Green Valley Auctions’ two main galleries were awash in a rainbow  of colors for the firm’s annual winter cataloged glass auction on  January 28 and 29. The three-session event featured more than  2,500 pieces of blown and pressed glass from the 1850s to the  1990s, with the main emphasis being Victorian period colored and  art glass.   Session One comprised a single-owner collection of blown glass  that had been gathered throughout the Ohio River Valley over the  past 30 years. This eclectic assemblage was offered in 316  cataloged lots and more than 950 bidder’s choice table lots.   Highlights included a mid-Nineteenth Century Pittsburgh region  free-blown covered sugar bowl on foot in a rare translucent  powder blue color, which sold for $1,870, a free-blown cream jug  having a most unusual amethyst with turquoise swirls body and  applied opaque turquoise handle and foot for $1,265 and an early  1920s Central Glass Works art glass console set consisting of a  footed center bowl and matching pair of tall candlesticks, all in  amethyst with opaque white applied elements, quickly sold for  $468 despite damage to one stick.   Session Two, which followed on Friday evening, drew a good crowd  for the selection of Twentieth Century collectible glass that  included a collection of Fenton and L.G. Wright wares. The top  lot of this session was a rare Dugan Glass Co. Butterfly &  Tulip amethyst carnival glass footed bowl, which was 13 inches in  diameter and in undamaged condition, selling at $2,090. Saturday’s Session Three, which included a huge selection ofVictorian opalescent and art glass, was the eagerly awaited mainevent for most collectors. Before the sale, head auctioneer JeffEvans commented that interest leading up to the sale had been verystrong; he added that the presale interest had led to 1,000absentee bids and that as many as five phone bidders would becompeting with those in attendance on the most desirable lots.   First up were more than 90 lots of the ever-popular vaseline  glass from the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth centuries,  which quickly sold between $33 and $220.   Vaseline was followed by a selection of colorless and colored  early American pattern glass, which included a scarce green  Feather four-piece table set with only minor roughness, which  sold for $605. Ruby-stained wares continue to be hotly pursued,  and a selection of original King’s Crown drew much interest, led  by an 111/4-inch-high tankard water pitcher featuring a bird in  flight and floral engraved decoration, which soared off at $523.   Green Valley offered up another selection of Victorian opalescent  glass, and water pitchers again proved to be the most hotly  contested form – the star of the show was a blue Stars &  Stripes tankard-form, which sailed off at $4,510. The next  highest priced pitchers were all cranberry, including a rare  Giant Diamond Optic by Phoenix Glass Co., which flew to $3,720; a  West Virginia Glass Co. Fern, which reached $3,410; and a Buttons  & Braids example that topped out at $3,190.   Sugar shakers and syrup jugs continue to be in high demand and  many fine examples were offered here. Two scarce cranberry  opalescent syrups led the way – an Opaline Brocade/Spanish Lace  and a reverse swirl, which marched off at $2,200 and $1,760,  respectively. Most of the other opalescent forms performed very  well also, including a rare satin rubina Criss-Cross covered  sugar in outstanding condition, which was battled to $2,090. This sale also included part four of the Ken Depew collectionof tumblers. This installment produced the biggest surprise of theentire auction when a Greentown Holly Amber tumbler came to theblock. As the bidding began, it was quickly evident that this wasnot your normal Holly Amber tumbler; the difference being that this31/2-inch-high example had a beaded rim. While much speculationexists as to the actual intended usage of this piece, it has beenlisted but never illustrated in Greentown glass references.   Karen Reed, head of the catalog department, commented that the  firm had never sold an example of this tumbler before and the she  did not recall every actually seeing one herself. She added that  the $800/$1,200 auction estimate was based on the two most recent  Greentown price guides.   The tumbler opened at $500 with competing absentee bids;  immediately a gentleman in the back row raised his bidding card  high competing against absentee bids to $2,100, at which point  the battle switched to a phone bidder. The floor bidder, who had  driven from Indiana just for this tumbler, never took his card  down and eventually won the right to take it home for a record  $8,810, prompting the astonished crowed to break into applause.   Art glass made up the final part of the sale, led by an extremely  rare New England Glass Co. second etching Pomona tumble-up with  cornflower decoration, which generated tremendous interest and  sold for $4,510.   Prices reported include the ten percent buyer’s premium.          
 
    



 
						