Important American and European Paintings
Tuesday, 12 June 2012 10:00 AM
IMPORTANT AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PAINTINGS
Sale:
Tuesday, June 12, 2012 10:00 AM
Viewing:
Friday, June 8, 2012 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, June 9, 2012 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Sunday, June 10, 2012 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Monday, June 11, 2012 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Preview and Sale Location:
Keno Auctions
127 East 69th Street
New York, NY 10021
Auction Code: 1007
In sending absentee bids or making inquiries, this sale should be referred to as SALE 1007.
Front cover: Lots 63 (detail)
Back cover: Lot 27
Inside front cover Lot 18
Inside back cover Lot 70 (detail)
Page 3 Lot 22
President and Owner:
Leigh Keno, [email protected]
Staff:
Amanda Brody, [email protected]
Ruth McNab, [email protected]
Jack O’Brien, [email protected]
Amy Sheldon, [email protected]
Catherine Skibitcky, [email protected]
Paintings Consultant:
Betty Krulik, Fine Arts, [email protected]
Auction Inquiries & Bid Department:
Sale Inquiries:
phone: 212 734 2381
Auction Online:
This auction features online viewing and
live online bidding at Kenoauctions.com
and Liveauctioneers.com.
Conditions of Sale:
This auction is subject to
Important Notices, Conditions of
Sale and Reserves.
2 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Handling and Collection
Lots will not be released until all outstanding charges due to Keno Auctions are paid in full. Please contact Keno Auctions Client Accounts department at +1 212 734 2381 or [email protected].
Administration and Handling Charges
Property not picked up the day of the sale or by 3:00 p.m. June 19 will result in handling and administration charges plus any applicable sales taxes.
Charges All Property
Administration and Handling fees (per lot, per day beginning 3:00 pm, June 19) $15.00
Keno Auctions Sale Site 127 E. 69 Street New York, NY 10021 Hours: 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Directions to the Sale
By Subway:
Take 6 train to 68th Street
Driving Directions
From Westchester and Connecticut
• Take Hutchinson River Parkway S (from Connecticut take Merritt Parkway S to Hutchinson River Parkway S)
• Continue onto Cross County Pkwy (signs for George Washington Bridge)
• Take exit 6 for Bronx Pkwy South toward Sprain Pkwy
• Merge onto Bronx River Pkwy
• Take exit 5 for East 177 Street toward Sheridan Expwy/I-895 S/Triboro Bridge
• Merge onto East 177th Street
• Take the Interstate 895 S ramp
• Merge onto I-895 S
• Take the exit onto I-278 W
• Take the exit toward FDR Drive
• Merge onto New York State Reference Route 900G
• Take the 125 Street/2 Avenue exit
• Turn right onto E 125th Street/Dr Martin Luther King Jr Blvd
• Turn left at the 3rd cross street onto Lexington Avenue
• Turn right onto E 69th Street
• 127 E 69th Street
From Long Island
• Take the ramp onto I-495 W
• Take the exit on the left toward E 35th Street
• Take the 1st right onto 3rd Avenue
• Turn left onto E 69th Street
• 127 E 69th Street
From New Jersey
• Take the I-95 N exit on the left toward G W Bridge/New York City
• Merge onto Interstate 95N Lower Level
• Slight left onto U.S. 9N
• Merge onto Interstate 95N Upper Level
• Take exit 2 for Amsterdam Avenue toward University Avenue
• Merge onto Harlem River Drive
• Take exit 20 to merge onto Park Avenue toward E 132 Street
• Turn left onto E 116th Street/Luis Munoz Marin Blvd
• Take the 1st right onto Lexington Avenue
• Turn right onto E 69th Street
• 127 E 69th Street
Parking:
There are many parking garages in the neighborhood, including the following:
Central Parking System
222 E 65th Street
212 758 8413
Imperial Parking Systems Inc
650 Park Avenue
212 744 7746
67 Street & 2 Avenue Garage Inc
254 E 68th Street
212 861 3603
Mutual Parking
135 E 71 Street
212 879 1801
Central Parking Systems
910 5th Avenue
212 439 1951
Including Property from the following:
Distinguished American Collector
Of a Lady
Of a Massachusetts Gentleman
Of a New York Gentleman
A New Jersey Collection
A Southwestern Lady
New England Family
Private American Collector
A New Jersey Gentleman
Historic Park-McCullough Association, North Bennington, VT
A Distinguished New England Family
A Private Collection
A Distinguished Midwest Collection
A Long Island Collector
Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com 5
Property of a Massachusetts Gentleman
3British School
Pair of early 18th century Portraits of a Man
and a Woman
Oil on canvasIn early carved and gilt wooden frames (2) 30 x 24 inches (oval)
$4,000-6,000
Provenance: Purchased by the present owner at Hubley’s Auction Gallery, Cambridge, Massachusetts, circa 1970
Property of a Distinguished American Collector
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British School, late 16th Century
Portrait of Dorothy Petre, Lady Wadham (1534-1618), 1595
Inscribed with sitter and age upper rightOil on Canvas36 x 29 inches
$5,000-10,000
Provenance: Newhouse Galleries, circa 1960’s
Dorothy Wadham (1534/4-1618), the daughter of Sir William Petre, co-founded Wadham College at Oxford University with her husband, Nicholas Wadham. A simi-lar portrait of her is in the collection of Petworth House, in Petworth, West Sussex, England, where it is accompanied by a companion portrait of her husband.
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British School, late 16th Century
Edward Hastings, Baron Hastings of Loughborough (1512/15-1572)
Inscribed variously versoOil on cradled panel 35 x 27 inches
$6,000-12,000
Provenance: Newhouse Galleries, circa 1960’s
Exhibitions: National Portrait Gallery, 1866
Edward Hastings, Baron Hastings of Loughborough (1512/15-1572) served as a privy to Queen Mary I. He was elected to the Order of the Garter in 1555, and is pictured here wearing the Order’s collar around his neck. The inscription surrounding his coat of arms, “Honi soit qui mal y pense” refers to the Order’s motto. This pic-ture was exhibited at the First Special Exhibition of National Portraits in April 1866 at the South Kensington Museum in London, England, which was organized to display portraits of signifi cant people in the history of England.
