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Rafael Osona's
AUCTION NEWS
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Nantucket's
Premier Auction Gallery
NEXT AUCTION
July 11th
Nantucket Art, Heirlooms & Memorabilia, Antiques & Fine Jewelry
The John Austin Estate Paintings Collection
link to our website for more highlights
If you haven't managed to score your very own Illya Kagan yet, this may be your chance!
Fine Illya Kagan Oil on Canvas "View of the Town of Nantucket from the Creeks", signed lower left and dated, 2000. It's a big one! 65 ½ in. x 31 ½ in.
Illya Kagan! This artist's emphasis on that rarified Nantucket light and its changing qualities, his dancing skies and skewed vantage points assure that these paintings could ONLY be accomplished "en plein air" where nature's largess both confounds and inspires.

Vintage Stephen Swift; Cherry High Back Armchairs; Set of Six
Genuine Nantucket heirlooms; comfortable AND beautiful to look at! Stephen Swift's very first chair design artfully combines elements of Shaker and Queen Anne styles. For three decades, this meticulously constructed bench-made furniture has been about craftsmanship and comfort. One person constructs each piece from beginning to end, from selecting the wood to bringing up the finish!
Here's one for you Flappers heading to the Roaring 20's AIDS Network Gala on Friday! Wonder what Miss Cheryl will be wearing?
Vintage French Enamel Traveling Toiletry Set in Green Leather Suitcase.  Likely the most diverse of any Nantucket artist, Anthony Frederick Sarg did it all! From book illustrations to jigsaw puzzles, place mats to parade balloons, Sarg's creative output was limitless. Rare, one of a kind Tony Sarg Hooked Rug, signed within the weave; lower right (prototype; this rug never went into production)  While American sailors of 1840-1880 pretty much stuck to scrimshaw, the British amused themselves during long weeks, months and years at sea by stitching. And who better to recon an accurate portrayal of those masts & rigging? English Nautical Woolie, circa 1880, square rigged British ship heading in, with lighthouse and vessel on the horizon. 11 ½ in. x 15 in.  'Twas Ms. Glenann Elliott of Golden Basket fame who first imagined the comfort of a kidney-shaped shoulder basket.
Glenann Kidney Shaped Basket, carved ivory crab peg and knobs, black leather strap, signed upon the base "Original Design by Glenann, The Golden Basket."
Stanley M. Roop Nantucket Friendship Basket, round ivory top with polychromed and engraved flowers, peg and polychromed ivory knobs, signed upon the base "Nantucket, Mass. Stanley M. Roop, 1966"
The John Austin Estate Paintings Collection |
Who among us doesn't remember John Austin? Fondly. A gentle man who always enjoyed a gam - mornings at the Downy Flake, curbside at the Hub, or over a Friday night "gallery glide" glass of wine at the Main Street or Kenneth Taylor Galleries -
John Austin painted Nantucket - our Nantucket - recognizing beauty in even the humblest scenes.
House portraits? Austin's were among the fashionable gifts from realtors to new home owners, and for family anniversary celebrations. Much like Lightship baskets, there's a certain status to owning a John Austin painting.
Offered on July 11th together with our Antiques, Marine & Fine Art Auction, these paintings indeed harken back to Friday night receptions and red dotted paintings; then and now a significant fragment of our Little Grey Lady's unique cultural fabric. | |

View more John Austin paintings.
biography
Rafael Osona's AUCTION NEWS
A Paradigm for Acquisition
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Peeking Ahead to August 1st Americana, Continental, Maritime & Fine Art

here's
Looking Back At you!___________
It's
right around the corner. The catalogs will be here soon.
These exceptional portraits are among the August 1st offerings.
Visit our (website) for more. Absentee Bids Accepted!
Pair of Fine Early American Portraits; First Quarter of the 19th Century; Subjects: Salmon Pease (b. June 14, 1783, Norfolk, Connecticut)
and Matilda Huntington (b. December 29, 1780, Ashford, Connecticut), in lemon
gilt frames. Oil on canvas, 26½ in. x 22½ in. Provenance: Descended in the family of the founders of
the Ingram Clock Company.  George Gardner Fish
(Nantucket 1822-1906) "The Bride [The
Maidens]", pastel on paper, signed, dated and inscribed lower left, G.G.
Fish, NYork, 1858. 50 in. x 36 in.

