Folk art, portraiture, and Chinese Export porcelain highlight Skinner's February Americana Auction
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Folk art, portraiture, and Chinese Export porcelain highlight Skinner's February Americana Auction
Samuel Jordan (New Hampshire/Massachusetts, 1804-after 1836) Portrait of a Gentleman (Lot 323, Estimate $8,000-$12,000).



BOSTON, MASS.- On Saturday, February 27 at 10 AM, Skinner, Inc. will host its first American Furniture & Decorative Arts auction of 2016 in its Boston, MA gallery. The sale will showcase a broad range of furniture, ceramics, and fine and decorative arts, from 17th Century andirons to 20th Century Folk Art and Tramp Art.

Folk Art
Leading the sale is an excellent group of Folk Art and Portraiture, highlighted by a spectacular early 19th Century Polychrome Decorated Overmantel Painting on Pine with a Maritime subject (Lot 224, estimated $30,000-$50,000). It was painted in place, circa 1815, at the Brainerd home in Haddam Neck, CT, where it remained in situ until 1981. The panel is thought to depict the capture of the United States frigate President by the British frigate Endymion, an encounter which took place outside New York Harbor in January, 1815. Painted with energy, attention to detail, and considerable drama, the panel is a masterpiece of American Folk Art.

More Folk Art from the hearth comes in the form of two painted fireboards, one from Pennsylvania, the other of Connecticut origin. The Pennsylvania example (Lot 302, $15,000-$25,000), with a faux tiger-maple frame, depicts a fanciful landscape of trees below feathery wisps of clouds and four colorful birds, all above an abstracted group of flowering shrubs which are painted as rainbows. The other Paint-decorated Fireboard (Lot 343, $15,000-$25,000), more subtle but still quietly beautiful, shows a flowering potted plant flanked by flowers, trees, and a border of meandering vines on a gray ground.

Two folk portraits of particular note are a large Portrait of Alice Whitman Pickett and her dog signed by William Matthew Prior and dated 1853 (Lot 321, $30,000-$50,000), and a scarce Portrait of a Gentleman by the elusive and talented Samuel Jordan, signed by the artist and dated 1831 (Lot 323, $8,000-$12,000). In the work by Prior, Alice, in a bright red dress, has her arm around a black dog with white paws. The background at the top of the painting is divided in half – light gray behind the dog, dark brown behind the girl’s blond hair. The approach, which is very successful in creating contrast, gives the painting a structured, modern feel. Samuel Jordan, who will be the subject of a lecture by noted Folk Art scholar Deborah M. Child prior to the auction, is a fascinating character, and Lot 323 represents him at his best. The subject sits in an Empire sofa and wears a bright yellow vest with cobalt trim. Behind him is another two-part background – a landscape above what appears to be a gray-blue-painted chair rail, and printed wallpaper or below it. Colorful, whimsical, and appealing, the Jordan portrait, like the Prior, pushes the envelope of artistic convention with pleasing results.

Other Folk Art highlights in the sale include 18th and 19th Century paint-decorated woodenware, early 19th Century needlework memorials and samplers from Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, and a nice group of watercolor miniatures and small framed works.

Furniture
The sale features over 100 lots of 18th and 19th Century furniture, mirrors, and clocks from throughout the Northeastern United States, including a set of Six 18th Century Carved Mahogany Side Chairs from Portsmouth, NH (Lot 107, $8,000-$12,000); a Carved Walnut Tall Case Clock by Henry Taylor of Philadelphia, PA (Lot 296, $2,500-$3,500); a Carved Mahogany “Cumberland” Dining Table, c. 1820, attributed to Thomas Seymour of Boston, MA (Lot 178, $4,000-$6,000); and a wonderful Carved Federal Mantelpiece from Kings County, Long Island (Lot 344, $4,000-$6,000).

Decorative Arts of the China Trade
The Decorative Arts of the China Trade are represented by an outstanding collection of early porcelain, comprising 18th Century Armorial ware as well as rare early 19th Century pieces. Among its highlights are “The Declaration of Independence” Punch Bowl (Lot 25, $6,000-$8,000); Armorial pieces made for the Yonge (Lot 14), Brodie (Lot 11), Napier (Lot 12), Bausset-Roquefort (Lot 18), van Gouderian (Lot 29), and Pole (Lot 13) families, among others; and a rare Yellow Fitzhugh Porcelain Dinner Plate (Lot 38, $3,000-$5,000). Also of interest are an early view of The Anchorage at Whampoa (Lot 243, $12,000-$15,000), and a watercolor and gouache of the Residence of Dr. G.R. Hall in Shanghai (Lot 244, $3,000-$5,000).

American Colonial Silver and Sterling Silver Yachting Trophies
Early American silver includes a rare Silver Porringer by Paul Revere, Jr. (Lot 74, $8,000-$12,000) with a close apparent relationship to a Revere example from the Pearce family of Gloucester, MA, and a Colonial Silver Teapot from Boston, c. 1760-70 (Lot 75, $3,000-$5,000), with elaborate chased and engraved decoration. Other silver includes a group of yacht racing trophies presented to the famous schooner Sachem in the late 19th Century, led by the Sterling Silver Repoussé Wine Cooler trophy presented for winning the 1887 Morgan Cup, a race from Vineyard Haven to Marblehead, MA (Lot 422, $5,000-$7,000).










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Folk art, portraiture, and Chinese Export porcelain highlight Skinner's February Americana Auction

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