Items located in Mount Kisco New York. This auction is from several Estates and is a charity auction. Part of the proceeds from lots 1-10 (and lot 19) will support Endeavor Horsemanship, a 501c 3 located in Bedford, NY. Auction items include fine art and exquisite contemporary, vintage/antique furniture from estates in Scarsdale, Chappaqua and New York City. Furniture from E.J. Victor, Takara Belmont and Lewis Mittman. Fine art from Fabio Sinisca, Lido Bettarini and BC Nowlin.

Payment is due by Tuesday, September 19 at 1PM.

Pickup will be on Wednesday, September 20 at 10AM.

All lots sold as is, where is. There is a 15% Buyers Premium for all lots purchased. Payment methods include cash, MC, Visa, Discover or good check. You can make credit card payment online by going to your Member Area and selecting your invoice.

Address will be given to winning bidders after the auction. Click More Info/Bid Now for additional photos.
Auction Info
Items located in Mount Kisco New York. This auction is from several Estates and is a charity auction. Part of the proceeds from lots 1-10 (and lot 19) will support Endeavor Horsemanship, a 501c 3 located in Bedford, NY. Auction items include fine art and exquisite contemporary, vintage/antique furniture from estates in Scarsdale, Chappaqua and New York City. Furniture from E.J. Victor, Takara Belmont and Lewis Mittman. Fine art from Fabio Sinisca, Lido Bettarini and BC Nowlin.

Payment is due by Tuesday, September 19 at 1PM.

Pickup will be on Wednesday, September 20 at 10AM.

All lots sold as is, where is. There is a 15% Buyers Premium for all lots purchased. Payment methods include cash, MC, Visa, Discover or good check. You can make credit card payment online by going to your Member Area and selecting your invoice.

Address will be given to winning bidders after the auction. Click More Info/Bid Now for additional photos.
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#24 – Jean-Paul Courchia (France), Jaffa Tel Aviv ancient harbor with boats painting. Measures, 32.5" x 29". Jean-Paul Courchia is a highly successful painter both in Europe and in America. His oils on canvas were displayed in Marseille in the famous Provincial Gallery Jouvne, which Van Gogh and Cezanne called home for their artwork. Her Highness Queen Paola of Belgium, Madame Nobutaka Shinomiya, wife of the Consul of Japan in Marseille, and Mr. Aldon James, president of the National Arts Club in New-York, are avid collectors of his work. Jean-Paul Courchia is also a unique speaker, able to explain through a simple approach the way we see art. Jean-Paul Courchia is a physician and a world renowned artist painter. He splits his life among his office, his studio and the department of ophthalmology where his two passions merge: he works on the relationship between art and the brain by analyzing eyes movements. He is often requested to give lectures in France and in the United- States about the art visitors visual strategy, and art and science. If you think that you are free in front of a painting you are wrong. Once the artist catches you he makes you travel in his work of art. If he is clever and succeeds in his plan, he will show you elements that are at the base of his message. If you stay in front of the painting, you will connect with the brain of the painter when he created his work. Through the study of eye movement he can describe the most complicated inner workings of the brain in a way that no one could understand. There is another facet to his interesting persona: medical doctor of endocrinology and metabolic diseases, he is fascinated by science and has given about one hundred of lectures in both fields: endocrinology and vision in art. Measurements of eye movements in the discovery of a painting show how vision is often disconnected from the brain. Starting out from a preliminary study on the behavior of museum visitors, and in particular the average time spent in front of a picture (about 12 seconds!), his research is intended to highlight the information picked up by viewers exploring various paintings. You will be captivated by the videos showing the eye-gaze strategies in paintings by Henri Matisse and Francisco Goya. In a new work presented at the French Society of Ophthalmology he explores the last painting of Van Gogh, and shows how the artistic information conducts the eye of the spectator. Through this painting, we discover the artists brain in his last moments. His study interested the documentation center of the Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam. It is a unique chance to have in the same personality the two sides of these fields, artistic and scientific knowledge. During his lecture, Doctor Courchia will bring you in his studio to explain how a painter, whether consciously or not, uses his abilities to catch the eye and makes it travel between the lines and the colors. Art collection from a prominent East Coast family with estates in New York City, Scarsdale and Chappaqua. Family name will NOT be disclosed. RARE OPPORTUNITY. Purchased at galleries around the country/world over the last 75+ years. Please refer to pictures for condition. Please bring help, tools, boxes, wrap, blankets, tools, equipment and the appropriate vehicle for SAFE removal. None will be available on site.