AUCTION BEGINS AT 10:00 AM
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6 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Property of a Lady
4Attributed to Roelof Koets, (1592-1653)
Grapes, Quinces, Plums and Pears on a Tabletop
Unsigned
Oil on panel 20 1/2 x 32 5/8 inches
$8,000-15,000
Provenance: Donald Antiques, London, England, October 1951;By descent in the family
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Another Owner
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Attributed to Jost Amman (Swiss, 1539-1591)
Sampson Carrying Off the Gates of Gaza
Ink on paper 10 x 6 1/2 inches
$5,000-10,000
The drawing includes two collector’s marks. This fi rst (Lugt L.2672), distinguished by the inclusion of a lion, belongs to the Austrian collector Ludwig Zatzka (b. 1857) whose collection included around 2,000 folios, European paintings and bronze sculptures. The other mark (Lugt L.2347), which includes the initials “SAG”, is unidentifi ed but possibly belongs to Count Saint-Germain or the Artaria publishing house in Vienna.
6Italian School, 18th Century
Italian Ruins
UnsignedOil on canvas 30 x 40 1/4 inches
$2,000-4,000
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9Attributed to Thomas Doughty (American, 1793-1856)
Rushing River through a Ravine
UnsignedOil on canvasRetains its original spandrel frame 34 1/4 x 44 1/4 inches
$10,000-20,000
Another Owner
8Edward Moran (American, 1829-1901)
Unloading the Boat, Sunset
Signed lower left “Ed Moran”Oil on canvas18 x 14 inches
$5,000-10,000
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Property of a New York Gentleman
7Harry Fenn (American, 1845-1911)
Rushing Forest Stream
Signed lower left “H Fenn”Oil on canvas 24 x 20 inches
$4,500-6,500
Provenance: Private collection, New York
8 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
10American School, 19th Century
Fishing at the River’s Edge
Oil on canvas18 1/2 x 32 inches
$2,000-4,000
Property of a New Jersey Collection
11James Brade Sword (American, 1839-1915)
Wish We Could Go Play, 1883
Signed and dated lower right “J B Sword ‘83”Inscribed with title versoOil on canvas24 x 15 1/2 inches
$3,000-5,000
12James Gale Tyler (American, 1855-1931)
Busy Harbor
Signed lower left “J. G. Tyler”Oil on canvas22 x 18 1/8 inches
$2,000-4,000
13Samuel S. Carr (American, 1837-1908)
Picking Goldenrod
Signed lower left “S.S. Carr”Oil on canvas10 x 14 inches
$5,000-8,000
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Property of a Southwestern lady
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David Johnson (American, 1827-1908)
Sunset on the Unadilla River, New York, 1856
Signed and dated lower left, “D Johnson 1856”
Inscribed and titled on a label affi xed to the frameOil on CanvasRetains the original frame19 x 28 1/8 inches
$50,000-80,000
Johnson claimed to be self-taught, but records show he studied at the National Academy of Design, and with Hudson River artist Jasper Cropsey (a student of Frederic Edwin Church).
Johnson exhibited at the National Academy of Design regularly and became an associate in 1860 and a full academician the following year. His works also appeared in exhibitions at other major American art centers, including Chicago, Boston and Philadelphia, and Scenery on the Housatonic was shown at the Paris Salon of 1877.
Johnson’s Sunset on the Unadilla River from 1856 has the infl uence of Frederic Edwin Church in use of brilliant salmon colored ground in the sky, and meticulous detail in the foliage. This work is not only a classic painting of the Hudson River School, characteristic of the very best of Johnson’s work, but has an engaging subtle narrative which leads the viewer through the landscape from the fi gure on the bridge to the homestead beyond.
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17Alexander Lawrie (American, 1828-1917)
Mountain Lake with Rocky Shoreline in Autumn
Signed lower left, “A. Lawrie”Oil on panel An old label verso from Curtis H Moyer of Hartford, Connecticut 6 7/8 x 8 5/8 inches
$500-700
16George William Whitaker (American, 1841-1916)
Rainbow after the Storm, 1898
Signed and dated lower right “G W Whitaker / -98-”Oil on canvas 16 1/8 x 24 3/8 inches
$3,000-5,000
Various Owners
1519th Century American School
Landscape with Native American Warrior
Signed on stretcher in chalk “T J Jones (?)” in early 19th C. scriptOil on canvas 20 x 26 3/4 inches
$1,000-2,000
Property of a Georgia Family
18William Trost Richards (American, 1833-1905)
The Otter Cliffs, Mount Desert Island, Maine, 1866
Signed and dated lower right “WM T Richards / 1866”Oil on panel backed canvas36 1/4 x 29 inches
$40,000-100,000
William Trost Richards returned from Germany in the spring of 1866. He traveled to Mount Desert Island, Maine, perhaps encouraged by fellow artists, Thomas Cole, Frederic Edwin Church, Jervis McEntee and William Stanley Haseltine. This is one of the few paintings extant from that trip. It signifi es an important transition from pure landscape painting to his atmospheric coastal scenes, a subject that would occupy him for the rest of his prolifi c career.
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12 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Another Owner
19Edward Mitchell Bannister (American, 1828-1901)
Sheep Grazing in a Newport, Rhode Island
Landscape
Signed lower right “E M Bannister”Oil on canvas12 x 16 inches
$8,000-12,000
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Property of a New Jersey Collection
20Henri Rondel (French, 1857-1919)
Young Girl Fishing at a Stream
Signed lower right “H Rondel”Oil on canvas 12 1/8 x 9 1/4 inches
$1,500-2,500
Various Owners
21George William Whitaker (American, 1841-1916)
An Opulent Fruit Still Life with Grapes, Oranges, Plums and Pears with a Silver Charger, 1899
Signed and dated lower left “G. W. Whitaker ‘99”Oil on canvas26 x 22 inches
$3,000-5,000
Provenance: Gift from the artist to Moses Brown School, Providence, Rhode Island, 1902;Gift to a custodian of the school, circa 1965;Thence by descent; Private Collection
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George Henry Hall (American, 1825-1913)
A Plea for Peace, 1861
Signed and dated lower left “G.H. Hall / 1861”Oil on board 18 3/4 x 15 inches
$25,000-45,000
Provenance: The Late Ms. Delia P. Frissora of Watertown, Mass.This work was purportedly loaned to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in 1972.George Henry Hall’s A Plea for Peace called into question the feminine qualities gen-erally associated with fl oral still-lifes. Hall, who earlier in his career painted historical and allegorical subjects, managed to refl ect the political turbulence of the times by depicting fl owers in patriotic colors sitting in a rifl e. In doing so Hall juxtaposed the fragility and vibrancy of the fl owers with a sense of impending destruction. Painted in 1861 at the beginning of the American Civil War, A Plea for Peace sent a clear mes-sage of what was at stake for a country newly at war.