George G. Hartwell (Massachusetts
1815-1901) "Portrait of a
Sea Captain with Spyglass", Oil on Canvas, 26½ in. x 21 in., in period mahogany faux grained frame.
George G. Hartwell was a member of the Prior-
Hamblin group of painters. His style is
very similar to William Matthew Prior. He was related to Prior by marriage.
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Rafael Osona's AUCTION NEWS The Fundamental Framework for Fun
Auctions
Saturdays at 9:30 a.m.
American Legion Hall 21 Washington St., Nantucket, MA

Don't worry We'll sustain you! Breakfast & Lunch Catered
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SEEKING FINE
CONSIGNMENTS FOR AUCTION
Antiques - Americana -
Maritime & Fine Art Nantucket Art & Baskets
   
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the Benefits of Friends
"The only people for me are the
mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous
of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace
thing, but burn, burn, burn like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like
spiders across the stars..."
-Jack Kerouac, On The
Road, 1957
 Friday, July 10th, 5-10p.m., The White Elephant
In the 1920's the
term flapper referred to a "new
breed" of young women who shortened their skirts, bobbed their hair, listened
to the new jazz music, and flaunted their disdain for what was at the time considered
acceptable behavior. Flappers were seen as brash for wearing excessive makeup, drinking,
smoking, driving automobiles and otherwise flouting social norms. They too were the mad ones. "mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved," and they "burn burn burn(ed)" to a pedigree. 
More than a half century later,
Honoree Cheryl Bartlett, is another "new breed" of woman. NAN's founder
in 1989, and an exemplary leader in public health, Ms. Bartlett is
Deputy Director of the Bureau of Community Health Access and
Promotion at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, and the
Executive
Director of the Plymouth Area Coalition for the Homeless. Her passion
and
commitment for public health advocacy continues to inspire and motivate
us all. Join us in tribute! This Friday, July 10th Auction, Dinner, Dancing and a helping of Razzmatazz!!
(tickets)
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Nantucket Artists
George Gardner Fish (1822-1906)
A Nantucket portrait painter who principally worked in
pastels, George Fish was born on Nantucket,
the son of Reverend Phineas and Phebe Fish.
His earliest surviving work is dated 1845, painted at only twenty-three
years of age. His brother, William H.
Fish (1821-1880) built the splendid frames that adorn many of George Fish's
works. Fish left Nantucket for New York in the mid-1850's, exhibiting at
the National Academy of Design from 1858 to 1863. In 1866 he married Judith J.
Derrick. While the couple spent an extended honeymoon in France, Fish
studied with French pastellist, Constant Joseph Brochart (1816-1899). Eventually, Fish returned to Nantucket
with his bride. There, the artist eked
out a modest career, operating at first out of rented studio space at the
Nantucket Atheneum. Fish soon became a kind of eminence
grise on the island. He was an experienced, learned man who lectured
frequently on art and literature, and played the violin. This pastel painting exemplifies Fish's portraiture
style. Signed and dated 1858 and
inscribed "NYork", it is one of his earliest known works to have been executed
after Fish first left Nantucket. It is believed that this pastel represents
Fish's two daughters, Madeleine and Anna, together with their friends, Caroline
and Florence Starbuck, who were the daughters of Fish's patron Matthew Starbuck
of Nantucket.
Matthew was the son of Joseph Starbuck, an extremely prominent whaleship
owner and merchant on Nantucket who built the
locally famous "Three Bricks," one each for Starbuck's three sons. Matthew received the "Middle Brick".
Ref: Robert A.
diCuricio, Art on Nantucket: The History of Painting on Nantucket Island,
(pbl.1982, pp.82-91).
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Emily Zohar won the prize!!!
The Barnaby Makes a Basket coloring/story book, that is. It's a Nantucket Lightship Basket Museum collaboration with Wendy Rouillard and her likable pal, Barnaby Bear. Did you know the Museum is one of Barnaby's favorite places? Hey Emily! Last week Molly Katherine Sherrard won the prize! We hear she asked her mom to take her to see the museum.Do you think she had fun?

now... YOU do the talking!just click on the two links below: PLEASETell us What You Think Forward to a Friend
AUCTION
NEWS is a publication
of Rafael Osona,
Nantucket, MA copyright 2009 all rights reserved produced by Carolyn Walsh
www.NantucketAuctions.com 21 Washington Street,
Nantucket, MA 02554 508-228-3942
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