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ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM LEADS A SUCCESSFUL SALE AT SHANNON’S

Shannon’s fall auction totals over $3.3 Million and over 82% sold


MILFORD, CT. – Shannon’s seamlessly transitioned to their “new normal” hosting an exciting auction with lively bidder participation despite the absence of live attendees. In the saleroom 20 phone bidders sat at socially distanced 6 foot tables and managed to generate the excitement, buzz and results of an in-person auction. Active online participation and aggressive absentee bidding helped drive the strong results. Overall, the sale achieved over $3.3 million dollars in total sales with 82% of the lots sold.

Adolph Gottlieb, work on paper
ADOLPH GOTTLIEB, SOLD FOR $162,500

Leading the auction was the highly-anticipated sale of Abstract Expressionist art from the Jeanne and Carroll Berry Collection. The results did not disappoint and listeners could feel the competition as auctioneer, Peter Coccoluto, fielded bids from the phones. Leading the group was Adolph Gottlieb’s, Untitled #30, from 1970 that sold for $162,500, exceeding its presale estimate. Two lots later, Jackson Pollock’s Untitled from 1952-1956 sold for $112,500. Overall, 11 of the 22 lots hammered down above their presale high estimates, a testament to the quality of the works offered.


Other notable sales from the Berry Collection include Mark Rothko’s, Untitled from 1968 that sold for $78,000. A pair of Hedda Sterne drawings that set a new record at $13,750. Sterne is the only female painter in the Irascibles and competition for her work was aggressive. Harry Weldon Kees, whose work has never before been offered at auction, sold for $8,750. And, the cover lot, a work on paper by Richard Pousette-Dart sold for $37,500.


Jackson Pollock, ink and gouache drawing on light blue paper
JACKSON POLLOCK, SOLD FOR $112,500

An Abstract Expressionist painting by Michael (Corinne) West from a separate collection sold for $52,500. West, a female artist, chose a masculine name to remove the bias of gender in the interpretation and sales of work.

Abstract expressionist painting by Michael (Corinne) West.
MICHAEL (CORINNE) WEST, SOLD FOR $52,500

There was success in all categories at Shannon’s and there were no dull moments during the nearly four-hour auction. Sandra Germain, managing partner, commented “We are thrilled with the results of the sale--the long anticipated offering of the Berry Collection finally came to fruition as well as many other works we have been holding since April. We had strong results across the board and have many happy consignors.”


A George Bellows painting from his time in Woodstock sold for $106,250 after enthusiastic bidding from 5 phone bidders. Charles Burchfield’s Steel Mill Homes sold for $75,000 to the Muskegon Museum of Art in Muskegon, Michigan. Charles Ethan Porter’s Peonies led the 19th century American Art category selling to a California institution for $55,000.


MONTAGUE DAWSON, The Needes, SOLD FOR $93,750

Notable sales in European art include Montague Dawson’s yachting scene, The Needles, that sold for $93,750 and a Hugues Merle, Young Woman in Blue, that sold for $50,000. Modern European art did well with a Kurt Schwitter’s collage from his Merz series selling for $50,000, a Jean Dufy of Les Champs-Elysees that sold for $57,500 and a Marie Laurencin, Jeune Femme, that tripled the low estimate selling for $45,000 with international bidder participation. A painting by contemporary British artist, Patrick Hughes, found a new home on the West Coast for $45,000.

American Impressionism was led by Charles Courtney Curran’s Wind on the Cliff, a sweeping view from a cliff with two young women, probably the artist’s daughter and a family friend, that sold for $100,000. Other highlights in this category include Woman in a Silk Robe by Frederick Carl Frieseke sold for $57,500 and Guy Carlton Wiggins “Winter at the Library” that also sold for $57,500.


Painting of two young women on a cliff overlooking the valley.
CHARLES COURTNEY CURRAN, "Wind on the Cliff," SOLD FOR $100,000

A regionalist work by Thomas Hart Benton of the Louisiana rice fields, “Threshing Rice” sold for $87,500. Winter Stream by Southwestern artist Victor Higgins quadrupled the low estimate selling for $40,000 to a buyer in New Mexico. There were three paintings by New England artist Eric Sloane, led by Last Hay of the Season, a large 24 x 36 inch painting that sold for $47,500.

Prints were led by Picasso’s Le Repas Frugal, one of the artist’s first print compositions, that sold for $100,000. A Robert Rauschenberg silkscreen with iconic figures from the 1960s, Signs, sold for $27,500 and a group of prints commissioned for the Jimmy Carter inauguration fund sold for $30,000 to a museum collection.

Winter landscape watercolor with trees in snow by Victor Higgins.
VICTOR HIGGINS, "Winter Stream," SOLD FOR $40,000

For the full results of the September 17th auction, visit www.shannons.com. Shannon’s produces an extensive color catalog, if you would like to join Shannon's mailing list, you can sign up on the website or email the gallery at info@shannons.com.


Shannon’s Fine Art Auctioneers is always accepting quality consignments for future auctions. The next auction will be an Online Fine Art Auction on November 19, 2020. To consign a single piece of artwork, an estate or a collection, you may call them at (203) 877-1711; or, email at info@shannons.com. To learn more about Shannon’s Fine Art Auctioneers and the Thursday, September 17th auction, please visit www.shannons.com.

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