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Property of a New Jersey Collection
26Frederick Arthur Bridgman (American, 1847-1928)
Camel and Merchant at a Town Gate
Signed with initials and inscribed, “To my friend WB”Oil on panel22 x 16 1/2 inches
$5,000-10,000
Property of a New Jersey Collection
23William McDougal Hart (American, 1823-1894)
Watering at Sunset
Signed lower right “W. Hart”Oil on panel10 x 16 inches
$3,000-6,000
Property of Various Owners
24Salomon Leonardus Verveer (Dutch, 1813-1876)
Figures by a Stream at Sunset, Windmill Beyond, 1861
Signed and dated lower right “S. L. Verveer 1861”Oil on canvas 15 1/4 x 22 inches
$4,000-8,000
25Alexandre Defaux (French, 1826-1900)
Study of Cows and Chickens
Signed lower right “A. DeFaux”Oil on canvas21 1/4 x 25 1/2 inches
$4,000-6,000
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Property from a New Jersey Collection
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Hamilton Hamilton (American, 1847-1928)
Sierras, 1873
Signed and dated and inscribed indistinctly with title lower right “Hamilton Hamilton ‘73 / Sierras S****” (indistinct)
Oil on canvas 18 x 29 7/8 inches $20,000-40,000
Hamilton Hamilton was largely self-taught, however, in 1870; he traveled to Europe, studying in Paris. After two years, he returned home opening a portrait studio in 1872. In 1873 he made a sketching trip west to Colorado and spent much of the summer and winter there, completing forty-seven paintings. Filled with brilliant and luminous color, few of these works are known to exist today. His Colorado paintings were chosen for exhibition in the 1876 Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, PA. He later turned to impressionism, but his Western Landscapes have stood the test of time being his most sought after works.
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16 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Property of Various Owners
28Frederick R. Wagner (American, 1864-1940)
Mother and Child Reading
Signed upper right “F. Wagner”Pastel on paper 8 x 10 1/2 inches
$1,000-2,000
29Frederick R. Wagner (American, 1864-1940)
Public Building with American Flags
Signed lower left “F. Wagner”Pastel on paper 9 x 11 1/2 inches
$1,000-2,000
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30George W. Seavey (American, 1841-1916)
Fresh Cut Roses
Signed lower right Oil on canvas 10 x 14 inches
$600-800
Provenance: Mrs. Delia P. Frissora, Watertown, Massachusetts
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Property from a Prominent New England Family
31David Johnson (American, 1827-1908)
On the Wa-wa-yan-da Orange Co. NY, 1875
Signed with conjoined initials and dated ‘75 lower rightSigned again verso and dated DJ. 1875Inscribed with title and Orange Co. NY on the stretcher Inscribed indistinctly on the stretcherOil on canvas9 1/4 x 12 inches
$3,000-5,000
Provenance: Curtis H. Moyer Pictures and Framers, Hartford Conn Label verso
Property from a Private American Collection
32William Trost Richards (American, 1833-1905)
Guernsey, Low Tide
Signed lower left “Wm. T. Richards”Oil on artist’s board 9 x 16 inches
$8,000-12,000
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36Frederick R. Wagner (American, 1864-1940)
Inner Harbor
Signed lower right “F. Wagner”Pastel on paper 4 1/2 x 6 inches
$1,000-2,000
Property of Various Owners
33Harriet Bowdoin (American, 1880-1947)
Figures by Shore
Signed lower left “Harriet Bowdoin”Oil on panel 9 x 11 inches
$3,000-4,000
34John Henry Dolph (American, 1835-1903)
Still Life with Grapes and Pears, Butterfl ies Fluttering, 1864
Signed with conjoined initials and dated lower right “JHD, 1864”Oil on artist’s board5 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches
$800-1,200
35Frederick R. Wagner (American, 1864-1940)
Boys Fishing on a Seaside Dock
Signed lower left “F. Wagner”Pastel on paper 5 x 6 inches
$1,000-2,000
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Property of a New Jersey Gentleman
37Frederick Childe Hassam (American, 1859-1935)
Wintertime In New York, 1893
Signed and dated lower left “Childe Hassam, New York, 1893”Watercolor and gouache with pen and ink on paperRetains original gilt frame2 1/2 x 8 1/2 inches
$30,000-60,000
Literature: This painting will be included in Stuart P. Feld’s and Kathleen M. Burnside’s forthcoming catalogue raisonné of the artist’s works.
Frederick Childe Hassam was born in 1859, in Dorchester, Massachusetts. He mar-ried in 1884 and moved to Paris two years later. Hassam moved to New York in 1889 where he lived until his death on 1935.
Hassam, noted for his urban scenes, chronicled the constant fl ux of Boston, Paris and New York. While he was known to paint in a variety of art colonies outside of the cities, his best works are that of the streets and the many types of people that inhabit them. City life was an endless inspiration for him, from the fl uttering of leaves as a carriage passes to the swoosh of skirts of the ladies as they cross the streets; he captures the bustle of the city. This work is particularly successful, even in its small scale, as it bursts with energy.
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DETAIL
Various Owners
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Jean Francois Raffaelli (French, 1850-1924)
Shoreline with a Fisherman in the Foreground
Signed lower left “JF. Raffaelli”Oil on board25 x 30 inches
$25,000-50,000
Jean Francois Raffaelli was born in Paris on April 20, 1850. He was accepted at the Paris Salon of 1870 despite his lack of formal training. He was known for picturesque views of quaint Paris neighborhoods and focused on scenes of middle-class life. He was associated with the Realists as well as the Impressionists, yet his work does not fall into either category. While in his earlier work was characterized by a somber pal-ette, which was contradiction to the Impressionists; their infl uence is felt in his later work with a lighter palette.
The Shoreline with a Fisherman is a classic subject for Raffaelli, with the expanding middle class and the growth of the suburbs around Paris, the artist had innumerable subjects from which to paint. This work is representative of the Raffaelli’s mature style. Lighter in color, but a broad brush, and small but strong energetic fi gures.