Jean-Paul Courchia (France), Jaffa Tel Aviv ancient harbor with boats painting. Measures, 32.5" x 29". Jean-Paul Courchia is a highly successful painter both in Europe and in America. His oils on canvas were displayed in Marseille in the famous Provincial Gallery Jouvne, which Van Gogh and Cezanne called home for their artwork. Her Highness Queen Paola of Belgium, Madame Nobutaka Shinomiya, wife of the Consul of Japan in Marseille, and Mr. Aldon James, president of the National Arts Club in New-York, are avid collectors of his work. Jean-Paul Courchia is also a unique speaker, able to explain through a simple approach the way we see art. Jean-Paul Courchia is a physician and a world renowned artist painter. He splits his life among his office, his studio and the department of ophthalmology where his two passions merge: he works on the relationship between art and the brain by analyzing eyes movements. He is often requested to give lectures in France and in the United- States about the art visitors visual strategy, and art and science. If you think that you are free in front of a painting you are wrong. Once the artist catches you he makes you travel in his work of art. If he is clever and succeeds in his plan, he will show you elements that are at the base of his message. If you stay in front of the painting, you will connect with the brain of the painter when he created his work. Through the study of eye movement he can describe the most complicated inner workings of the brain in a way that no one could understand. There is another facet to his interesting persona: medical doctor of endocrinology and metabolic diseases, he is fascinated by science and has given about one hundred of lectures in both fields: endocrinology and vision in art. Measurements of eye movements in the discovery of a painting show how vision is often disconnected from the brain. Starting out from a preliminary study on the behavior of museum visitors, and in particular the average time spent in front of a picture (about 12 seconds!), his research is intended to highlight the information picked up by viewers exploring various paintings. You will be captivated by the videos showing the eye-gaze strategies in paintings by Henri Matisse and Francisco Goya. In a new work presented at the French Society of Ophthalmology he explores the last painting of Van Gogh, and shows how the artistic information conducts the eye of the spectator. Through this painting, we discover the artists brain in his last moments. His study interested the documentation center of the Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam. It is a unique chance to have in the same personality the two sides of these fields, artistic and scientific knowledge. During his lecture, Doctor Courchia will bring you in his studio to explain how a painter, whether consciously or not, uses his abilities to catch the eye and makes it travel between the lines and the colors. Art collection from a prominent East Coast family with estates in New York City, Scarsdale and Chappaqua. Family name will NOT be disclosed. RARE OPPORTUNITY. Purchased at galleries around the country/world over the last 75+ years. Please refer to pictures for condition. Please bring help, tools, boxes, wrap, blankets, tools, equipment and the appropriate vehicle for SAFE removal. None will be available on site.

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Jean-Paul Courchia (France), Jaffa Tel Aviv ancient harbor with boats painting. Measures, 32.5" x 29". Jean-Paul Courchia is a highly successful painter both in Europe and in America. His oils on canvas were displayed in Marseille in the famous Provincial Gallery Jouvne, which Van Gogh and Cezanne called home for their artwork. Her Highness Queen Paola of Belgium, Madame Nobutaka Shinomiya, wife of the Consul of Japan in Marseille, and Mr. Aldon James, president of the National Arts Club in New-York, are avid collectors of his work. Jean-Paul Courchia is also a unique speaker, able to explain through a simple approach the way we see art. Jean-Paul Courchia is a physician and a world renowned artist painter. He splits his life among his office, his studio and the department of ophthalmology where his two passions merge: he works on the relationship between art and the brain by analyzing eyes movements. He is often requested to give lectures in France and in the United- States about the art visitors visual strategy, and art and science. If you think that you are free in front of a painting you are wrong. Once the artist catches you he makes you travel in his work of art. If he is clever and succeeds in his plan, he will show you elements that are at the base of his message. If you stay in front of the painting, you will connect with the brain of the painter when he created his work. Through the study of eye movement he can describe the most complicated inner workings of the brain in a way that no one could understand. There is another facet to his interesting persona: medical doctor of endocrinology and metabolic diseases, he is fascinated by science and has given about one hundred of lectures in both fields: endocrinology and vision in art. Measurements of eye movements in the discovery of a painting show how vision is often disconnected from the brain. Starting out from a preliminary study on the behavior of museum visitors, and in particular the average time spent in front of a picture (about 12 seconds!), his research is intended to highlight the information picked up by viewers exploring various paintings. You will be captivated by the videos showing the eye-gaze strategies in paintings by Henri Matisse and Francisco Goya. In a new work presented at the French Society of Ophthalmology he explores the last painting of Van Gogh, and shows how the artistic information conducts the eye of the spectator. Through this painting, we discover the artists brain in his last moments. His study interested the documentation center of the Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam. It is a unique chance to have in the same personality the two sides of these fields, artistic and scientific knowledge. During his lecture, Doctor Courchia will bring you in his studio to explain how a painter, whether consciously or not, uses his abilities to catch the eye and makes it travel between the lines and the colors. Art collection from a prominent East Coast family with estates in New York City, Scarsdale and Chappaqua. Family name will NOT be disclosed. RARE OPPORTUNITY. Purchased at galleries around the country/world over the last 75+ years. Please refer to pictures for condition. Please bring help, tools, boxes, wrap, blankets, tools, equipment and the appropriate vehicle for SAFE removal. None will be available on site.

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High Bid:
$300.00 – pwc1110

bidding history

Auction Type: One Lot
Quantity: 1

Bidding has closed on this lot