Vintage clocks, Asian antiques and more at Converse auction, Sept. 9-10 A large two-session auction featuring Asian antiques, vintage clocks and watches, fine arts and furniture items will be held Sept. 9-10 by Gordon S. Converse & Company in Malvern, Pa.
News-Antique.com - Aug 18,2011 - (MALVERN, Pa.) – A large two-session auction featuring Asian antiques, vintage clocks and watches, fine arts and furniture items will be held Sept. 9-10 by Gordon S. Converse & Company at the Peoples Light & Theater Company, located at 39 Conestoga Road in Malvern, a city situated in eastern Pennsylvania, not far off Interstate 76, just north and west of Philadelphia.
The start times both days will be 10:30 a.m. (EDT). Previews for the first session (the Asian sale), will be held Thursday, Sept. 8, from 11-5:30, and from 8:30 a.m. to the start of sale on Friday, Sept. 9. Previews for the second session (antiques and clocks) will be held Thursday, same times as the session one preview, and Saturday, Sept. 10, from 8:30 a.m. to the start of sale.
Online bidding will be facilitated by LiveAuctioneers.com. By far the most viewed item to date has been lot #197 from the Sept. 9 session, but a quick click of the mouse will explain why. It is an oil on canvas rendering of a stunning young nude Chinese lady. The work, in an image area of 30 inches by 24 inches and without stretchers, is expected to sell for $150-$250.
Sept. 9 will also feature a large variety of porcelains, such as a stunning and fine 15-inch green celadon glazed vase with two-color crackle glaze finish and reindeer handles (est. $800-$2,000), plus many other examples from Japanese and Chinese porcelain makers dating back to the 1600s and leading up to the present day. Many will exhibit colorful glazes and techniques.
Two superstar lots of the Sept. 9 session promise to be an exceptionally fine 19th century carved ivory figure depicting Quan Ying holding an oval container, 10 inches in height and signed with two characters and “China,” on a wooden base (est. $7,000-$12,000); and a fine and well-preserved blue and white glazed ovoid (or pear form) vase, 6 ½ inches tall and featuring a single dragon coiling between borders with a flared, trumpet-shaped top (est. $5,000-$8,000).
Other Asian objects set to cross the block that day include a massive green jade seal (4 ¾ inches square by 5 inches tall), with calligraphy on all sides and contained in a dark wood fitted box (est. $450-$650); and an antique Chinese bowl (3 ¼ inches by 8 inches) with blue and white interior showing impressive dragons and the same dragon motif outside (est. $120-$200).
Rare and vintage clocks will dominate the Saturday session (Sept. 10). Two anticipated top earners will feature a very rare 19th century mahogany cased regulator clock with a five-legged gravity escapement, made by Wainmann of Howden, England (est. $8,500-$12,500); and a 34-inch early banjo timepiece in the original “crossbanded” style, with a mahogany case attributed to Simon Willard, circa 1802-1905 (est. $6,000-$12,000).
Two Philadelphia mahogany tall case clocks are expected to do well. One is an early 19th century clock with a heroic painted dial with Federal eagle, signed Abraham Cassel of Germantown (Philadelphia), and another by David