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20 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Proceeds to benefi t the Historic Park-McCullough Association, North Bennington, Vermont
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Hendrik Willem Mesdag (Dutch, 1831-1915)
Morning Fishing Boats at Anchor
Signed lower right “H W Mesdag”Oil on canvasInscribed with title on a label affi xed to the stretcher24 x 51 inches
$40,000-80,000
Provenance: Purchased by Eliza Hall Park McCullough and John G. McCullough circa 1900;And by descent in the family;The Park McCullough House Association, 1975
Hendrik Willem Mesdag was the fi rst of the artists to move to The Hague in 1869, followed by Maris, Israels Mauve and Weissenbruch, amongst many others. The group became known as “The Hague School” and was characterized by paintings with muted tones in warm greys. The critic Jacob van Stanten Kolff described the work as “intent to convey mood, tone takes precedence over color… almost exclu-sive preference for so-called…gray mood.”
This work Morning: Fishing Boats at Anchor, is one of Mesdag’s masterpieces, with its grand scale, and rhythmic arrangement of fi gures and boats. The subtle tonal quality of the greys, pinks and blues are visible even under 100 years of surface grime and aged varnish.
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The Property of a Prominent New England Family
40John Fabian Carlson (American, 1874-1945)
Sunrise on the Shore
Signed lower right “John F. Carlson”Signed again dated “jan, 7th 1917” and inscribed “To Susan and Boardman Tyler/ In memory of a very/ wonderful day/ From Margaret G. and John F. Carlson/ with affectionate regard”Oil on board mounted to paperboardUnframed8 1/4 x 10 1/4 inches
together with May Morning
Oil on canvas board8 1/4 x 10 1/4 inches(2)
$3,000-5,000
Property from a New Jersey Collection
41Chauncey Foster Ryder (American, 1868-1949)
Egremont, Massachusetts
Signed lower left “Chauncy F Ryder”Oil on canvas 12 x 16 inches
$2,000-4,000
42Bruce Crane (American, 1857-1937)
Spring Walk
Signed lower right “BRUCE CRANE”Oil on canvas22 x 32 inches
$8,000-12,000
Property from Various Owners
43American School, circa 1850
Holding the Fort
UnsignedOil on canvasUnframed 20 x 16 inches
$800-1,200
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Property from a Private Collection
44Charles Marion Russell (1864-1926)
Wood Nymph With Rabbit
UnsignedOil on canvas9 x 5 1/4 inches
$15,000-25,000
Provenance: Trails End Gallery, Pasadena, California;The Hammer Brothers, New York, New York by 1957To Private Collection, circa 1972
Exhibitions: Los Angeles, California, Department of Municipal Art, August 29- September 13, 1957; San Francisco California palace of the Legion of Honor (September ‘57); Fine Art Gallery, October 1-12, 1957; Great Falls Montana, The C.M. Russell Foundation, Inc., Oct 14-26, 1957, catalogue number 77Calgary Allied Art Council
*Please visit KenoAuctions.com for a write up on this painting by Byron Price, Director,
Charles M. Russell Center for the Story of the American West, University of Oklahoma
45Charles Marion Russell (1864-1926)
The Burning of the Tonquin
UnsignedOil on canvas7 7/8 x 12 1/2 inches
$20,000-40,000
Provenance: Trails End Gallery, Pasadena, California;The Hammer Brothers, New York, New York by 1957To Private Collection, circa 1972
Exhibitions: Los Angeles, California, Department of Municipal Art, August 29- September 13, 1957; San Francisco California Palace of the Legion of Honor (September ‘57); Fine Art Gallery, October 1-12, 1957; Great Falls Montana, The C.M. Russell Foundation, Inc., Oct 14-26, 1957, catalogue number 77Calgary Allied Art Council
*Please visit KenoAuctions.com for a write up on this painting by Byron Price, Director,
Charles M. Russell Center for the Story of the American West, University of Oklahoma
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Property of Various Owners
47Alexander Helwig Wyant (American, 1836-1892)
Summer Stream
UnsignedOil on canvasRetains the original frame 30 1/8 x 40 1/4 inches
$5,000-10,000
49Theodore Wores (American, 1859-1939)
The Shrine in Spring
Signed lower right “Theodore Wores”Watercolor and gouache on paper laid down on board 13 x 19 1/2 inches
$2,500-4,500
* Visit KenoAuctions.com for a discussion of this work by William Gerdts
Property from a New Jersey Collection
48Mabel May Woodward (American, 1877-1945)
Sketching By the Sea
Signed lower left “M. Woodward”Oil on canvas 10 x 8 inches
$4,000-6,000
Property from Another Owner
46Walter Farndon (American, 1876-1964)
The Old Grist Mill
Signed lower left “Walter Farndon NA”Inscribed with title and Roslyn, New York versoalso inscribed “From Marie and Walter” versoOil on masonite14 x 18 inches
$1,500-3,000
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Property of a Lady
50John LaFarge (American, 1835-1910)
Study on the Reef at Tautira, Tahiti, 1891
Unsigned
Watercolor and gouache on paper
8 x 9 inches (sight)
$15,000-30,000
Provenance: Vance Jordan Fine Art, Inc., circa 2002
Exhibitions: Records of Travel, New York, no. 170; Paris, no. 169
John LaFarge’s Second Paradise, Voyages in the South Seas 1890-1891: Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut, Oct. 19, 2010- January 2, 2011; Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover, Massachusetts, January 22- March 27, 2011, Catalogue number 38
In February of 1891, John LaFarge and Henry Adams were traveling from Papara along the Isthmus to the island of Taiarapu, where they met Ori, the chief of the Teva clan, who Robert Louis Stevenson had met in1888. Stevenson had written a letter of introduction for La Farge and Adams.
LaFarge painted just two watercolors of the reefs, this being the crisper more detailed of the two. Lafarge wrote in his Record of Travel, “to go to the reef which runs along exactly like a great coastway… and to see the great waves break against this wall, then run in innumerable ripples over the edge in to the quiet water inside the reef.”
