Rick Norsigian may have bought $200 million worth of Ansel Adams negatives for $45

Rick Norsigian (photo by Craig Kohlruss)

10 years ago, Rick Norsigian bought 65 old glass negatives for $45 from a man who said he bought them at a warehouse sale in Los Angeles in the 1940s. Could these views of Yosemite be the work of Ansel Adams? If they really are, they could be worth as much as $200 million. But there’s the rub — the authenticity is in hot dispute.

Ansel Adams (http://www.temple.edu/photo /photographers/adams/Ansel.jpg)

Ansel Adams (http://www.temple.edu/photo /photographers/adams/Ansel.jpg)

Years ago, someone familiar with Ansel Adam’s work in Yosemite suggested to Norsigian that the negatives could possibly be authentic. That suggestion led to a 10-year quest to authenticate them. Experts at the Smithsonian Institution and the Getty Center refused. Norsigian persisted and hired attorney Arnold Peter to assist him with the process. Peter hired a team of photography, handwriting and meteorology experts, who came to the conclusion that the negatives were authentic. Norsigian and Peter are now trying to cash in by setting up a website, ricknorsigian.com, to sell prints from the negatives, with prices that range from $45 for a poster to $7,500 for a 30″ x 40″ Silver Gelatin Darkroom Print.

Even if it’s ultimately determined that the negatives are authentic, the prints can never be 100% “authentic”. There is an art to printing negatives. The process can be manipulated to achieve different results, so only those prints that were actually printed by Ansel Adams’ own hands are truly authentic. He took the photographs AND printed them.

The opposition is being led by Ansel Adams’ grandson, Matthew Adams, who runs the Ansel Adams Gallery in San Francisco. He points to several inconsistencies as proof they are not the work of his grandfather — mainly several spelling errors in naming the sites pictured in the negatives. William Turnage is the managing trustee for the Ansel Adams Trust that owns the copyright to Ansel Adams’ name. He and Matthew Adams may eventually pursue a lawsuit against Norsigian.

The Jeffrey Pine Tree in Yosemite, one of Norsigian's images

The Jeffrey Pine Tree in Yosemite, one of Norsigian's images

In the meantime, evidence is mounting that the negatives could be the work of other photographers, including Earl Brooks, the uncle of 87-year-old Miriam Walton. Since the 1920s, she has had a photograph on her wall of the Jeffrey Pine Tree, given to her by her uncle. It appears to have been taken the very same day as one of the negatives in Norsigian’s group.

There is no such thing as bad publicity except your own obituary. Brendan Behan, Irish poet and novelist (February 9, 1923 – March 20, 1964). And that certainly seems to be the case regarding these negatives — so far business is good. There is no question about the quality of the photography, only the attribution. Ultimately, it appears that the matter will be decided in the courts.

I recently added over 10 Galle vases to my website, 7 Tiffany lamps, 1 Grueby vase, 1 Newcomb vase, Daum Nancy glass and a fabulous Burgun & Schverer internally decorated vase. This coming week, I’ll be adding many new items. Please take a look. Click on this link chasenantiques.com.

Please send me your comments or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer you in a future blog.

Picasso painting sells for $106.5 million, a world record

Picasso 'Nude, Green Leaves and Bust', Christie's New York, lot 6, May 4. 2010

Picasso 'Nude, Green Leaves and Bust', Christie's New York, lot 6, May 4. 2010

Christie’s New York held several Impressionist and Modern Art sales, May 4-5, 2010. The PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF MRS. SIDNEY F. BRODY sale included lot 6, a Pablo Picasso painting entitled “Nude, Green Leaves and Bust”. It sold for $106,482,500, becoming the most expensive single work of art ever sold at auction. It eclipsed the recent record of $101,426,070, set by a bronze sculpture by Alberto Giacometti entitled “Walking Man I”, that was sold at Sotheby’s in London on February 3, 2010.

Alberto Giacometti bronze 'Walking Man I', lot Sotheby's London, February 3, 2010

Alberto Giacometti bronze 'Walking Man I', lot Sotheby's London, February 3, 2010

The painting was purchased in 1950 from the art dealer Paul Rosenberg for $17,000. It was painted in 1932 and depicts the model Marie-Thérèse Walter. The painting has only been exhibited once in public, in 1961, at an exhibition sponsored by the UCLA Art Council.

