved cedar  eider drake decoy, Bailey’s Island, Friendship, Maine, dating  from the Nineteenth Century. It measures 73/4 inches long, is  missing one glass eye and had a high presale estimate of $10,000.  The hammer fell at $22,800.   The phones were very active during this sale, partly because of  the forecasted blizzard for the city, and that is the direction a  molded copper and zinc stag leaping over a shrub weathervane by  Harris & Co., Boston, circa 1880, went. It measures 26 inches  high by 311/2 inches long and carried a high estimate of $50,000.  It sold for $114,000. The provenance starts out with Edmund  Fuller and ends with Steve Miller. A very high price was paid for  a gilded copper rooster weathervane, J.W. Fiske, circa 1885, with  red-painted comb and wattle, 20 inches high, when the hammer fell  at $20,400. A realistic presale estimate was at $2/3,000.   Among the nicest lots of painted furniture was a set of six  mustard painted and polychrome decorated thumb back Windsor side  chairs, Daniel Stewart, Farmington, Maine, circa 1820. The  underside of each chair was chalk-inscribed with the signature of  Henry Noyes, or simply Noyes, a well-known seller of painted  chairs in Belfast, Maine. The chairs have been through a number  of Americana dealers – Barbara Pollack, Frank Miele and Sam  Herrup – and sold within estimate at $20,400.   A red painted sack back Windsor armchair, attributed to William  Seaver, Boston, last quarter of the Eighteenth Century, 38 inches  high, sold for $19,200, above the $12,000 high estimate. Ending the sale was a complete set of bound copies of TheMagazine Antiques, 1922-2002, estimated at $2/5,000, which soldfor $15,600.   The final total of this sale, 160 of the 177 lots sold, came to  $2,859,600. Nancy Druckman, head of the folk art department,  said, “It was a very solid sale with no great surprises and most  of the lots either within or close to estimate.”   Jon and Becky Zoler noted in their piece in the catalog that “we  were mere custodians of such beautiful objects” and echoing many  collectors before them, “It is our fondest hope that these folk  art pieces will find new owners who will treasure them and derive  as much enjoyment from them as we have.”   All of the prices noted include the buyer’s premium (20 percent  on the first $200,000, and 12 percent on anything over that  number).          
 
    



 
						