Raine`s Tavern - Copley Fine Art Auctions
Transcription
Raine`s Tavern - Copley Fine Art Auctions
auctions-news :Layout 1 2/18/09 6:09 PM Page 6 NEWS Gus Wilson Exhibit Being Planned A major retrospective exhibition of the diverse carvings of Gus Wilson is in the preliminary stages of planning. The exhibit is being organized by Gene Kangas and John Dinan in conjunction with a Maine museum. The exact place and time is yet to be determined. Your participation is welcomed. Please email either Kangas or Dinan digital photos of Gus Wilson’s decoys as well as his bird and animal carvings in your collection. The organizers are especially interested in learning of previously unpublished and undocumented examples as a first step in surveying the range of images created by Gus Wilson during his lengthy career. Contact Gene Kangas at Kangas@CreeksideArtGallery.com or John Dinan at captdinan@yahoo.com Special Crowell Decoys to be in Copley Summer Sporting Sale Seven major works by famed decoy carver A. Elmer Crowell (1862–1952) of East Harwich, Massachusetts, will be placed on the auction block July 15-16 in Plymouth, MA, as part of the Copley Fine Art Auctions’ 2009 Sporting Sale. Originally commissioned by prominent New England sportsman Harry V. Long between 1910 and 1920, and descended through the Long family, this extraordinary group has never before been offered on the market. The decoys are currently on public exhibit for the first time at the Massachusetts Audubon Visual Arts Center in Canton, Massachusetts, through May 10, 2009. Of the historic group of carvings, Copley‘s chairman, Stephen O’Brien, says, “This is the most important collection of Crowell works to have ever come up for auction. There have been whispers of the existence of these birds for years, and to have March-April, 2009 Nesting Canada goose by A. Elmer Crowell, ca. 1910. Preening pintail with raised wings by A. Elmer Crowell, ca. 1910. the opportunity to bring them to market is an honor for our firm. We have estimated the group between $1.6 and $2.6 million collectively.“ Included in this iconic group is the third and final piece of Crowell’s famed “Long Trinity” of Canada geese — a folky gander described by Crowell scholar Gladys Hopkins as “the best of the three.” Estimated at $600,000 — $900,000, this exquisite sculpture is carved in a nesting position and is considered by experts to be one of the finest waterfowl carvings in existence. The two other “Long Trinity” goose carvings are no strangers to the spotlight. The hissing goose sold Calling yellowlegs with dropped wings by A. Elmer Crowell, ca. 1910. for $605,000 in April 2004 at a Guyette & Schmidt auction. The preening Canada goose was featured in the Wall Street Journal in May 2000 when it sold at a Sotheby’s and Guyette & Schmidt auction for a then record $684,500. The same goose appeared on the cover of the Boston Globe in September 2007, Raine’s Tavern Decoys Folk Art Collectibles www.rainestavern.com Antiques 443 614-6015 63