Interestingly enough, the ladies of The View discussed the sale of the painting on their show, but were forced by the network’s attorneys to blur out the breasts of the nude. What??? Scantily clad women can dance on Dancing With the Stars, soap operas have blatant sexual topics and near nudity, but The View can’t show two single line breasts? Just plain nuts.

The Brody sale also eclipsed another record, the highest gross for any single owner collection sold at auction — $224,177,500. Click on this link for the entire sale results. The Brody Collection Results.

In the next few days and weeks, I’ll be adding my new acquisitions to my website as they come in. Please take a look. Click on this link chasenantiques.com.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog.

Why buy Maxfield Parrish prints when you can buy the originals?

Maxfield Parrish 'Daybreak', Christie's lot 24, May 20, 2010

Maxfield Parrish 'Daybreak', Christie's lot 24, May 20, 2010

Have you been wasting your time buying Maxfield Parrish prints, when you could have been buying the originals? Christie’s New York held their Important American Paintings sale on Thursday, May 20, 2010, with 11 originals by Maxfield Parrish.

If you had a spare $5.2 million, you could have bought the original, penultimate Maxfield Parrish painting “Daybreak”. Mel Gibson and his wife, Robyn, bought it at Christie’s in 2006 for $7.6 million. Now that they’re divorcing, the new buyer got a bargain. The pre-sale estimate was $4-7 million.

In 1922, Daybreak was the first painting commissioned by The House of Art, specifically to be reproduced as a print. It was an instant success. Parrish became so famous in the 1920s that it’s estimated that 1 in 4 households in the United States had a Parrish print on display in their homes. He became the highest paid artist in the country.

Maxfield Parrish 'Sing a Song of Sixpence', Christie's lot 28, May 20, 2010

Maxfield Parrish 'Sing a Song of Sixpence', Christie's lot 28, May 20, 2010

The second highest Parrish painting of Christie’s sale was lot 27, “Sing a Song of Sixpence”. The huge painting, over 13′ wide, was originally commissioned as a mural for the Sherman House Hotel in Chicago, Illinois. It sold for $2,210,500, below the pre-sale estimate of $2.5-3.5 million.

Maxfield Parrish 'End Papers for The Arabian Nights', Christie's lot 106, May 20, 2010

Maxfield Parrish 'End Papers for The Arabian Nights', Christie's lot 106, May 20, 2010

You didn’t have to be a millionaire to buy an original Parrish at this auction. Lot 106 was the end papers for “The Arabian Nights”. Done in ink, gouache and pencil on paper, and measuring 10″ x 14¼”, they sold for $6,250, against an estimate of $6-8,000.

For the complete results to the Christie’s Important American Paintings sale, click on this link. Christie’s results.

In the next few days and weeks, I’ll be adding my new acquisitions to my website as they come in. Please take a look. Click on this link chasenantiques.com.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog.

Christie’s New York sells the Michael Crichton collection of contemporary art for over $100 million

Jasper Johns "Flag", Christie's New York, lot 7, May 11, 2010

Jasper Johns 'Flag', Christie's New York, lot 7, May 11, 2010

Recent art auctions at Christie’s New York brought some extraordinary results. Tuesday, May 11, 2010, was the day that Christie’s sold the art collection of Michael Crichton, of Jurassic Park fame. The highlight of the sale was the iconic image of the American flag, painted by Jasper Johns in the period from 1960-1966. As Mr. Crichton and Mr. Johns were personal friends, he was able to purchase the painting directly from the artist. It was sold as lot 7 and carried a pre-sale estimate of $10-15 million. The result was a new world record for the artist, $28,642,500, including buyer’s premium.