51John LaFarge (American, 1835-1910)
Flower Study: Cobaea Scandens (Cup and Sau-
cer Vine), circa 1906
UnsignedWatercolor and gouache on brown toned paper 7 1/2 x 5 1/2 inches
$5,000-7,000
Provenance: Vance Jordan Fine Art Inc., New York, NY
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Property of a New Jersey Collection
54Hayley Lever (American, 1876-1958)
Pears Still Life, 1943
Signed and dated lower right “Hayley Lever 1943”Signed again, inscribed and dated versoOil on board16 x 24 1/2 inches
$4,000-6,000
Property of Another Owner
52Frederick R. Wagner (American, 1864-1940)
Sunrise
Signed lower right center “F. Wagner”Pastel on paper 7 1/2 x 6 1/4 inches
$1,000-2,000
53Frederick R. Wagner (American, 1864-1940)
Path to the Barn
Signed lower right “F. Wagner”Pastel on paper 6 1/2 x 7 3/4 inches
$1,000-2,000
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56Reginald Marsh (American, 1898-1954)
Two Women on a Boardwalk, 1943
Signed and dated lower right “R. Marsh 1943”Watercolor on paper 11 x 9 1/2 inches
$6,000-10,000
Provenance: Hudson’s Department Store, Detroit, Michigan
Reginald Marsh was known for his depictions of life in New York City in the 1920s through 1950s. Crowded Coney Island beach scenes, popular entertainments such as vaudeville and burlesque, women, and jobless men on the Bowery are subjects that reappear throughout his work. Two Women on the Boardwalk is an iconic exam-ple of Marsh’s watercolors from the depression era, his women are voluptuous and powerful. The work is infused with rich color and bold pen and ink lines, which attest to his love of Tiepolo drawings, and energize the watercolor
Property from a Distinguished Midwest Collection
55George Benjamin Luks (American, 1867-1933)
Children of the Street
Signed lower right “George Luks”Inscribed with title versoOil on canvas 20 x 16 1/8 inches
$12,000-18,000
Luks made many paintings of working class subjects and scenes of the urban street. Luks’s representations of immi-grant shoppers, pushcart peddlers, casual strollers and curious onlookers of the ethnic variety characterized metropolitan, turn-of-the century New York. It was very important for the artists associated with the Ashcan school to depict real life.
Luks’s work typifi es the ‘real-life’ scenes painted by the Ashcan School artists, in Children of the Street, Luks paints a three young children, a blond adolescent , a dark haired youth and an Asian child, huddled together in a red blanket for warmth. His bold brush and thick impasto together with his social consciousness are hallmarks of his best work.
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Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com 27
57Jerome Myers (American, 1867-1940)
Carousel, 1930
Signed and dated lower right “Jerome Myers 1930” Oil on canvas 25 x 30 inches
$12,000-18,000
Provenance: Vose Galleries, Boston, MA
Myers studied at in Paris and in NY at the Art Students League but his main classroom was the streets of New York’s lower East Side. His strong interest and feelings for the new immigrants and their life resulted in hundreds of drawings, paintings, etch-ings and watercolors. He capturing the whole pan-orama of their lives as found outside of the crowded tenements which were their fi rst homes in America.
In Carrousel, he captures the Mothers and Children of the working class enjoying the carefree festival atmo-sphere of the Carrousel and the park. The arrangement of colorful and active fi gures plays off against the broad sweep of grey ground, highlighting the buoyant environment.
Property of a Private American Collection
58Milton Avery (American, 1885-1965)
Beach Photographer, 1930
Signed lower left center “Milton Avery”Watercolor and gouache on black paper17 1/2 x 24 inches (sight)
$20,000-40,000
Provenance: Riva Yares Gallery, Scottsdale, Arizona
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28 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com 29
Property from a Distinguished Midwest Collection
59Charles Demuth (American, 1883-1935)
Two Men and a Woman on the Beach, 1912
Signed and dated lower right “C. Demuth 1912”Watercolor over pencil on paper on board 8 1/2 x 5 1/4 inches (sight)
$12,000-18,000
Provenance: Durlacher Brothers, New YorkNew York, The Museum of Modern Art, Charles Demuth A Retrospective Exhibition, 1950, no. 10
Charles Demuth was born in 1883 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania to a prosperous fam-ily in the tobacco business, who encouraged his artistic pursuits. He studied at the School of Industrial Art in Philadelphia from 1903 to 1905. He traveled to Paris frequently from 1904 till 1914, living the bohemian life and associating with Gertrude and Leo Stein in Paris and absorbing the many aspects of Modernism. By 1914, he became one of the modernist artists associated with Alfred Stieglitz. He was friends with Marcel Duchamp; they spent time together in Harlem jazz clubs and Greenwich Village bars, which became the subject of many of his watercolors.
Demuth’s works, primarily, in watercolor are characterized with an economy of sinu-ous line, and controlled application of watercolor. Two Men and a Woman on the
Beach, from 1912 is typical of his offbeat world view and humor, with a woman fully clothed in a fox stole conversing with male bathers.
Property of Various Owners
60Milton Avery (American, 1885-1965)
Red Refl ections, 1959
Signed and dated lower left “Milton Avery 1959”Oil crayon on paper 15 x 22 inches
$8,000-12,000
Provenance: The Avery Trust;
David Barnett gallery;
Private Collection
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61Victor Higgins (American, 1884-1949)
Western Mountains
Signed lower right “Victor Higgins”Watercolor on paper 15 x 21 1/2 inches
$15,000-25,000
62Paul A Grimm (American, 1891-1974)
San Jacinto’s Front Yard
Signed lower right “Paul Grimm”Signed and inscribed with title verso Oil on canvas24 x 30 inches
$2,500-4,500
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30 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Property from a Private American Collection
63Esteban Vicente (American, 1903-2001)
On Space, 1987
Signed, dated and inscribed with title verso “Esteban Vicente”Oil on Canvas54 x 64 inches
$30,000-60,000
Provenance: Riva Yares Gallery, Scottsdale, Arizona, circa 1988Purchased from the above by the present owner
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Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com 31
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Property from a Distinguished Midwest Collection
64Aaron Bohrod (American, 1907-1992)
Mother Earth
Signed and dated indistinctly lower right 19..?Oil on masonite 12 x 16 inches
$5,000-8,000
This work is a commentary on organic and inorganic substances, our material society and the passage of time.
