A silver salver by New York maker Myer Myers was bidders’ choice  at Skinner’s November 6 Americana sale, where it sold for  $99,500. Bidding on the circular piece that had a robustly molded  edge opened at $15,000 and caused a flurry of phone activity  before it sold to the hardiest phone caller of the lot. Although  the saleroom was full, the shank of the action was among the  phone bidders. The salver first appeared at Skinner in an email  from the consignor to Stuart Slavid, director of Skinner’s silver  department. Speaking after the sale, auctioneer and head of the  Americana department, Stephen L. Fletcher, intoned, “It first  appeared to us as a vision on the screen.”   It was a good day for choice lots with Massachusetts history. The  sale was sprinkled liberally with them and they fared well. A  remarkably crisp Eighteenth Century Salem wool canvas work  picture went to $58,750. The woolie depicted a hunter in a  tricorn hat and red frock coat on horseback accompanied by two  dogs in pursuit of a stag. The piece retained the original  vibrant color, almost as if it had been wrought yesterday. It  came from descendents of Timothy Pickering and went to a phone  bidder.   A Nineteenth Century street scene of Marblehead that was  attributed to Jonathan Orne Johnson Frost also brought $58,750,  also from a phone bidder. The painting was among a group of  objects from a New York house.   A Seventeenth Century Brewster armchair in turned maple and ash  was conservatively estimated at $500/700 and tucked into a group  photograph in the back of the catalog. Still, it sold for  $54,050. Fletcher said it was rare, and probably made in  Plymouth, Mass. A Salem Federal mahogany work table with mahogany  and satinwood veneer and inlay made around 1805-1810 brought  $43,475.   A Chippendale carved mahogany slant lid oxbow serpentine desk  attributed to Salem maker William King sold for $28,200. The desk  had lively gadroon carving on the legs and a carved and pierced  pendant. It descended in the family of Timothy Pickering of  Salem. Another Chippendale mahogany oxbow serpentine slant lid  desk thought to have been made in Salem generated a flurry of  bidding in the room but went ultimately to a phone bidder for  $11,163. A fine pair of Massachusetts Federal mahogany inlaid cardtables with serpentine fronts and bird’s-eye maple panels brought$23,500 and a Federal mahogany and bird’s-eye maple worktablethought to be a Massachusetts piece brought $14,100. The table’sebonized ovolo corners were made with concentric circles centeringivory bosses.   A North Shore Massachusetts Chippendale mahogany block front  chest of drawers with a deep overhang sold on the phone for  $24,675.   A diminutive Massachusetts Federal lady’s desk with mahogany  veneer realized $19,975 from a phone bidder and a Massachusetts  Federal mahogany sofa with inlay interested bidders who drove it  to $11,750 from a buyer on the phone.   Farther afield, a New Hampshire Queen Anne maple high chest of  drawers that was attributed to the Dunlap family went on the  phone for $29,375. A New England Queen Anne tiger maple slant lid  desk with an attractive interior having eight valanced  compartments and a vigorously carved bracket base fetched  $29,375.   A New York Federal mahogany serpentine front sideboard with  mahogany veneer and inlay made in about 1790-1810 brought $25,850  and an early Eighteenth Century Hudson River Valley gumwood  kasten that descended in the Van Wyck family realized $22,325.   Scrimshaw stimulated energetic competition. The top lot was an  81/4-inch early to mid-Nineteenth Century example engraved with  the image “South Sea Fishery” on one side and “Port Owharre,  Huahene” that brought $70,500 from a phone bidder. The tooth,  estimated at $25/35,000, was engraved with a whaling ship flying  the English flag, several whaling dories and whales. Another  phone buyer took an early Nineteenth Century carved whale ivory  and whalebone swift with abalone inlay for $17,265. The same  bidder was exceptionally busy and bought a circa 1835 tooth with  an image of a square rigger sailing under the American flag with  a tombstone, anchor and ship on the reverse for $16,450. The same bidder also bought an early Nineteenth Centurywhale’s tooth that was carved by an English or Americanscrimshander for $4,994. The tooth bore an image of a dancingcouple with the caption “Fashionable Amuse’t” and a portrait of agentleman with the inscription “Dapper Peer” on one side and “AWell Spent Day” with an image of a kneeling man with a church inthe distance and “Obscure Beauty” with an image of a fashionablydressed woman. He or she also bought an interestingly engraved panbone panel with the legend “Runnymede” above a whaling scene for$5,288. A carved ivory jagging wheel with sprightly bird head armsand a silver band went to the same bidder for $1,293.   