Robert Rauschenberg 'Studio Painting';, Christie's New York, lot 24, May 11, 2010

Robert Rauschenberg 'Studio Painting', Christie's New York, lot 24, May 11, 2010

The Michael Crichton collection was 100% sold — an unusual feat for a collection of this magnitude. The sale grossed $103.3 million, a record for a single owner sale of contemporary art. Works by other artists also performed well, with 17 of the 31 lots offered selling for over $1 million each. The second best lot of the sale went to a mixed media painting by Robert Rauschenberg entitled “Studio Painting”. It sold for $11,058,500.

Picasso 'Femme et fillettes', Christie's New York lot 13, May 11, 2010

Picasso 'Femme et fillettes', Christie's New York lot 13, May 11, 2010

Three Picasso paintings in the sale sold well, with lot 13, “Femme et fillettes”, selling for the most at $6,578,500.

For a complete listing of the sale results, click this link. Christie’s Michael Crichton sale results.

In the next few days and weeks, I’ll be adding my new acquisitions to my website as they come in. Please take a look. Click on this link chasenantiques.com.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog.

Jim Julia sells a million dollar map at auction

Jim Julia with the Battle of Yorktown map

Jim Julia with the Battle of Yorktown map

Jim Julia sells millions of dollars of antiques yearly at his auction house in Fairfield, Maine, but never before has he sold a single object for over one million dollars — until February 5, 2010. On that day, Jim sold a very rare and historically important map — George Washington’s personal copy of the Battle of Yorktown.

John Trumbull painting of the surrender of General Lord Cornwallis to General George Washington

John Trumbull painting of the surrender of General Lord Cornwallis to General George Washington

In 1781, General Comte de Rochambeau and his French army combined with George Washington and his American army to defeat General Lord Cornwallis and his British army at the Battle of Yorktown in Virginia. This was the last major battle of the American Revolutionary War. Cornwallis’s surrender led the British to ultimately negotiate an end to the war and sign the Treaty of Paris in 1783.

The map was prepared by Jean Baptiste Gouvion a few days after the battle. It descended in the family of Tobias Lear, the personal secretary to George Washington from 1784 until Washington’s death in 1799.

The action in the auction was furious with many bidders on the telephone and one determined bidder in the room. Ultimately the phone bidder won the battle against the bidder in the room, with a winning bid of $1 million, for a total of $1,150,000, including buyer’s premium. It set the record for the most expensive map ever sold at auction and also the highest price every paid for any object at auction in the state of Maine.

I’m taking a lot of time to add new items to my website. I’ve already listed new items under Gallé glass (including a blownout vase), Daum Nancy glass and Tiffany Studios glass. Soon I’ll be adding many Tiffany Studios desk pieces. Please take a look, as every day I’m adding more. Click on this link chasenantiques.com.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog entry.

A Giacometti bronze sets the new world record price for a single work of art at auction

Alberto Giacometti 'Walking Man I', Sotheby's London lot #8, February 3, 2010

Alberto Giacometti 'Walking Man I', Sotheby's London lot #8, February 3, 2010

On February 3, 2010, Sotheby’s London held their Impressionist and Modern Art sale, with impressive results. 31 of the 39 lots sold, grossing a total of $229 million. The top lot of the sale, a bronze scupture by Alberto Giacometti entitled “Walking Man I”, set a world record for the most expensive single item of art ever sold at auction, when it sold for $101,426,070, including buyer’s premium. The guesswork is that it was purchased by one of Russia’s new billionaires. It’s interesting to point out that the new world record holder is not a unique item. It was cast in 1961 and numbered two of six. I guess that means there are five other owners with big smiles on their faces, although most of the others are in museum collections.

Gustav Klimt - Church in Cassone - Landscape with Cypresses, Sotheby's London lot 13, February 3, 2010

Gustav Klimt - Church in Cassone - Landscape with Cypresses, Sotheby's London lot 13, February 3, 2010

The next best result went to Gustav Klimt, with a painting entitled “Church in Cassone – Landscape with Cypresses”. It sold for $42 million, including buyer’s premium, more than double the pre-sale estimate of $19-28 million.

Pitcher and Fruit on a Table by Paul Cézanne, Sotheby's London lot #5, February 3, 2010

Pitcher and Fruit on a Table by Paul Cézanne, Sotheby's London lot #5, February 3, 2010

Third best was a still life by Paul Cézanne, which sold for $18,413,075, including buyer’s premium, within the pre-sale estimate of $15.5-23 million.

