art glass

  • Greene & Greene lantern pulled due to provenance concern

    Our friend Ted Wells of Living Simple passed this note on to us a few weeks ago. This particular item was taken from the White Sisters’ (Martha, Violet and Jane) House at 370 Arroyo Terrace [map / photo / Zillow] in Pasadena, a very attractive Greene & Greene home from 1903; Larry Wilson writes a bit more about this in today’s paper, and argues for an inventory of Greene objects in private hands, as the Frank Lloyd Wright Preservation Trust has attempted and had good success with.

    Of course, this isn’t the first time that the provenance or sale of a Greene & Greene lantern has stirred up controversy…

    PASADENA – A porch lantern that experts believe was bought and illegally removed from a Greene and Greene house on Arroyo Terrace at a garage sale has been withdrawn from a Sotheby’s auction set for Friday in New York City.

    The lantern, with an auction estimate of $30,000 to $50,000, was taken out of the American Renaissance sale Tuesday on the advice of Sotheby’s lawyers "pending further research," spokeswoman Lauren Gioia said.

    The decision came in response to a letter sent to Sotheby’s by the Pasadena city attorney’s office on Dec. 5; it asks that the lantern "be returned immediately" to Pasadena since the sale of any interior or exterior fixture removed from a Greene brothers’ house is forbidden by a city law enacted in 1986.

    Reached by telephone, Naomi Ritz said she put the lantern, listed as "from the Estate of the Ritz Brothers," up for auction, but declined to give any details about its acquisition.

    The lantern is believed to have once hung on the porch at 370 Arroyo Terrace, known as the White Sisters’ House. The 1903 Craftsman-style home was built by Charles Greene for his sisters-in-law, Martha, Violet and Jane, next door to his own 1901 house at 368 Arroyo.

    The lantern’s journey to New York started at a garage sale at 370 Arroyo Terrace, according to the city attorney’s office. The private, word-of-mouth sale was held earlier this year when the home’s long-time owner, Ann Duffy, was moving out.

    The Duffy Trust sold the house for $1.4 million to Timothy J. Toohey and David Liu in May; it is undergoing restoration. Toohey, 57, bought the Charles Greene house next door in September 2005 for $2.475 million.

    Local preservationists first got wind of the lantern’s impending sale when contacted by Ted Wells of Guardian Stewardship, the Greene and Greene watchdog group, and when the buyers began toting it around town for expert opinions on its authenticity.

    Backed by an anonymous private collector, Guardian Stewardship bought all but a few of the 49 items put under the hammer by former Gamble House curator Randell Makinson at Sotheby’s in December 2004. The collection raised almost $2.9 million – about three times the estimated value. Some of it is on show at the Huntington Library and the Long Beach Museum of Art.

    Wells said a dealer in Chicago, who knew the group had bought the Makinson collection, had offered to sell the lantern.

    "I questioned if it was something that could be legally sold, and if there were ethical issues, we would not be interested," Wells said. "The dealer in Chicago agreed … but I see it reached Sotheby’s."

    It’s believed the lantern was stored for years in a box in the White Sisters’ House basement, but it’s almost certainly original to the house, said Ted Bosley, curator of the Gamble House and a Greene and Greene expert.

    "It’s a very lovely piece, an early Greene and Greene lantern," Bosley said. The buyers, he said, showed him photographs of the lamp, described in the Sotheby’s catalogue as zinc-plated steel and opalescent glass with lead strips, circa 1903.

    "They thought it might be important, and I confirmed it to the best of my knowledge," Bosley said. "I suggested they take it back to the house and make sure it was protected. They didn’t follow my advice."
    Sue Mossman, executive director of Pasadena Heritage, said Ritz’s husband Clyde Munsell – whom Ritz identified as her attorney to this newspaper – offered the lantern to the preservation group.

    "Based on a phone conversation, I thought he was willing to donate it, get a tax deduction and we would return it to the house," Mossman said. "He said, `We’re not donating, we’ll sell it to you.’ But we don’t have these resources."

    Mossman said that everywhere the sellers went they were advised to return the lantern to the house, and that the house’s owners would reimburse them.

  • Allan-Dymarz Studios

    Edmonton craftspeople Curtis Allan, a woodworker, and Ania Dymarz, an artist working with leather and glass, have come together to build some very unique and attractive pieces, with plenty of flair and a noticeable basis in the Arts & Crafts movement. Curtis and Ania regularly display and sell their work at Edmonton and other local crafts fairs and events.

  • George Maher Window Sells for $120,000

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    Our friend Tamera Herrod forwards the following press release about a striking stained-glass Chicago-school window that just sold for a record price at a recent Treadway-Toomey auction. A much higher-resolution version of the photograph is available in our Flickr art glass album.