Property from a New Jersey Collection
65Lodewijk Karel Bruckman (Dutch, 1913 - 1980)
Egg, 1960
Signed upper right “Lodewijk / Bruckman / f ‘60 t”Signed, inscribed and dated verso “Lodewijk Bruckman / Providence / Cape Cod / Mass. / 1960”Tempera on canvas20 1/2 x 14 1/2 inches
$2,000-4,000
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Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com 33
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Matta left Chile as a young man, for Paris to study, New York to work and Rome to live his mature years. He did not like to be thought of as a “Latin American” art-ist. He was one of the few Surrealist artists to take on political, social, and spiritual themes directly and without abandoning the biomorphic mutations for which he was known. His most characteristic works border on abstraction and evoke fantastic subjective landscapes. This work Topologie de Illusion from 1990 has an otherworldly fantastic aura which is the hallmark of his work.
Property of a Private American Collection
66Roberto Anotonio (Echaurren) Matta (Chilean, 1911-2002)
Topologie de I’illusion, 1990
Signed lower rightSigned again, inscribed with title versoAcrylic on canvas 74 1/2 x 82 3/4 inches
$50,000-100,000
Provenance: Riva Yares Gallery, Scottsdale, Arizona, circa 1991Purchased from the above by the present owner
34 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
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68
Property of Various Owners
68Lester F. Johnson (American, 1919-2010)
Three Women Walking
Signed lower right “Lester Johnson”Oil on Canvas 30 x 20 inches
$5,000-10,000
69Nicola Hicks (British, 1960)
Wild Boar
Charcoal on brown wrapping paper39 1/2 x 51 inches
$4,000-6,000
Provenance: Sold Sotheby’s London, Wed., Nov.26, 1997, Lot 126
Property from a New Jersey Collection
67Raphael Soyer (American, 1899-1987)
The Bathrobe
Signed lower right “RAPHAEL SOYER”Oil on canvas24 1/2 x 16 inches
$2,000-3,000
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Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com 35
Property of a Long Island Collector
70Jean Paul Riopelle (Canadian, 1923-2002)
Folâtre, 1957
Signed lower right “Riopelle”
23 1/2 x 28 1/2 inches
$80,000-120,000
Provenance: Jane Kahan Gallery, 1992 Purchased from the above by the present owner
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Literature: Michel Waldberg, Yseult Riopelle, Monique Brunet-Weinmann, François Odermatt (Editor), Jean Paul Riopelle: catalogue raisonné, Montreal: Hibou Éditeurs, 1999, Cat No. 1957-059, illustrated
Riopelle was a member of the group Les Automatistes (founded by Montreal art-ist Paul-Emile Bourduas, the group was infl uenced by Surrealism and its theory of automatism). This movement was seen as the beginning of Canadian Modern Art. Many of this group worked in Paris and New York. In Paris in the early 1950s he was known as the ‘Wild Canadian’, not only because of his exuberant artistic style, but also because of his lifestyle. In the 1960s-80, he had a relationship with Joan Mitchell, who had a great infl uence on his work.
Affi liated with the post war modernists, he created works of heavy impasto and quite often squeezed paint directly from the tube onto the canvas. In the 50s and 60s, he frequently used a palette knife; this work Foltâre is emblematic of that which is con-sidered his best period.
36 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
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73Ilya Bolotowsky (Russian-American, 1907-1981)
Geometric Abstraction, 1953
Signed lower right “I. Bolotowsky / 53”Mixed media on cardboard 7 1/2 x 10 inches
$3,000-5,000
End of Sale
72John M. Johansen (American, b. 1916)
Modernist Edifi ce, 1953
Signed and dated lower left “John MacL. Johansen / ‘53”Watercolor and gouache on paper26 x 19 inches (sight)
$2,000-4,000
Provenance: Acquired directly from the artist;By descent in the family
Property of Various Owners
71Robert Arthur Goodnough (American, 1917-2010)
Abduction by Boat, 1963 (A Tondo)
Signed and dated lower right “Goodnough / ‘63”Signed, dated and inscribed with title versoOil on canvas 47 inches, diameter
$2,000-4,000
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Index
Lot
Amman, Jost 5
Avery, Milton 58, 60
Bannister, Edward Mitchell 19
Bohrod, Aaron 64
Bolotowsky, Ilya 73
Bowdoin, Harriet 33
Bridgman, Frederick Arthur 26
Bruckman, Lodewijk Karel 65
Carlson, John Fabian 40
Carr, Samuel S. 13
Crane, Bruce 42
Defaux, Alexandre 25
Demuth, Charles 59
Dolph, John Henry 34
Doughty, Thomas 9
Farndon, Walter 46
Fenn, Harry 7
Goodnough, Robert Arthur 71
Grimm, Paul A. 62
Hall, George Henry 22
Hamilton, Hamilton 27
Hart, William McDougal 23
Hassam, Frederick Childe 37
Hicks, Nicola 69
Higgins, Victor 61
Johansen, John M. 72
Johnson, David 14, 31
Johnson, Lester F. 68
Kneller, Sir Godfrey 3
Koets, Roelof 4
LaFarge, John 50, 51
Lawrie, Alexander 17
Lever, Hayley 54
Luks, George Benjamin 55
Lot
Marsh, Reginald 56
Matta, Robero Anotonio (Echaurren) 66
Mesdag, Hendrik Willem 39
Moran, Edward 8
Myers, Jerome 57
Raffaelli, Jean Francois 38
Richards, William Trost 18, 32
Ryder, Chauncey Foster 41
Riopelle, Jean Paul 70
Rondel, Henri 20
Russell, Charles Marion 44, 45
Seavey, George W. 30
Soyer, Ralph 67
Sword, James Brade 11
Tyler, James Gale 12
Verveer, Salomon Leonardus 24
Vicente, Esteban 63
Wagner, Frederick R. 28, 29, 35, 36, 52, 53
Whitaker, George William 16, 21
Woodward, Mabel May 48
Wores, Theodore 49
Wyant, Alexander Helwig 47
38 Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com
Bidding Increments The auctioneer will commence the bidding at any level and in increments con-sidered appropriate. Bids will be sought in increments selected by the auction-eer who will have the absolute discretion to select any increments for any lot (and the discretion to vary the increments in the course of the bidding for any lot). However, generally speaking, the increments will depend upon the low estimate for the lot. Thus for example, for lots having a low estimate below $1,000, bids will be sought at increments of $50. The normal pattern for bid-ding increments will be as follows:
Low Estimate Increments< 999 $50s$1,000 – 1,999 $100s$2,000 – 4,999 $250s$5,000 – 9,999 $500s$10,000 – 29,999 $1,000s$30,000 – 49,999 $2,500s$50,000 – 99,999 $5,000s> $100,000 at auctioneer’s discretion
These increments may vary during the course of the auction at the discretion of the auctioneer.
