Artists have long sought refuge in the town of Woodstock, N.Y.,  most commonly known as the site of the great 60s mega rock  concert that brought the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin  to Max Yasgur’s farm, yet few, even today, recognize the name of  Ralph Whitehead, an influential figure in the art history of the  town. Whitehead, with his wife Jane and son Peter, founded a  small Arts and Crafts community in Woodstock in 1903 that they  named Byrdcliffe, a moniker making use of their middle names.   The colony had a complex mission that varied vastly from other  American Arts and Crafts communities of the time, and together  with the community in Rose Valley, Byrdcliffe is considered to be  among the most successful. The Whiteheads offered classes in Arts  and Crafts and hoped to provide a utopian communal-type  environment for their artists, supported by a functional farm and  the sales of art and furniture produced there. Production at the Byrdcliffe colony was short lived and thefurniture, pottery and paintings produced there have become highlydesirable, fueled originally by the exhibition “Life by Design: TheByrdcliffe Arts & Crafts Colony” at the Delaware Art Museum in1983, and more recently by Cornell’s traveling exhibition”Byrdcliffe: An American Arts and Crafts Colony.”   In 1975, with the death of Peter Whitehead, White Pines, the  Whiteheads’ home at the Byrdcliffe colony, passed to his cousin  Mark Wilcox, who along with his wife Jill have worked hard to  preserve the legacy. Ultimately the couple transferred White  Pines to the Woodstock Guild, and along the way they have also  made major donations of Byrdcliffe furnishings and archival  materials to major institutions such as The Metropolitan Museum  of Art and Winterthur.   With the recent exhibition having culminated, the Wilcoxes made  the decision to sell the remainder of the collection of art,  pottery and furniture, some of which had been on tour.   James Bakker and Robert Edwards teamed up and with a small room,  a handful of people, four phone lines, and 29 lots of extremely  rare material, conducted an auction.   While the auction was well received, for the most part prices  fell short of presale estimates and expectations. The sale opened  with a Zulma Steele monoprint that went out to a telephone bidder  at $632. Photographic portraits of the Whiteheads sold at $1,150  for an image of Jane and Peter, while an image of Ralph brought  $2,070, both going to the same phone bidder. The fourth lot of the auction was the highlight of the saleas the Hermann Dudley Murphy chiffonier was offered. The circa 1904piece retained sparse remnants of the original transparent greenstain and the original hardware, and was decorated with a landscapeview of a winding river with mountainous background at sunset. AsBakker offered the lot, he termed it a “masterpiece of theByrdcliffe Colony” and then opened the rare piece with a bid of$170,000. A single bid came from a couple seated in the rear of theroom and after some brief confusion on the telephones it washammered down for a selling price of $207,000, a record price paidat auction for a Byrdcliffe chiffonier.   The last piece in the auction, a rare blanket chest with carved  panels designed by Zulma Steele, also did well, selling to a  gentleman in the room for $57,500. Both the chiffonier and the  blanket chest were sold with original design drawings. A library  table, the same form as the ones in the Woodstock Library, sold  to a buyer on the telephone for $7,475.   Two pieces of furniture that did not find buyers: the “Tirol”  settle and table, which were designed in a heavy Nouveau style by  Dawson Dawson-Watson. Byrdcliffe pottery brought strong prices with a 14-inch-talldouble-handled vase in an aubergine glaze and a paper labelattached to the base fetching $4,485, a bulbous vase withcylindrical neck in blue sold at $3,680, a matte blue glazed vaserealized $2,990, a six-inch vase with buff ground and leafydecoration $2,070, and a small vase in a sang de boeuf glazebrought $1,840.   Paintings included a “View from Arcady” by Leonard Lester that  sold for $2,760, another “View of Arcady,” an oil on canvas by  Jane Whitehead, went out at $1,725, and a Zulma Steele ink and  watercolor of a columbine brought $4,255 after fierce competition  from four telephone bidders.   A selection of tiles were offered with the top lot coming as a  Halsy Ricardo hand carved tile triptych in a copper frame that  was impressed on the verso with the De Morgan’s Sands End pottery  mark sold for $5,750.   Prices include the 15 percent buyer’s premium that was charged.  For further information contact James Bakker 508-487-9081 or  bakkerart.com. Robert Edwards may be contacted at 610-543-3595.          
						