I think I’m in the wrong business. No Tiffany lamp has ever sold for more than a couple of million dollars at auction. No Gallé vase has ever sold for more than a couple of hundred thousand dollars. Just one or two billionaires is all I need.

I’m taking a lot of time to add new items to my website. I’ve already listed new items under Gallé glass (including a blownout vase), Daum Nancy glass and Tiffany Studios glass. Soon I’ll be adding many Tiffany Studios desk pieces. Please take a look, as every day I’m adding more. Click on this link chasenantiques.com.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog entry.

Call or write and let me know what you would like to buy, sell, or trade. philchasen@gmail.com or
516-922-2090. And please visit my website. chasenantiques.com

Now is the time to buy Louis Icart etchings at historically low prices

I studied economics in college, so I understand the basics of the laws of supply and demand. The price of an item is inversely proportional to the supply, i.e., the price rises when the supply goes down and falls when the supply goes up. Also the price of an item is directly proportional to the demand, i.e., the price rises when the demand goes up and falls when the demand goes down.

Louis Icart etching 'Two Beauties'

Louis Icart etching 'Two Beauties'

The market in the works of Louis Icart follows these laws. Historically, the high-water mark for the Icart market was in the late 1980s, when the Japanese were buying heavily. The demand was so strong that prices for even the lowliest of Icart etchings was $4,000 and for the best and rarest as much as $55,000, e.g. Two Beauties.

Louis Icart etching 'Laziness'

Louis Icart etching 'Laziness'

The low-water mark for Icart etchings seems to be now. For whatever reason, there are few new collectors looking to acquire Icart etchings and existing collectors are not adding many to their collections. So, logically, the prices need to drop to increase demand. To that extent, I am going to drastically reduce the prices of authentic Icart etchings to levels not seen in 40 years. The new prices will start at $850 for the very same etchings that were selling for $4,000. Each and every one will come with a certificate of authenticity. I am changing from retailer to wholesaler for Icart etchings. Please check my website for the latest listings and prices. Click this link. Louis Icart Sale. Don’t take long to make up your mind, because at these prices, they’ll be gone fast. Most are available for immediate shipping, so if you still need a last-minute gift, there’s still time!

I’m taking a lot of time to add new items to my website. I’ve already listed new items under Gallé glass (including a blownout vase), Daum Nancy glass and Tiffany Studios glass. Soon I’ll be adding many Tiffany Studios desk pieces. Many are priced right for great holiday gift-giving. Who wouldn’t like to receive a genuine Tiffany desk set accessory as a Christmas or Chanukah gift? Please take a look, as every day I’m adding more. Click on this link chasenantiques.com.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog entry.

Call or write and let me know what you would like to buy, sell, or trade. philchasen@gmail.com or 516-922-2090. And please visit my website. chasenantiques.com

No more room to collect? Christie’s has the solution.

62 Imlay Street in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn

62 Imlay Street in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn

I’ve often met collectors who told me they no longer have any room for new purchases. Well if you’re from the greater New York area, you no longer have an excuse. Christie’s New York has signed a lease on a huge 235,000 sq. ft. warehouse and you can rent space there. It will be in the up-and-coming Red Hook section of Brooklyn, which already boasts major IKEA and Fairway Market stores.

The building is a mess at the moment, but after Christie’s gets finished with it, it will be a state-of-the-art, high security, climate-controlled, storage facility. It will be equipped with infrared video cameras, biometric readers, and detectors for motion, smoke, heat and water. Nice, since it’s likely that the value of the art stored there will exceed the value of the building.

Christie’s already has offered this service in London for many years. Now New York has been added, with additional plans for the same service in Singapore.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog entry.

Call or write and let me know what you would like to buy, sell, or trade. philchasen@gmail.com or 516-922-2090. And please visit my website. chasenantiques.com

The Charles Martignette collection of American Illustration Art, part II

I’ve previously written about the Charles Martignette collection of American Illustration Art, but I’m writing again because this time I’m giving you advance notice of an upcoming auction, being held by Heritage Galleries on Oct 27, 2009, where you will have the opportunity to buy paintings from his collection. Charles had accumulated one of the best American illustration art collections in the world before his untimely death in February, 2008.