Estimates Pre-sale estimates are provided to encourage competitive bidding. These esti-mates may not be relied upon as any predictions of the selling price and may not be considered to be any opinion or representation regarding the value of the property. Keno Auctions shall not be responsible or liable for any differ-ence between a pre-sale estimate and the actual selling price for any lot.
Reserves Unless otherwise indicated, all lots are offered subject to a reserve, which is a confi dential minimum price set by the seller below which the lot will be not be sold. The reserve will not exceed a given low pre-sale estimate at the time of the auction. Regardless of whether there is a reserve, the auctioneer may reject any bid and withdraw any lot for any reason. In order to comply with the seller’s reserve on any lot, the auctioneer may open bidding by placing a bid on behalf of the seller. The auctioneer may bid further on behalf of the seller (i.e. a bid from the book held by the auctioneer) up to the amount of the reserve by placing consecutive bids or by placing bids in response to other bidders. If a lot is not sold, the auctioneer will announce that fact (normally by stating that the lot has been unsold or passed).
Property of Keno Auctions / Guarantees Should Keno Auctions own any lot in whole or in part or have a fi nancial inter-est in any lot equivalent to an ownership interest, the catalogue will clearly iden-tify any such property as the Property of Keno Auctions. From time to time, a lot may be offered for which a guaranteed minimum price or an advance secured by the consigned property has been given to the seller. Such property will be identifi ed in the catalogue with the symbol * next to the lot number.
AFTER THE SALE
Successful BidsKeno Auctions is not able to notify successful absentee bidders. While invoices are sent out by mail after the auction we do not accept responsibility for notifying you of the result of your bid. Buyers are requested to contact us by telephone or in person as soon as possible after the sale to obtain details of the outcome of their bids to avoid incurring unnecessary handling charges.
Buyer’s Premium A buyer’s premium will be added to the hammer price of each lot and is pay-able as part of the total purchase price (comprising the hammer price, buyer’s premium and any applicable taxes). The buyer’s premium is 24% of the hammer price.
Sales TaxUnless exempted by applicable law, all purchases are subject to the 8.875% sales tax of the City and State of New York. Any buyer claiming exemption from sales tax must have the appropriate documentation on fi le with Keno Auctions prior to the release of the property.
Conditions of SaleParticipation in this auction is subject to and governed by the following contrac-tual terms. Each prospective buyer is deemed to have reviewed, understood and accepted these conditions of sale and participation in the auction in any manner (in person, by telephone, by written bid or on-line) constitute an accep-tance of these conditions of sale by the participant.
BEFORE THE SALECondition Every item offered for sale will be sold subject to the actual condition of the property at the time of the sale (generally referred to as ‘as is’). Prospective buyers are permitted and strongly encouraged to thoroughly examine any prop-erty before the auction with the understanding that there is no representation or warranty of any kind concerning the condition or any of the physical aspects of any items offered for sale. Catalogue descriptions or verbal statements are offered as opinion and shall not constitute a representation or warranty or assumption of liability of any nature whatsoever.
Registration before Bidding Prospective buyers who wish to bid in the saleroom can register online in advance of the sale, or can come to the saleroom approximately 30 minutes before the start of the sale to register in person. A prospective buyer must complete and sign a registration form and provide identifi cation (including a check acceptance form) before bidding.
Absentee Bidding Reasonable efforts will be used to carry out written bids delivered to us before the sale for the convenience of prospective purchasers who are not present at the auction in person, by an agent or by telephone. If written bids for identi-cal amounts are submitted for the same lot and are the highest bids on this lot at the auction, the property will be sold to the person whose written bid was received and accepted fi rst. Execution of written bids is a free service under-taken subject to other commitments at the time of the sale and there shall be no liability for failing to execute any written bid or for errors and omissions in connection with any written bid.
Telephone Bidding Telephone bids will be accepted on lots with a low estimate of more than $2,500, no later than twenty-four (24) hours prior to the commencement of the sale and only if capacity allows. Arrangements to bid in languages other than English must be made well in advance of the sale. We will use reasonable efforts to contact prospective purchasers to enable them to participate in the bidding by telephone as a free service, however there will be no liability for any failure or for any errors or omissions in connection with telephone bidding.
Online BiddingPlease register for online bidding at KenoAuctions.com. Reasonable efforts will be exerted to place on-line bids in the saleroom. However there will be no liability for any failure or error in the placement of such bids.
AT THE SALE
Terms of Bidding The auctioneer has the absolute and sole discretion to refuse any bid and to advance the bidding in any manner. The auctioneer also has the right to with-draw any lot, and in the case of error and dispute (whether during or after the sale) to determine the successful bidder, to continue the bidding, to cancel the sale or to reoffer and resell the property. The highest bidder acknowledged by the auctioneer will be the purchaser. In the case of a tie bid, the winning bidder will be determined at the sole discretion of the auctioneer. In the event of a dispute between bidders, the auctioneer has fi nal discretion to determine the successful bidder or to reoffer the lot in dispute. If any dispute arises after the sale, the sale record of the auctioneer is conclusive.
Participation in the auction may be disallowed for any reason. A bid is an offer to purchase and by making a successful bid, a bidder is accepting personal liabil-ity to pay the purchase price, plus the buyer’s premium, all applicable taxes and all other applicable charges.
Additional Information and Condition Reports at Kenoauctions.com 39
In the event that the property is removed from the auction premises by Keno Auctions, the buyer will be charged for 120% of the actual packing and shipping cost incurred in transporting the property and a daily storage charge of 1.5% of the purchase price of the property (commencing on the day following the completion of the auction). At the option of Keno Auctions the property may be transferred to and stored at a bonded warehouse and the buyer agrees to pay all the transfer and storage expenses and accepts all risks of loss or damage. Keno Auctions will only release the items after payment in full has been made of transportation, administration, handling, insurance any other costs incurred, together with all other amounts due to us.