A finely detailed and signed Sunqua gouache and watercolor  panorama of the Hongs near Canton from about 1832, which is  similar to a circa 1852 example in the collection of the Peabody  Essex Museum in Salem, sold on the phone for $47,000. The same  buyer took a Chinese school picture of the Praya Grande at Macao  by He Chung for $23,500 and another signed circa 1830 Sunqua  gouache and watercolor of the city of Macao for $9,988. The  Sunqua pictures were deaccessioned by the Henry Ford Museum in  Dearborn, Mich.   A selection of about 85 marine views in watercolor and pencil and  ink by US Navy Captain Henry Schreiner Stellwagen, for whom  Stellwagen Bank is named, attracted very focused interest.  Stellwagen made the pictures during the voyages to many parts of  the world made during his naval career, which began in 1828 and  only ended in the 1860s. Stellwagen was also a noted hydrographer  and inventor of marine devices. One collector, a Boston real  estate developer and sailor, bought most of the images – and did  so eagerly – snapping up all except six of the images across the  block. The album frontispiece fetched $2,820, a view of the navy  yard at Norfolk, Va., realized $2,115, and a view of an American  whaler offshore near Lima, Peru, sold for $2,115.   Other buyers took other lots such as two watercolor views of  Caribbean islands that brought $7,050 from an absentee bidder who  also got a view of Havana for $2,938 and an image of a French  ship flying dozens of flags for $2,585.   The Stellwagen pictures were originally part of the artist’s  scrapbook, which was taken apart many years ago. They were also  deaccessioned by the Henry Ford Museum.   The Nineteenth Century Chinese School painting “Ship Empress  D.R. Lecrew Entering Hong Kong by the Lesoon Passage, 1862”  brought $25,850 from another phone bidder who also paid $38,775  for a painting of a sailboat race “Dauntless and  Sappho off the Needles, Isle of Wight,” which was unsigned  by but attributed to James E. Buttersworth.   Another painting of note was a circa 1840 portrait of the  6-year-old twins Audrey and Adelia Brownell that brought $35,250.  The picture was unsigned but was probable painted in the area of  Pownal, Vt., and Petersburg, N.Y.   Antonio Jacobsen’s 1883 oil on canvas painting of the steamer  City of Portland was of interest to marine painting  collectors and dealers and sold to an absentee bidder for $31,725  while the 1892 portrait of the schooner Monhegan by Solon  Francis Monteccello Badger sold on the Internet for $18,800.  Badger has for some time been misidentified as Samuel Finley More  Badger. Ten phones were mustered for the portrait of a young womanholding a red rose that was signed indistinctly “W.W. Kennedy1846,” who is included among the artists of the Prior HamblenSchool. The picture brought $7,050 against the estimated$1,000-$1,500. Ralph Cahoon’s 1980 painting of a mermaid with aship and a hot air balloon in the background sold for $15,275.   A cast-iron and copper weathervane in the form of a rooster was  attributed to J. Howard of West Bridgewater, Mass., and brought  $16,450 against the estimated $800-$1,200. The vane had a compact  form that appealed to many who saw it. Fletcher said he found it  on the workbench in the garage at the consignor’s home.   A nice circa 1815 leather fire bucket from the Mechanic Fire  Society in Portsmouth, N.H., sold for $4,994.   A mahogany shelf clock made around 1800-1805 by Samuel Mulliken  of Salem or Lynn, Mass., sold for $31,725. The clock, like the  Salem canvas work picture, came from descendents of Timothy  Pickering.   Another clock of interest was a carved cherry tall case clock by  William Crawford of Oakham, Mass., that fetched $30,550. The late  diminutive (83 inches including the finial) Eighteenth Century  clock came from a house in Rindge, N.H. A beautifully painted  pine tall case clock by Silas Hoadley realized $11,750.   Lot 1 was an auspicious opening to the sale. The earthenware  pitcher with polychrome and transfer decoration commemorating the  landing of Lafayette at Castle Garden in New York City, August  16, 1824, sold on the phone for $10,575 against the estimated  $1,5/2,500. Among a selection of Staffordshire pottery decorated  with blue transfers the highlight was a Dr Syntax vegetable dish  that brought $764. A Chinese Export porcelain vase, circa 1710-1725, that wasdesigned to resemble a Venetian glass piece was estimated at$800-$1,200 and sold for $11,163. The ovoid form was decorated withorange bands with gilded flower blossoms.   The star of the stoneware was a pitcher by Thomas Commeraw of New  York decorated with an incised floral sprig that was filled in  with cobalt above the inscription “N. York Coelears Hook.”  Despite the absence of a handle and the presence of a few chips,  the pitcher sailed past the estimated $400/600 to $12,925 from a  phone bidder. An Eighteenth or early Nineteenth Century redware  loaf dish decorated with a jazzy yellow slip squiggle fetched  $6,463.   All prices quoted reflect the buyer’s premium. For information,  call 978-779-6241 or visit www.skinnerinc.com.          
 
    



 
						