Items located in Pleasant Valley, NY. Items include George Rodrigue framed and matted numbered print under glass of a blue dog in front of a tree with a yellow star at the top; Elizabeth O'Neill Verner lithograph of Brooklyn Bridge with Manhattan in the background; Epicault double inkwell having bronze statue of Saint Georges on marble base with pen holder; brass National receipt drop box having two glass sides and decoration throughout; Durani & Co mother of pearl and bronze opera style binoculars; James Dixon & Sons Sheffield powder flask having plaque; Bronze statue of military officer; pair of five fixture table lamps having decorative metal bases and shades with rounded finials; several Salvador Dali colored lithographs; Jean Antoine Houdon signed carved marble bust and more.

Payment is due by Friday, October 27 at 1PM.

Pickup in Pleasant Valley, NY must be completed by Monday, October 30 at 3PM.

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.

*NOTE* Shipping is available on items not indicated in description as Pickup only.
Auction Info
Items located in Pleasant Valley, NY. Items include George Rodrigue framed and matted numbered print under glass of a blue dog in front of a tree with a yellow star at the top; Elizabeth O'Neill Verner lithograph of Brooklyn Bridge with Manhattan in the background; Epicault double inkwell having bronze statue of Saint Georges on marble base with pen holder; brass National receipt drop box having two glass sides and decoration throughout; Durani & Co mother of pearl and bronze opera style binoculars; James Dixon & Sons Sheffield powder flask having plaque; Bronze statue of military officer; pair of five fixture table lamps having decorative metal bases and shades with rounded finials; several Salvador Dali colored lithographs; Jean Antoine Houdon signed carved marble bust and more.

Payment is due by Friday, October 27 at 1PM.

Pickup in Pleasant Valley, NY must be completed by Monday, October 30 at 3PM.

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.

*NOTE* Shipping is available on items not indicated in description as Pickup only.

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Norma Bassett Hall signed color wood block matted of landscape scene titled "Haystack Rock" signed lower right "Norma Bassett Hall", 5" x 6". Bio from AskArt: Norma Bassett Hall (1889-1957) was most remembered as a woodblock printmaker and one of the founding members of the Prairie Printmakers, Norma Bassett Hall was the only woman member of that group and the only one to establish a reputation exclusively with color prints. Her interest in woodblock printmaking dated from 1922 when she was on a Cannon Beach, Oregon honeymoon trip. The couple decided to make a pictorial visit of their trip by copying block prints from a book, and she saw what she described as the "real possibilities" of block printmaking. She used the Oriental method, which is the mixing of dry color with water and rice-flour paste. She learned the Japanese woodcut print method on rice paper involving transparent watercolors, which for Hall was a redirection from opaque oil base colors. Adopting this approach exclusively for many years, Hall printed with as many as six or seven colors, each requiring a separate hand cut woodblock. Hall's prints are signed in the bottom right-hand corner, with the edition number printed beneath the lower left side of the image.

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Norma Bassett Hall signed color wood block matted of landscape scene titled "Haystack Rock" signed lower right "Norma Bassett Hall", 5" x 6". Bio from AskArt: Norma Bassett Hall (1889-1957) was most remembered as a woodblock printmaker and one of the founding members of the Prairie Printmakers, Norma Bassett Hall was the only woman member of that group and the only one to establish a reputation exclusively with color prints. Her interest in woodblock printmaking dated from 1922 when she was on a Cannon Beach, Oregon honeymoon trip. The couple decided to make a pictorial visit of their trip by copying block prints from a book, and she saw what she described as the "real possibilities" of block printmaking. She used the Oriental method, which is the mixing of dry color with water and rice-flour paste. She learned the Japanese woodcut print method on rice paper involving transparent watercolors, which for Hall was a redirection from opaque oil base colors. Adopting this approach exclusively for many years, Hall printed with as many as six or seven colors, each requiring a separate hand cut woodblock. Hall's prints are signed in the bottom right-hand corner, with the edition number printed beneath the lower left side of the image.

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High Bid:
$100.00 – greenwood

bidding history

Auction Type: One Lot
Quantity: 1

Bidding has closed on this lot