    Historic Chicago Art Glass Window by George W. Maher, Louis J. Millet Sells for Record $120,000 at Treadway-Toomey Galleries’ Auction

    A relic of Chicago’s Prairie School art glass circa 1901, the thistle window was designed for the James A. Patten house and implemented in vermilion, olive, opalescent and gold-foiled glass.

    OAK PARK, Ill. — A Prairie School art glass window with an elaborate thistle design by architect George W. Maher fetched a record $120,000 at Treadway-Toomey Galleries’ 20th Century Art & Design Auction on May 7. Executed by stained glass master Louis J. Millet circa 1901, the triptych window was reclaimed from the James A. Patten house in Evanston, Ill. prior to its demolition in 1938. It had a presale estimate of $15,000 to $20,000.

    "It’s a spectacular window," said Rolf Achilles, curator of Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows in Chicago. "Maher was a highly regarded Midwestern architect who was not nationally known. He should have been. He was a very important regionalist." (read on below)

  • Gamble House Lantern – sold!

    0172_1_lg This was posted a week ago, but I’m bumping it up to the top of the page now due to an important correction.

    This lantern was created as a replacement for a stolen G & G lamp, originally made for the Gamble House; once the original was recovered, this copy was auctioned off to raise funds for the Gamble House’s upkeep and education programs was sold off – see below. It sold at auction last weekend  for $2,500, a bit lower than the expected $3,000 – $4,000. There are several excellent images on the ebay auction page.

    reader John Hamm of Hamm Glass Studios writes in to give us the straight dope on this:

    I do not know where you received the infromation stating that the Gamble House profited in any way from the sale of this lantern but it is completly false. The Gamble House had absolutely nothing to do with the sale of this piece, and in no way made any money from its sale. The "gentleman" that located the original that was stolen from the house many years ago was given the reproduction as a thank you, at a public ceremony no less, for allowing the Gamble House to purchase from him the original lantern that he located and purchased on E-bay. He then in turn put the repro. up for auction and profitted soley from its sale – an action that I personally find repugnant. You may verify this by calling the Gamble House and speaking with the director, Ted Bosley. It would have been a kind gesture if the profit from the sale had been directed back to the Gamble House, but no one there knew about the sale until the auction was about to take place.

    So basically the owner profited twice: he bought stolen property (something that people are often punished for!), which was then bought back from him at the Gamble House’s expense; and then he sold off the lantern that was given to him and profited from that as well. Certainly within his rights, as the radical capitalist portion of the antique-selling trade have reminded us on this very forum within the last few weeks (when I questioned the ethics of selling pottery ebay for a huge markup without telling the buyer they could buy it for less from the potter directly) – but not very ethical behavior! Thanks to John Hamm for setting us straight on this.

  • Upcoming Art Glass Auction

    Vaseglass150
    On February 10, Rago Arts will hold an auction of fine European and American art glass at their Lambertville auction center. 200 lots of Lalique, Walter, Steuben, Quezal, Gallé, Tiffany, Daum and plenty more will be offered; previews run through 5 pm on the 9th, and the entire catalog is on view online and can be downloaded as a 3 meg pdf.

  • Wayne Cain Architectural Art Glass

    2Wayne Cain lives and works in Bremo Bluff, Virginia, and has spent the last 30 years exploring the use of glass in (and as) architecture. He uses a wide variety of techniques (beveling, staining, carving, silvering, fusing, painting and lampworking) to produce glass for all sorts of clients. His historical design gallery showcases beveled & stained transoms, landing windows, domes and entryways, and his contemporary work – showcasing various thicknesses, textures and shapes of glass – shows off his virtuosity. He’s also produced a number of religious windows, and is comfortable working on public windows, designed and produced on time and in accordance with building codes.

  • Object Fetish: Ebay, April 2005

    Roy4

    Lots of good stuff on Ebay this week – tomorrow I’ll go through A&C items on various Craigslist regional sites, but today I’ve got a few deals from ebay to share.

  • Mickey Abbey Custom Glassworks

    Mickeyabbeyglass1I ran into this fellow while exploring a local flea market here in Sacramento. He had a few windows on display from the back of his truck, and has been building custom glass and restoring older work  – mostly historical designs for restoration projects – for over 20 years. He does a lot of Victorian beveled glass as well as traditional Craftsman patterns (Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired Prairie grids, Charles Rennie Mackintosh rosettes, etc.); I am going to hire him to replace a pane in our stained-glass built-in doors, broken by a burglar when our house was broken into back in September. Mickey Abbey Custom Glassworks, 1166 34th Ave., Sacramento CA 95822: 916.955.7026.