Warranty Except as specifi cally described in this particular condition, Keno Auctions makes no representation or warranty of any kind as to the accuracy of any description of any lot and any information regarding any subject including quality, authentic-ity, medium, size, date, importance, rarity, provenance or historical relevance. Any statements made in the catalogue or at the sale or in any invoice or in any other writing shall not be deemed or constitute any warranty, representation, statement of fact or assumption of liability. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Keno Auctions will warrant the accuracy of any statement or information set forth in BOLD type in the catalogue description of the lot, unless clearly and conspicuously modifi ed prior to the bidding on the applicable lot. This warranty regarding the information in bold type shall exist for a period of fi ve (5) years from the date of the auction and is given solely to and strictly for the benefi t of the original purchaser of record at the auction. It may not be transferred to any third party. Furthermore, the exclusive remedy of the original buyer in the event of any inaccuracy not otherwise excluded herein shall be a refund of the hammer price and buyer’s premium actually paid by the buyer for the lot at the time of the sale. Keno Auctions and its consignor shall not be liable for any incidental or consequential damages incurred or claimed under this warranty.
The warranty does not apply if: (i) a written claim supported by a written report by a recognized expert in the applicable fi eld is not delivered by the original buyer to Keno Auctions before the expiration of fi ve (5) years from the date of the sale; or (ii) the catalogue description was consistent with the opinion(s) of generally accepted scholar(s) and/or expert(s) at the date of the sale; or (iii) the only method of establishing any inaccuracy in the warranted informa-tion is by means or processes not generally available or accepted at the time of the auction sale or by means and processes at the time of the auction sale that could have caused damage to the lot or could have caused loss of value to the lot; or (iv) there has been no material loss in value of the lot from its value had it been in accordance with its description in the Bold type; or (v) the property is not returned to Keno Auctions in the same condition as on the date of the auction sale.
Governing Law These Conditions of Sale and the rights and obligations of all participants here-under, shall be governed by and construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of New York. The buyer and any agent for the buyer shall be deemed to have consented to the jurisdiction of the state courts of, and the federal courts sitting in, the State of New York.
Notice: Regarding jewelry, all weights and dimensions are approximate only. It is strongly recommended that you bring your own expert to examine any prop-erty prior to the auction. Regarding colored stones: Historically colored stones have been enhanced or treated to improve their appearance. It is widely believed that these treatments are permanent; buyers should assume that treatments may not be permanent and stones may require additional care over time. These treatments have been accepted by the jewelry trade. Keno Auctions, its employees, or representatives make no opinions or warran-ties regarding these enhancements/ treatments. All Jewelry is sold as is with no representations of enhancements, treatments or assumption of liability is assumed. This includes all weights, measurements, carats and clarity.
PaymentBuyers are expected to pay the full amount due (comprising the hammer price, the buyer’s premium and any applicable taxes) the day of the auction. Please note that Keno Auctions will not accept payments for purchased lots from any party other than the registered buyer.
Lots purchased may be paid for in the following ways:
(i) bank checks (ii) checks (iii) cash (up to $7,500)(iv) money orders (up to $7,500)(v) travelers checks (up to $7,500)(vi) Pay Pal (up to $10,000)
Bank checks and personal checks should be made payable to Keno Auctions. Checks must be drawn on a US bank and payable in US dollars. In order to process your payment effi ciently, please quote sale number, invoice number and client number with all transactions. Buyers not known to us who wish to write a check must complete a bidder registration form and check acceptance form no later than two business days preceding the auction.
Remedies for Non Payment If a buyer fails to make payment in full in good cleared funds, Keno Auctions shall be entitled in its absolute discretion to exercise anyone or more of the fol-lowing rights or remedies (in addition to asserting any other rights or remedies available by law):
(i) to charge interest at a rate of 1.5% per month;(ii) to charge $50 for any dishonored check; (iii) to hold the defaulting buyer liable for the total amount due and to com-mence legal proceedings for its recovery together with interest, legal fees and costs to the fullest extent permitted under applicable law; (iv) to cancel the sale; (v) to resell the property publicly or privately on any terms; (vi) to pay the seller an amount up to the net proceeds payable in respect of the amount bid by the defaulting buyer; (vii) where several amount are owed by the buyer in respect of different pur-chases, to apply any amount paid to discharge any amount owed in respect of any particular transaction, whether or not the buyer so directs; (viii) to reject at any future auction any bids made by or on behalf of the buyer or to obtain a deposit from the buyer before accepting any bids; (ix) to exercise all the rights and remedies of a person holding security over any property in our possession owned by the buyer, whether by way of pledge, security interest or in any other way, to the fullest extent permitted by the law of the place where such property is located and in this regard the buyer will be deemed to have granted such security to Keno Auctions which may retain such property as collateral security for such buyer’s obligations; (x) to take such other action as may be deemed necessary or appropriate. If the property is resold as described above, the defaulting buyer shall be liable for payment of any defi ciency between the total amount originally due and the price obtained upon resale as well as all costs, expenses, damages, legal fees and commissions and premiums of whatever kind associated with both sales or oth-erwise arising from the default. If any amount is paid to the seller as described above, the buyer acknowledges that Keno Auctions shall have all the rights of the seller, however arising, to pursue the buyer for such amount.
Collection of PurchasesWe shall be entitled to retain items sold until all amounts due to us have been received in full in good cleared funds or until the buyer has satisfi ed such other terms as we, in our sole discretion, shall require.
Packing, Handling, and ShippingThe removal of purchased property is entirely the responsibility of the buyer. Accordingly, packing, handling and shipping arrangements for any purchased lot is at the entire risk and cost of the buyer. Where we may suggest other handlers, packers or carriers if so requested, we do not accept responsibility or liability for their acts or omissions.
Failure to Collect Purchases Where purchases are not collected from the auction premises, whether or not payment has been made, Keno Auctions will remove and store such property in any manner and by any means that it deems appropriate. Keno Auctions will not be responsible or liable for any damage caused as a direct or indirect result of the removal and storage of such property.
INVITE TO CONSIGN
We are currently accepting property for our upcoming auctions
October 2, 2012
Fine European and American Paintings,
Furniture and Decorative Arts
Property accepted through July 20
January 2013
Important American Paintings, Furniture
and Decorative Arts
Property accepted through October 2
Queen Anne Cherry wood Chest-on-chest on Frame
Connecticut, circa 1760
Estimate $40,00 - 80,000
Naïve Painting Depicting African American Circus
American School, circa 1925
Estimate $7,000 - 10,000
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