A good selection of Americana attracted large crowds of buyers to  Nadeau’s Auction Gallery on Saturday, October 22. The auction,  taking place at the same time as the Hartford Antiques Show,  always draws a devoted crowd.   The selection of furniture to be offered this time around had  several highlights, some selling for upwards of double the  presale estimates. A good assortment of smalls were also featured  including a large assortment of English porcelains, glass,  silver, lighting and country primitives.   While there was plenty in the auction to capture the attention of  potential bidders, it was the stylish Wethersfield bonnet top  Queen Anne highboy that became the star of the show. Consigned  from a local home, the piece had been collected by Hartford  architect Roy Bassette during the 1920s and had descended in the  family. In an old and possibly original finish, the highboy possessedwhat many called the most graceful and sensuous legs seen on anysimilar case piece. With a pinwheel carved plinth supporting theupper urn finial, and upper and lower fan carved drawers, one ofthe only downsides of the piece was the replaced brasses and twodrop finials. Nadeau estimated the lot at $100/150,000 and askedfor a $100,000 opening bid from the gallery. When no one in thegallery budged, one of the six active phone lines hit the lot. Itwas off and running with bids coming from the telephonesexclusively, despite several serious clients, a couple of majorones from the Hartford Show included, seated in the room. Biddingcame quickly on the lot moving in $10,000 increments to the$170,000 mark where it hammered down for a selling price of$189,500 inclusive of premium.   The lot, according to auctioneer Ed Nadeau, sold to a “private  collector of Connecticut material.” While the maker of these  pieces is a mystery, they are commonly referred to as coming from  the “Willard” group. The case pieces obtained its name from the  original owner of one of the high chests, Daniel Willard. The highboy established a high-water mark for a pricerealized for any item sold at the auction gallery.   Another lot to attract the attention of several in the gallery  was a Norwich, Conn., area Queen Anne cherry side chair that sold  well beyond presale estimates despite an unattractive refinished  surface. With a bold splat with whale fluke frets, a balloon seat  and cabriole legs ending in pad feet, the chair shot past the  $4/7,000 presale opening selling for $16,100, going to a  telephone with Nathan Liverant and Son underbidding it from the  room.   A Federal inlaid sideboard with the original brasses, thought to  be from the New Jersey region, circa 1795, was actively bid on,  selling smack in the middle of estimates at $13,800.   “We are going to start displaying our furniture upside down,”  stated Nadeau, as previewers examined the bottom of a New England  cherry Queen Anne chest on frame. With four over five drawer  configuration, the piece had been attracting relatively little  attention. “Normally the bases are all mucked up,” stated the  auction, “but this one is right as can be. Ed Jr, got tired of  turning the piece up on end for inspection and decided to leave  it like that,” he said, “Now everyone can see the base, who knows  we might be starting a new trend.”   The lot opened with absentee bids at $5,800 and moved between the  floor and the telephones with the lot hammering down just above  the high estimate at $8,050.   The auctioneer had to work the crowd hard as an attractive  Chippendale reverse serpentine front slant lid desk was offered.  A shiny refinish and replaced brasses kept the lot in check with  the attractive ball and claw example selling for only $3,450.   One of the sleepers of the sale was a sack back Windsor armchair,  circa 1790, with a late white “porch” paint on it. The chair had  good style and it soared past the $400/600 presale estimate on  its way to a selling price of $2,645. The next lot was an  assembled group of six refinished sack back Windsors that the  auctioneer could only muster $2,990 for. A nice Windsor  two-seater bench in black paint was also sold with it going above  estimates at $2,415.   A highboy base in crackled varnish, probably of New Hampshire  lineage, was one of the buys of the sale with it selling way  below the $1,5/1,800 presale estimates at $517 and a nice Queen  Anne maple and pine slant front desk with a single drawer and on  cabriole legs, estimate $5/8,000, was another lot that slipped  through the cracks at $1,437.   A large and ornate French Regency giltwood and gesso wall mirror,  circa 1735, sold at $6,900. Paintings in the auction were topped by a C.E. Porterlandscape and a Russian painting with both lots bringing $20,700.The Porter was a rare landscape depicting a rural area thought tobe East Hartford with a church steeple in the background. TheRussian painting by Sergi Kolesnikoff depicted a bunch of gypsiesbefore a town gate with onion domed buildings in the background.Estimated at $2,5/4,000, the lot opened at $1,500 and took off withan internet bidder finally claiming the lot.   A second C.E. Porter was offered with a still life with apples  and grapes also selling well at $6,900.   Other art included a Seventeenth/Eighteenth Century Flemish  painting of flowers that brought $5,750, a Chinese oil depicting  “Hong” with a Vose label on the back went out at $4,887, an  unsigned oil depicting a Roman street scene sold at ten times the  low estimate bringing $4,600 and a Currier and Ives hand colored  litho depicting “The Yacht Mohawk of New York” sold at  $3,335.   The top lot from the assortment of accessories was an oversized  eider drake decoy believed to have been of Maine origin. In a dry  old paint, the decoy opened at the low estimate of $3,000 and  bounced back and forth between the telephones and the room until  a buyer at the rear of the gallery claimed the lot for $11,500.  An unusual carousel figure of a running rooster, with a  provenance of early Woodbury dealers Howard and Priscilla  Richmond, did well at $10,925.   An American silver tea and coffee service by Eoff and Shepard,  New York, circa 1859, in a faux rattan type pattern did well as  it sold for $5,405.   A selection of English porcelains were offered with a rare pair  of large enameled pearlware lions selling at $4,025. A 17-inch  tall creamware standing figure of Cupid sold at $1,725, and two  creamware equestrian figures of St George slaying the dragon  brought $1,035 and $1,610.   Prices include the buyer’s premium charged. For information,  860-246-2444 or www.nadeausauctions.com.          
 
    



 
						