Bruce and Vicki Waasdorp’s most recent absentee American pottery  auction was a success, according to the Waasdorps. There were  many new participants and more than 160 winning bidders.   American folk art was still in demand at this semiannual  stoneware auction. The top lot was a standing stag on a  six-gallon cream pot signed “John Burger, Rochester.” The winning  bid of $44,000 was made by New York City dealer Leigh Keno.   Other animal decorated pieces also did well. A signed L. Lehman  New York three-gallon crock with two deer reached $23,650.  Another New York signed three-gallon crock with a prancing zebra  sold for $8,250, even with some damage to the piece.   The Norton Bennington Factory was well represented. A  three-gallon cream pot with a deer and house design sold for  $13,750. A four-gallon advertising jar decorated with a lion  design reached $19,800. Great examples from the Cowden & Wilcox, Harrisburg,Penn., factory proved popular with buyers as well. Three highlydetailed floral designs on three-gallon jugs sold for $8,800,$7,700 and $15,400, respectively. An oversized cream pot with arare double bird design reached $14,300.   A number of signed Stetzenmeyer, Rochester, pieces were featured  in this sale. The lifelong collection of a prominent Texas  resident was competitively bid by many participants. This  Rochester, N.Y., factory’s elaborate floral designs are a prized  addition to any collection, and prices ranged from $2,000 to  $4,500.   A last-minute consignment to the sale was an extraordinary early  stoneware inkwell. Impressed and blue accented “E. Sheldon Troy  1829” on the front, it was competitively bid to $16,500.   Prices reflect ten percent buyer’s premium.          
 
    



 
						