
Herzog Landscape leads Turkey Creek Auction
by Fred Taylor, Antique
Week, Eastern Edition 12/27/04
CITRA, Fla.-- In preparation for the annual overindulgence this
time of the year, Turkey Creek Auction owner Charles David Glynn spread
a mighty feast of more than 550 lots for his 16th annual
pre-Thanksgiving auction on Nov. 20. The Florida weather cooperated and
the big white tent outside the Turkey Creek Auction red barn was packed
with around 275 bidders. Unlike many recent auctions at the auction
site, the inventory for this event did not come from New England but was
found mostly in Florida.
The big fish in the sale was a landscape by Herman Herzog. It was
signed on the back Rattlesnake Run, Pike Co Penn 1884 H Herzog and
depicted a small sunlit clearing littered with fallen trees in a heavily
wooded area. Herzog was born in Bremen, Germany, in 1832 and attended
the Dusseldorf Academy where he established quite a name for himself.
His patrons included Queen Victoria and the Grand Duke Alexander of
Russia, as well as a growing band of admirers in the United States.
After winning Honorable Mention at the Paris Salon in 1863 and
1864 he relocated to Philadelphia. He adapted readily to his new
country, winning a bronze medal at the Centennial Exhibition in 1876,
but his real passion was to see the entire country, border to border and
coast to coast and to paint as much of it as possible. He left a
pictorial legacy of the unspoiled American landscape of the 19th
century. Late in the century, when Herzog's son lived in Gainesville,
Herzog made frequent trips to the area, completing a body of work
consisting of more than 250 Florida scenes before his death in 1932.
This painting, though not one of the Florida works, was found in the
community of Beverly Hills near Inverness, Fla.
When Rattlesnake Run crossed the block there was an onslaught of
phone activity with 10 lines in action. The winner was a private
collector in Texas who called in with the winning number of $47,000 plus
the 10 percent buyer's premium.
But no art sale in Florida is complete without some Highwaymen
paintings and this sale had two by Harold Newton. The Highwaymen is the
name given the group of 26 African American artists working around Fort
Pierce, Fla., in the mid 1950's. Influenced by A. E. "Beanie"
Backus (1906-1990), the artists sold their landscape and seascape
renditions out of their cars Along Florida roads. Highwaymen art has
enjoyed a renewed popularity in the last decade after years of oblivion.
There are now a number of galleries and dealers, mostly in Florida, who
specialize in the subject. One of Newton's oil on board, a portrait
oriented scene of a palm tree and shoreline sold for $2,800 plus
premium. The other, a sedate river scene, reached $1,500.
The best art buy of the sale was probably a portrait of a woman
signed D.V. Bond Detroit 1853. Charles V. Bond, American, 1825-1864, was
a portrait and landscape painter from Livingston County, Mich., whose
work today generally sells in the $650-$1,000 range. This pre-Civil War
portrait went for $400.
Furniture was soft in spots but good pieces did well. A very
impressive Eastlake tall sideboard had a marble deck above five drawers
and a raised panel door and a mid-rise shelf supported by turned columns
below a dome-top mirror. In walnut with walnut burl accents on major
flat panels, this 120-year-old dining room piece sold for $1,600. A late
19th century oak baker's cabinet with a dry sink in the main surface
featured three chip carved blind panel doors and three small drawers in
the top section and two drawers, two blind panel doors and a pullout
flour bin below. It looked sufficiently mellow but still crisp in a
refinish, rising to $1,500. An elegant three-piece oak bedroom set from
the turn of the century was encrusted with applied molding and carving.
The 7ft tall headboard was topped by a crown panel of what appeared to
be a nautical theme. The dry sink and the dresser each had the same top
panel above their mirrors. This set was a very good buy at $1,300.
Oak seemed to be the wood of the day in general. A nice quarter
sawn oak china server with curved glass panels below and a beveled
mirror above, with a top shelf supported by lion's paw columns, sold for
$900. An oak 60in S-roll top desk, with raised panels, a spacious fitted
interior and seven drawers plus a file drawer, in an old refinish, hung
in there for the same price, and an oak china cabinet with curved side
glass, a beveled and leaded glass door and lion's head columns crossed
at $800.
Several English pieces of furniture did surprisingly well. A
George III mahogany chest three over three with string inlay on the
drawer fronts with ring pull hardware, standing on French feet, sold for
$700 as did another mahogany George III chest, two over three, on a
bracket base. A rosewood tea poy, circa 1840, brought $350.
Pairpoint lamps are generally well received, especially those with
puffy shades. The example at Turkey creek had a base with a gold wash
and 14 in shade with a rose and butterfly theme. The lamp had a late Art
Nouveau feeling to it, dating from around 1910. It felt like a $6,000
lamp to a local bidder in the tent.
Jewelry was also on several bidders' shopping lists. A Victorian
gold slide bracelet with carved stones and gems made $1,300 and a lady's
cocktail ring with 3.08 carats of emerald and diamonds sold for $900.
Printed with permission of the author Fred
Taylor, P.O. Box 215, Crystal River, FL 34423, 800-387-6377.