SAVANNAH, GA.- Considered by many to be the Souths finest online auction house,
Everard Auctions & Appraisals combines traditional values and caring personal service with the latest Internet technology, making it a trusted choice within the art community worldwide. Everards next event, an October 26-28 Fall Southern Estates Auction, offers more than 900 lots of fine and decorative art from select sources in Georgia, South Carolina, Florida and beyond. Absentee bidding is now in progress, with live online bidding slated to begin at 10 am EDT on all three days of the auction series.
The memory of Everards exciting October 2020 sale of a Stephen Scott Young painting titled Tenth Son is still fresh in the minds of Southern regional art collectors. Youngs captivating watercolor depiction of an African American boy in summer attire a signed first study charmed bidders and had no trouble reaching a winning bid of $31,250. While many art aficionados were already familiar with Youngs work, others were delighted to discover the talented contemporary realist, whose luminous watercolors sensitively capture the people, landscapes and architecture of Americas coastal Southeast.
Everards October 26-28 auction will present another beautiful example of Youngs portraiture, a 1988 signed and dated watercolor study titled Island Pearl. It depicts an African American girl dressed in white and wearing an elegant pearl necklace. Stephen Young is admired for his mature style, which has been compared to such American masters as Winslow Homer and Andrew Wyeth, noted Amanda Everard, president of Everard Auctions. Measuring 27½ inches square, Island Pearl is entered with a $10,000-$15,000 estimate.
A bold abstract painting attributed to the influential African American artist Hale Woodruff (1900-1980) is executed in shades of blue, yellow, black and brown. The work is believed to have been created in the mid-1950s, when Woodruff later a founding member of Harlems legendary Spiral artists collective was living in New York and creating groundbreaking paintings, prints and murals that depicted the historic struggle and perseverance of African Americans.
Hale Woodruffs art education was considerable and went well beyond his technical training. He studied at the John Herron Art Institute in Indianapolis, Harvard University, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and at art academies in Paris, but also studied mural painting with Diego Rivera in Mexico. He also founded the countrys first fine art department for Southern African American students, at Atlanta University, said Everard. The painting attributed to Woodruff comes from a Tennessee private collection and was purchased at a St. Louis gallery, circa 1990s. It is offered with a $10,000-$15,000 estimate.
Another artist who was shaped by work done during the WPA period was William Wind McKim (Missouri/Kansas, 1916-1995). His teacher was none other than Thomas Hart Benton. McKims painting of a hunting scene, estimated at $3,000-$5,000, appears strongly influenced by Benton and will convey together with a vintage photo of the two artists.
The auction also features two works by Charles P Gruppe (Canadian/American, 1860-1940), a seascape by Anthony Thieme (American/Rockport school, 1888-1954), $3,000-$5,000; a wonderful 1884 painting of longhorn sheep by Robert Watson (British, 1865-1916), $1,000-$1,500; and a vibrant impressionist work by Spanish artist Joan Beltran Bofill (1934-2009) depicting women at the seashore, $3,000-$5,000. There are eight works by Evelyn Metzger (New York, 1911-2007), who explored many different styles including cubism, fauvism, impressionism and realism; and was a pioneer in the use of spray paint in fine art. Additionally, there are three paintings depicting fairies by illustrator Harold Gaze (1885-1962), and two Paul Goadby Stone (1928-1976) watercolors from the estate of Millicent Melaver, whose family was close friends with the artist.
Asian highlights include Cambodian sandstone fragment, Chinese huanghuali scholars cabinet, Warring States bird-form ceremonial cup, Ching table screen, Nepalese head vessel
The Asian section boasts exemplary pieces of Chinese, Japanese, Nepalese, Cambodian and Korean origin. Among the top lots are: a Warring States lacquer bird-form ceremonial cup, $3,000-$5,000; a large Nepalese terracotta head vessel, $2,000-$3,000; a Chinese late Ching hardwood and ivory table screen, $4,000-$6,000; and a Chinese huanghuali scholars cabinet, $3,000-$5,000. Distinguished provenance accompanies a Cambodian sandstone relief stele fragment dating to around the 13th century. It was a treasured item in the collection of the late Dr Richard Hall Chamberlain (1915-1975), a renowned radiologist and University of Pennsylvania professor who served as a consultant to the World Health Organization. Dr Chamberlains speaking tours took him to Southeast Asia several times, and it is there that he acquired the figural sandstone artwork, circa late 1960s. After Dr Chamberlains passing, the piece was inherited by his niece, Beth Pickels, of Marietta, Georgia, and later Florida. It carries a conservative auction estimate of $2,000-$3,000.
Decorative art highlights include a stunning Austro-Hungarian sterling silver chess set with enameled and jeweled decoration, $8,000-$12,000, a circa-1800 Carys New Celestial Globe on stand, $3,000-$5,000; a 19th-century Austrian ivory, enamel and semiprecious stone-mounted table clock with hidden drawers, $2,500-$5,000; and an S Kirk and Son (Baltimore) sterling silver repousse punch bowl with eight cups, $2,500-$4,000.
Items deaccessioned by the Telfair Museums in Savannah and formerly on display at the Owens Thomas House include a pair of monumental 19th-century four-light cut-glass candelabra, $4,000-$6,000; and a George III four-poster bed, $1,000-$1,500. A third Telfair Museums consignment, a Biblical artwork attributed to Francisco Collantes (Spanish, 1599-1656), depicts the flight of Jesus, Mary and Joseph into Egypt. Estimate: $2,000-$3,000.
Additional categories of interest include jewelry, musical instruments, WWI and WWII posters, furs, silver, including pieces by Tiffany, Cartier, Kirk and Buccellati; majolica, Staffordshire, and a large group of marsh paintings from a Hilton Head Island estate.