Norman Rockwell, Heritage lot #96253

Norman Rockwell, Heritage lot #96253

Norman Rockwell will be represented with several lots. Rockwell has sold for over a million dollars for some of his famous magazine cover illustrations, but this colored pencil on board from 1955, for Scott Tissue, is estimated to sell for $8,000 – $12,000.

Howard Chandler Christy, Heritage #96058

Howard Chandler Christy, Heritage lot #96058

Howard Chandler Christy is another fabulous artist who will be well represented at the sale with several lots, including a stupendous oil on canvas of several nudes, entitled In the Garden of Eden, dated 1925. This very large painting, 28″ x 71″, has a pre-sale estimate of $40,000 – $60,000.

Cafe des Artistes, showing several Howard Chandler Christy paintings

Cafe des Artistes, showing several Howard Chandler Christy paintings

Christy painted all of the paintings that decorated the interior of Cafe des Artistes, a quintessentially New York restaurant and a wonderful place for Sunday brunch. Unfortunately the restaurant closed this past summer and has since filed for bankruptcy. Hopefully the paintings will still be available for viewing at some point in the future.

The Heritage sale has many other paintings with lower estimates, but I suspect that the actual selling prices will be significantly higher. Remember what I’ve repeated in many of my blog entries — auctions always do well with fresh to the market items priced below fair value. I’ll write about the sale after it’s over and we’ll see if I’m right about my prediction. If you’re interested, here’s the link to the auction. Heritage Signature Illustration Art Auction #7016.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog entry.

Call or write and let me know what you would like to buy, sell, or trade. philchasen@gmail or 516-922-2090. And please visit my website. chasenantiques.com

What is Art Deco?

The Chrysler Building in New York City

The Chrysler Building in New York City

The Art Deco movement began developing in the 1910s during a transitional period from the Art Nouveau movement. It was in full bloom by the 1920s and 1930s. Art Deco is characterized by stylized designs of people and flowers, as well as geometric designs, and is frequently symmetrical. This is the total opposite of Art Nouveau, where asymmetry is the usual rule. European works of Art Nouveau art trumped American examples, but not necessarily so with the Art Deco movement. There are exceptional examples on both sides of the pond.

An entrance to Rockefeller Center in New York City by Alfred Auguste Janniot

An entrance to Rockefeller Center in New York City by Alfred Auguste Janniot

New York City has some of the finest examples of Art Deco architecture in the world. The Chrysler Building, the Empire State Building and Rockefeller Center are prime examples. In collaboration with famous European artists, the French sculptor, Alfred Auguste Janniot, was employed to create a superb Art Deco, gilded bronze entrance to Rockefeller Center.

Le Verre Francais Poissons vase

Le Verre Francais Poissons vase

In France, Charles Schneider fully embraced the Art Deco movement and created the finest glass of the period. The designs were stylized and symmetrical. The technique was acid-etching and the vases were signed “Le Verre Francais”. The colors of Art Deco glass are bright and happy as opposed to the mostly true-to-life colors of the Art Nouveau period.

Icart etching 'Speed II', 1933

Icart etching 'Speed II', 1933

Louis Icart was most popular during the Art Deco period. His art became more Art Deco as the period became more popular. Here is an example of one of his famous etchings, entitled Speed II, published in 1933. It’s more Art Deco than his original version which was published in 1927 and was very successful. Notice especially the change in the woman’s hairdo.

Speed I on the left and Speed II on the right

Speed I on the left and Speed II on the right

By the early 1940s, the Art Deco movement had pretty much run its course, but its popularity is very much alive today.

Please send me your suggestions or questions about art glass, lamps, Louis Icart, shows, auctions, etc. If it’s interesting, I’ll answer your question in a future blog entry.

Call or write and let me know what you would like to buy, sell, or trade. philchasen@gmail or 516-922-2090. And please visit my website. chasenantiques.com