Bid now Gloucester art at auction | Sotheby’s American Art sale closing March 5 and Doyle sale March 10

I track and bid at auctions because I help people buy art. From time to time I highlight here on GMG a few selections from upcoming auctions, fairs and shows solely because they have some Gloucester (Cape Ann) connection. In the early spring sales at two New York auction houses, artists include: Emma Fordyce MacRae, Gifford Beal, Jane Peterson, John Sloan, Lillian Westcott Hale, Paul Manship, W. Lester Stevens and Martha Walter.

BID NOW Sotheby’s American Art ON LINE– closes March 5th, 2019

john sloan fishing port, gloucester on line sothebys sale by march 5 collection patrick and carlyn duffy

Featuring works from the Patrick and Carlyn Duffy collection (yes that’s actor Patrick Duffy) some great ones failed to find a just right home at the live sale back in 2018.

Lillian Westcott Hale study for Harriet Blake Sothebys Amer Art on line by March 5 2020 est 5000-7000

Most of the sale is beyond Gloucester. The couple had a few classic Wyeths. — See all 119 lots here. 

WYETH Elsie's house 200,000-300,000 est on line by march 5

 

Doyle Fine Paintings LIVE auction March 10, 2020

a few of the paintings by artists with Gloucester ties

Andre Gisson lot 46 est 1200 to 1800 at Doyle auction March 10 2020

Andre Gisson lot 46 (pre-sale est $1200-$1800) at Doyle March 10, 2020 (no gloucester ties) See all 105 lots here. 

 

Also Doyle At Home auction (bid live on line) March 4, 2020 lots here

Kyra Markham American Edge of a Wood, 1934 est 800-1200 march 4 2020 Doyle At Home sale
Small Kyra Markham (not Gloucester scene) presale estimate $800-1200

 

Hirschl & Adler galleries just featured gorgeous Peterson paintings at the Winter Show

JANE PETERSON  (1876-1965), Niles Pond (Yellow and Turquoise), ca. 1916-20, Oil on canvas, 32 x 32 in.

Jane Peterson Niles Pond COURTESY PHOTO HIRSCHL & ADLER GALLERY

and drawing

JANE PETERSON  (1876-1965) Harbor with Dunes Watercolor and gouache on paper, 12 x 18 in.

JANE PETERSON at Hirschl & adler Harbor With Dunes work on paper watercolor and gouache 12 x 18 APG 8815

Here’s a look at iconic art inspired by #GloucesterMA for sale at the big auction houses November 2018

For sale at Sotheby’s November 2018

WINSLOW HOMER Yacht in a Cove Gloucester Harbor_ca 1880_wc_Sothebys Nov 2018 American pre sale auction estimate 200000 to 300000
WINSLOW HOMER Yacht in a Cove Gloucester Harbor_ca 1880_watercolor_upcoming Sothebys Nov 2018 American sale. Pre-sale auction estimate is $200,000 – $300,000

Last spring a Homer image of Gloucester boys in a dory fetched $400,000. Relatable, though not Gloucester: Life Brigade is expected to fetch 4x that amount at Sotheby’s; another classic motif , Gathering Wild Blackberries, is estimated to sell for $150,000-$200,000. There is a smashing Marsden Hartley of Dogtown.

 

EDWARD HOPPER_Two Comedians_ upcoming Sotheby's American sale Nov 2018_from Sinatra collection est 12 mil to 18 mil
EDWARD HOPPER_Two Comedians_ upcoming Sotheby’s American sale Nov 2018_from Sinatra collection_The pre-sale estimate is 12 million to 18 million. (Not a Gloucester Hopper- there are no Gloucester Hoppers in these November sales)

For sale at Christie’s November 2018

c STUART DAVIS_Private Way_(Gloucester MA)_1916_ oil on canvas_Christies Nov 2018 presale auction est 60 to 80,000
STUART DAVIS Private Way, 1916.oil on canvas. Christies Nov 2018 presale auction est 60,000 to 80,000

Besides Stuart Davis, artists featured include Jane Peterson, Martha Walters, Hayley Lever, and George Bellows. There’s a classic Nahant work by William Stanley Haseltine and a marine themed WPA mural study by Lyonel Feininger.

c EDWARD HOPPER _Chop Suey_32 x 38_ 1929 oc_Christies presale estimate 70 mil to 100 million
EDWARD HOPPER Chop Suey, 1929, 32 x 38 inches, oil on canvas, Christies steep presale estimate 70 million to 100 million (from Barney A. Ebsworth collection) There are no Hopper works featuring Gloucester in these sales.

