Dog art is auctioned in New York
NEW YORK (AP) -- While the real canines were cavorting across town at the annual Westminster Kennel Club show, a group of dog paintings, statues, fancy collars and other items fetched a total of $700,000 at an auction house.
Leading the way was the $66,000 paid for a 19th-century John Emms oil painting of foxhounds and a terrier resting on a straw-covered bench. Two other paintings went for $57,000 each: One, titled "Winter Fireside," was by Arthur Wardle; the other, "The First of October," by James Hardy Jr., showed three hounds after a hunt.
Tuesday's auction was the 26th sale of dog-related items by Bonhams, a company founded in London in 1793.
"We're encouraged by the continuing strength in this market, a market we've made our own," company spokesman Charles O'Brien said in a statement. "Several lots sold for spectacular prices."
The top-selling Emms painting and another Wardle work, which sold for $39,000, were within the presale estimates, but "Winter Fireside," showing dogs near a fireplace, went for about four times its high estimate of $15,000.
Besides the paintings, the sales included a 19th-century life-size cast-iron black retriever for $10,200, a Victorian sewing cabinet decorated with hand-painted dog heads for $9,000 and a William IV silver and leather collar once worn by a champion Blenheim spaniel, for $3,900.
None of the buyers were identified in the statement.
Leading the way was the $66,000 paid for a 19th-century John Emms oil painting of foxhounds and a terrier resting on a straw-covered bench. Two other paintings went for $57,000 each: One, titled "Winter Fireside," was by Arthur Wardle; the other, "The First of October," by James Hardy Jr., showed three hounds after a hunt.
This photo of a 19th century painting entitled "Foxhounds and a Hunt Terrier on a Bench," by John Emms was released in New York by Bonhams Auction house, Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2008. The painting sold for $66,000 as part of Bonham's 26th sale of dog-related items in New York.
Tuesday's auction was the 26th sale of dog-related items by Bonhams, a company founded in London in 1793.
"We're encouraged by the continuing strength in this market, a market we've made our own," company spokesman Charles O'Brien said in a statement. "Several lots sold for spectacular prices."
The top-selling Emms painting and another Wardle work, which sold for $39,000, were within the presale estimates, but "Winter Fireside," showing dogs near a fireplace, went for about four times its high estimate of $15,000.
Besides the paintings, the sales included a 19th-century life-size cast-iron black retriever for $10,200, a Victorian sewing cabinet decorated with hand-painted dog heads for $9,000 and a William IV silver and leather collar once worn by a champion Blenheim spaniel, for $3,900.
None of the buyers were identified in the statement.
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