PDF Lot View
Transcription
PDF Lot View
AMERICAN FURNITURE, FOLK & DECORATIVE ARTS 2 MAY 2014 LOT 88 Eunice Pinney (Connecticut, 1770-1849) two works: friendship, circa 1820, and young girl with goat Both watercolor on paper, framed. 12 1/2 in. x 9 3/4 in. (sight) and 9 3/4 in. x 7 1/2 in. (sight) PROVENANCE: Property of a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Collector. Friendship: Christie's, New York, Important American Furniture, Silver, Folk Art and Decorative Arts June 1999, lot 91. Ex-Collection: Colonel Edgar William and Bernice Chrysler Garbisch. Exhibited: Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Nineteenth Century American Women Artists, January-February 1976. Young Girl with Goat: Sotheby's, New York, Fine Americana and Silver, June 17, 1999, lot 87. Estimate $4,000-6,000 A native of Simsbury and Windsor, Connecticut, Eunice Griswold Pinney (1770-1849) was a rarity in so far as she was a remarkably educated young girl, regarded by her brother as 'a woman of uncommonly extensive reading.' Though her work utilizes similar techniques and shares themes with that produced by schoolgirls, Pinney did not begin painting watercolors until her thirties. Her oeuvre reflects her maturity, relates to her life and experiences, and contains more subtle symbols and literary allusions. See Susan Foster, "Couple & Casualty: The Art of Eunice Pinney Unveiled," Folk Art: Magazine of the Museum of American Folk Art, Vol. 21, Number 2, Summer 1996, pp. 30-37. 1808 Chestnut Street Philadelphia PA 19103 | +1.215.563.9275 | info@freemansauction.com | www.freemansauction.com