Click on thumbnails to enlarge the photo and see descriptions. I’ll post results after the sales. 

 

 

Dogtown Book Shop Scarce Book on Jane Peterson

Here’s a very scarce book on artist Jane Peterson who painted in Gloucester in the early 20th century. The book is one of only 500 ever printed and they are each individually numbered inside.

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A simple Google Search Of Jane Peterson Turns up many auctions in which her paintings sell for over $500,000 like this one-

From the Christie’s web site-

image

Lot Description

Jane Peterson (1876-1965)
Gloucester Harbor–Late Afternoon
signed ‘Jane Peterson’ (lower left)
oil on canvas
30¼ x 40 in. (76.8 x 101.6 cm.)

Lot Notes

During the first half of the twentieth century, one of the most socially acceptable venues for women to express their creativity was through participation in the male-dominated world of the fine arts. Jane Peterson, a fixture on the American art scene, had an unwavering devotion to her sense of self as an artist. She subsequently developed an Impressionist-Fauvist style that is uniquely her own. Peterson’s body of work encompasses scenes of gardens and beaches, colored umbrellas, and sun drenched port settings. Among the finest of her career, Gloucester Harbor exemplifies the artist’s frequent depiction of natural beauty using brilliant colors and active brushwork.
Peterson’s determination to be an artist began at a young age. When she was eighteen, she moved from Elgin, Illinois to New York and in 1896, she began her formal training at the Pratt Institute under the instruction of Arthur Wesley Dow. In 1901, Peterson studied with Frank DuMond at the Art Students League. Over the next decade Peterson held various teaching positions that brought her to Boston and Maryland. During this time she continued her studies at the Art Students League as well as with the leading European artists of the period such as Frank Brangwyn, Jacques-Emile Blance and Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida in Paris, Venice and Madrid. She also traveled extensively throughout North Africa visiting exotic locales such as Biskra, Algiers and Cairo.
Upon her return to the United States, Peterson continued her travels. After visiting the pacific Northwest with artist and friend Louis Comfort Tiffany, she frequented the various artist’s colonies that dotted the Massachusetts coast line including Gloucester and Martha’s Vineyard. Drawing inspiration from her travels both domestic and abroad, Peterson produced a diverse body of work that she exhibited at various institutions such as the Société des Artistes Francais, St. Botolph Club in Boston, the Art Institute of Chicago and in 1915 at the Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco.
In Gloucester Harbor, Peterson employs grand brush strokes and an assertive line, creating a mosaic effect of highly expressive tones of blue, pink and yellow offset by pure whites. Peterson’s style had become very definitive and has been described by Jonathan J. Joseph: "Her linear construction directed a viewer along a definite course and did not allow the viewer’s attention to wander. Her tonal masses dominated lines and defined form, while subtle, thin oscillating lines emphasized form edges to better display the juxtapositioning of dark and light color areas. In some ways, Peterson’s paintings resemble cloisonné, in that color is often surrounded by a thin outlining of charcoal or contrasting paint much like the thin wires of cloisonné surround enamel. However, lines do not encompass or totally contain color areas, but combine in a grand decorative order and show control in carefreeness. The work of Peterson becomes a sensuous place in the commonplace movements of nature." (Jane Peterson: An American Artist, Boston, Massachusetts, 1981, p. 17)
Large canvases such as Gloucester Harbor emphasize Peterson’s bold and unique brushwork and present her skills at their best. The innovative stylistic elements found in Gloucester Harbor are the fundamental characteristics of Peterson’s painting style that achieved critical acclaim. One reviewer in 1917 noted, "Miss Jane Peterson uses strong colors and broad brush to give the facts about docks and fishing craft and harbours in a somewhat knock-you-down fashion." (as quoted in Jane Peterson: An American Artist, p. 32)
Johnathan Joseph has confirmed the authenticity of this work.

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