NEW YORK, NY.- Sothebys annual spring auction of American Art in New York will feature an important, highly personal painting by John Singer Sargent, which remained in the artists collection for more than 20 years before descending through his family to the present owner. Marionettes (est. $5/7 million) is a rare and dynamic example of the artists work outside of society portraiture, depicting a group of men from the large Italian American community of Philadelphia at the turn of the 20th century performing Sicilian puppet theater. The American Art auction also will be highlighted by a wonderful selection of property that has not been seen previously on the market, and has emerged from notable private, corporate and museum collections, with important works that span the many periods and styles offered by the category. The full sale will be on view in Sothebys York Avenue galleries beginning 18 May, with the auction on the 22nd followed that afternoon by an inaugural sale of Arts of the American West.
JOHN SINGER SARGENTS MARIONETTES
By the last decades of the 19th century, Sargent had established his reputation as a preeminent portrait painter. As his success grew, however, his interest in the genre gradually waned, as he never felt truly comfortable socializing in such powerful social circles. As a result, Sargents travels became more important as a source of creative stimulation he would stop accepting portrait commissions altogether by 1909, choosing instead to paint what he liked while exploring the world with friends and family.
Sargent painted Marionettes in 1903 during a four-month stay in the United States. At the time, Philadelphia was home to a large population of Italian-Americans who transported many of their cultural traditions with them Sicilian marionette theater among them. In the present work, Sargent presents a quartet of men operating these Sicilian rod puppets within a confined and dramatically lit interior. The painting was so personal to the artist that the kept it remained in his own collection until his death in 1925, at which point it descended through the Sargent family to the present owner.
Only six works by Sargent have ever come to auction with estimates of more than $5 million all of these have been sold at Sothebys New York, including Group with Parasols from the Fraad Collection that set the artists auction record of $23.5 million in 2004.
AMERICAN CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS
Sothebys is privileged to offer a diverse group of important works from four American museums as highlights of the May sale:
Three works sold by the Art Institute of Chicago are led by Fredric Remingtons Call the Doctor from 1889, an example of the artist and illustrators popular and romantic visions of the wild American West (est. $1/1.5 million). The painting seizes on a moment of dramatic action, when a heroic party of American soldiers must confront the extent of their wounded comrades injuries in the midst of a remote and unfamiliar locale.
- Property from the Museum of Modern Art, sold to benefit the acquisitions fund, features Trumpet Flowers from 1919, a rare work by Stanton Macdonald-Wright who, along with fellow American painter Morgan Russell, founded the aesthetic movement Synchromism (with color) in 1913 (est. $400/600,000). As exemplified by the present work, the Synchromist reverence for color proved profoundly influential on the development of modern art in the US.
- The Nevada Museum will offer Stuart Daviss Summer Landscape #2 to benefit future acquisitions (est. $300/400,000). Between 1930 and 1940, Davis produced a series of works based on a specific site in Rockport, Massachusetts, which he would visit during the summers. He produced the present example in 1940, in which the objective world is symbolized with abstracted forms and overlapping clocks of bold color.
- Two works from the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, sold to benefit the collection, include Norman Wilfred- Lewiss Meeting Place (Shopping), dated 1941 (est. $70/100,000). Part of a large concentration of works by Lewis acquired by George and the late Joyce Wein, the work depicts a group of eager women surrounding a store-front bin, in hopes of spotting a bargain during the Great Depression.
NORMAN ROCKWELL: AMERICAN ICON
Following the success of Sothebys November 2012 auction of American Art, in which five works by Norman Rockwell totaled $6.1 million, the May 2013 auction will offer a selection of six pieces by the iconic illustrator. Highlights include: Hes Going to Be Taller than Dad, a domestic scene of a boy and his faithful dog that stands among the finest examples of Rockwell's imagery as a commercial illustrator (est. $500/700,000); Doc Mellhorn and the Pearly Gates, which epitomizes Rockwells ability to market new products and technology in this case, the pharmaceutical and healthcare industries by tapping into the countrys nostalgia for the past (est. $500/700,000); and Sport (Man in a Fishing Boat), which appeared on the April 29, 1939 cover of the Saturday Evening Post featuring professional model and Rockwells personal friend Fred Hildebrandt in the setting of New Rochelle, NY (est. $500/700,000).
PROMINENT PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
Works emerging after decades spent in private collections include:
- Property from the estate of screen star Gregory Peck and his wife Veronique offers Music Makers by Milton Avery (est. $1/1.5 million). Averys figurative images from the 1940s exemplify the unique aesthetic approach that has made him among the most admired artists of the mid-20th century. Music Makers was painted in 1946-47, four years after he joined Paul Rosenbergs gallery in New York.
- Five works from the collection of David S. Copley of La Jolla, California, led by Eastman Johnsons Interesting News dated 1872 (est. $150/200,000). The work reflects many of the stylistic and thematic influences Johnson absorbed in Europe, and depicts a young woman who has disregarded her sewing materials in favor of a daily newspaper perhaps illustrating the nations newly-favorable stance on female literacy.
- Portrait of a Child by James McNeill Whistler has remained in the family of Denys Sutton since its purchase in the early 1950s (est. $250/350,000). Mr. Sutton assumed the role of editor of the London-based arts magazine Apollo in 1962, considerably expanding the scope of the publication during his 25 year tenure, and, among other accomplishments, served as secretary of the international commission for the restitution of cultural material after World War II.
CHARITABLE WORKS FROM THE BANK OF AMERICA COLLECTION
Three works by Alfred Jacob Miller from the Bank of America Collection whose proceeds will benefit non-profit organizations are led by War Path (est. $150/250,000). The majority of Millers artistic success can be traced to his nearly six month expedition West in 1837. William Drummond Stewart, a retired Captain of the British army and Scottish nobleman, invited Miller to accompany him as the commissioned artist on a trip to the Rocky Mountains, where they traveled on what would become the Oregon Trail. Miller executed some 100 watercolor and pen-and-ink-sketches during this expedition, which he later reworked into finished watercolors and oils for a variety of patrons.