Remmey’s Early Spring Auction Featuring Ceramics, Furniture, & Glassware
Remmey’s Early Spring Auction Featuring Ceramics, Furniture, & Glassware

iGavel Interiors:

Remmey’s Early Spring Auction Featuring Ceramics, Furniture, & Glassware

Sale Code:
RA8A
Presented by:
Remmey Auction Services, LLC
March 12, 2020
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April 1, 2020

ABOUT THE AUCTION

The Center for Photographic Art (CPA) in Carmel, California, is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization and one of the oldest members’ photography galleries in the country. We occupy the historic gallery established as the Friends of Photography in 1967. For more than five decades, CPA has served as a valuable asset to its members, the community, and the greater world of the photographic arts.This year will be CPA’s sixth online auction with iGavel hosting its annual 8 x 10 Fundraising Exhibition. Previously an onsite raffle, the 8 x 10 show is our most anticipated fundraiser of the year. It raises vital funds in support of the innovative and thought-provoking programming, exhibitions, lectures, and classes that the photographic community has enjoyed and relied on for over fifty years. This year we offer small works by 130 established and emerging photographers from California and beyond. This special show features contemporary works from rising stars in the photography world and local legends and international favorites as well! (all framed 8x10” and all bidding starts at $80…because 8x10=80!). We would especially like to thank all the talented artists who have generously donated their photographs to our annual fundraiser. Their enthusiastic support creates important funding toward our many programs and helps make our nonprofit a vibrant community resource.

FUNDING SUPPORT

Your valued support is what makes our programming possible. As a non-profit organization, the Center for Photographic Art counts on our members, plus the generosity of collectors, educators, students, donors, and photographic artists of every level to keep us thriving. Please join us! We have met the challenges of these past years by developing a fantastic community of weekly presenters and enthusiastic and engaged audiences. We offer classes and lectures from a diverse group of photo historians, photojournalists, gallerists, publishers, teachers, and photographic artists working in a variety of media. The gallery is free and open to the public. Thanks to you, we are able to continue hosting exhibitions to support artists and educate our audiences and visitors about the importance of photography at this moment in time.For more information about Center for Photographic Art, and to become a member please visit www.photography.org.

IMPORTANT NOTICE: Pre-columbian Sale WE1N Extended to close July 22, 2025

Due to our proximity to the tragic events in Texas, we have extended the 'Pre-Columbian and Other Works of Art from an American Collector' to close on Tuesday, July 22, 2025.

The closing times will remain the same, the sale will now close in one week on July 22nd.
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Additional provenance information has been added to many lots in the sale. Should you have questions please email customerrelations@igavelauctions.com.

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Please note, frames that have multiple cels are not always counted as additional cels.
Piano available for viewing by appointment, please call (212) 289-5524 or email niki@larkmasonassociates.com

This Steinway fancy painted empire Model A grand piano, serial number 88495 was made in New York in 1897.  It was painted by Arthur Edward Blackmore (New York / England 1854-1921), and his signature and the date are visible on the panel at the front of the cover.  The piano was purchased from Steinway by the American industrialist, businessman, art collector, and museum benefactor Isaac D. Fletcher, for his mansion at the corner of East 79th Street and Fifth Avenue in 1898.  The mansion is known today as the Harry F. Sinclair House, which houses the Ukrainian Institute of America.

Designed in the “French Renaissance” style, Fletcher remained in the mansion as did the piano until his death in 1917 when the mansion and Fletcher’s art collection were bequeathed to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  In 1918 the executors of Isaac Fletcher’s estate sold the contents of the mansion, including this piano as lot 222, in a sale at “The American Art Galleries,” New York, January 25,26, 1918. The double-page illustrated lot reads:

“Decorated Mahogany Steinway Grand Piano: Specially designed case, Style A; made in rich polished mahogany, with elaborate decorations in color and gilding. Has square front legs and carved lyre. The front panel bears a painted ribbon scroll with the quotation, “As may the strains through my ear dissolve me into ecstacies. (sic)”  The painting including trophy and floral panel, with scrollwork, signed by Arthur E. Blackmore and dated 1898. Made by Steinway & Sons.”  

Evelyn Nesbit (1884 or 1885 -1967), was an actress, the original “Gibson Girl” model for Charles Dana Gibson, chorus girl, and performer.  Early in her career she was introduced to Stanford White, the illustrious American architect and partner in McKim, Mead & White.  Shortly afterward she was in a relationship with John Barrymore, who proposed to her but was turned down.  Soon she married the socially prominent New Yorker, Harry K. Thaw.  Her life was portrayed by Joan Collins in the movie “The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing,” and she features as a main character in the book, film, and musical “Ragtime.”  An iconic beauty, she is famously known for the tragic love triangle with Stanford White and Thaw.  A contemporary retelling of Thaw’s 1906 shooting of his rival is in the HBO series The Gilded Age.  Thaw’s murder trial became “The Trial of The Century.”  After the trial, Nesbit successfully established herself in film and vaudeville, and by 1918, Nesbit was separating from her second husband and dance partner, Jack Clifford.  Following her separation, she performed in clubs and cabaret throughout the United States while remaining in New York until after World War II when she relocated to Los Angeles.  Nesbit had a stroke in 1956 and died in Los Angeles in 1967. 

By repute, the piano was associated with Nesbit after 1918, most likely during the 1920’s. Notes and articles accompanying the piano mentioned “Salem N.Y. interests who deal in unusual theater memorabila” and that “The piano was once owned by Evelyn Nesbit, for whose love Harry K. Thaw shot and killed an architect.”  Salem, New York is associated with Fort Salem Theater, which was created by Judge William Drohan, who purchased and converted the First Presbyterian Church of Salem into a theater in 1972.  No records can be found associating Drohan with the piano.  However, the mention of ‘theatrical interests’ within Salem, New York as owners of the piano in the late 1970’s or early 1980’s establishes a possible connection between them and the purchaser, John K. Desmond, Jr., of Philadelphia.  Desmond opened the Desmond Hotel in Albany, New York where he installed the Fletcher / Nesbit piano sometime after 1981 in the Scrimshaw restaurant within the hotel.  His records indicate he purchased the piano from unknown sources fifteen years earlier.  After the Desmond Hotel was sold to the Crown Plaza Group, ownership of the piano was transferred to the current owner.

Jewelry
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