
| Oskar Schlemmer, Rote Leiber, 1929 Signed, Oil on canvas, 35 3/8 x 23 5/8 inches. Sold for $2,480,000 |
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| Henri Matisse, Un Beau Matin D'ete, 1905, Signed, Oil on canvas, 16 x 12 3/4 inches. Sold for $1,136,000 |

| Eastman
Johnson, The Little Soldier, Oil on board,
Sold for $607,500. A WORLD AUCTION RECORD |
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EUROPEAN ART
AMERICAN ART
MODERN
AND CONTEMPORARY ART

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ELAINE BANKS STAINTON
Executive Director
212-427-4141, ext 238
Elaine.Stainton@DoyleNewYork.com
Elaine Stainton completed her undergraduate work in history and French literature at Indiana University, then studied classical archaeology at the University of Maryland, where she received a masters degree in this field in 1972. She worked in the department of Greek and Roman Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, before continuing her studies in archaeology at Princeton University. While at Princeton she studied both classical archaeology and Renaissance and Baroque art, eventually completing her doctoral work in Renaissance painting. She received her Ph.D. in Art and Archaeology in 1978, with a dissertation on the Venetian painter Jacopo Tintoretto.
In 1975, Dr. Stainton joined the faculty of the University of Delaware, where she taught for four years before moving to New York in 1979 to work at the auction house of Sotheby Parke Bernet. Since that time she has lived in New York and has worked for several art firms, including Sotheby’s, Richard Feigen Gallery, P. & D. Colnaghi, and Doyle New York, where she was Director of the Paintings and Drawings Department from 1984-1993.
In 1993, she formed her own company, Stainton Associates, specializing in fine arts research and appraisal. Since 1994, she has also taught art history and connoisseurship at New York University School of Continuing and Professional Studies. In 1994, she was appointed senior editor at Harry N. Abrams, Inc., a publishing house known for its fine illustrated books, where she has edited a number of distinguished art books.
In April 2006, Dr. Stainton returned to Doyle New York as the Executive Director of the Paintings and Drawings Department. As such she is responsible for the appraisals and auctions of important paintings and drawings in the fields of European Old Masters, European 19th Century Art, and European and American Modern and Contemporary paintings, drawings and sculpture.



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HAROLD E. PORCHER
Director, Modern and Contemporary Art
212-427-4141, ext 235
Harold.Porcher@DoyleNewYork.com
Harold Porcher was born in Charleston, South Carolina and studied fine art painting and biology at the College of Charleston. While in school, he developed a special interest in art sales and began his career as an art dealer. He moved to New York in 1989 and joined Sid Deutsch Gallery. He eventually became its director, thereby developing experience in the buying, selling and exhibiting of twentieth century American art. Mr. Porcher’s interest in American abstraction of the 1930s and 1940s led him to Snyder Fine Art, New York, where he served as gallery manager.
After leaving Snyder Fine Art, Harold Porcher consulted for several private dealers, estates and artists throughout New York City and Chicago. In 1997, he started his own business, Sage Fine Art, specializing in the private sales of American abstract art from 1913 through the present. In 2000, his long time friend, the artist and illustrator Esphyr Slobodkina, invited him to co-found the Slobodkina Foundation, based in Glen Head, New York, which houses and presents Slobodkina’s life work to a varied audience. Porcher now serves as Vice President in charge of the Foundation’s art collection.
Mr. Porcher has written extensively on modernist art for magazines and has curated several fine art exhibitions in New York City. Furthermore, he paints and exhibits his own work. Having joined Doyle New York in April 2006, Mr. Porcher is the Specialist in Charge of Modern and Contemporary Art.



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ANNE COHEN DePIETRO
Director, American Paintings
212-427-4141, ext 281
Anne.DePietro@DoyleNewYork.com
Anne Cohen DePietro comes to Doyle New York with an extensive background in the museum field. A native New Yorker, she studied art history and fine arts at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. The recipient of a Master’s degree in art history and museology from the George Washington University, Ms. DePietro completed an extensive study of American costume and portraiture of the mid-eighteenth through mid-nineteenth centuries. A specialist in American art, with a strong interest in American Modernism, Ms. DePietro spent three years as research historian at the Catalog of American Portraits, National Portrait Gallery.
She served for many years as chief curator of the Heckscher Museum of Art in Huntington, Long Island, and director of its Newsday Center for Dove/Torr Studies, a program devoted to the life and work of Arthur Dove and Helen Torr. With important acquisitions of work by Worthington Whittredge, William Merritt Chase, Thomas Anshutz, J. Alden Weir, Thomas Dewing, Paul Manship, Florine Stettheimer, Georgia O’Keeffe, Esphyr Slobodkina, Arthur Dove and Helen Torr, the permanent collection nearly quadrupled in her years at the Museum, with acquisitions valued at more than $9,000,000. She organized numerous landmark exhibitions at the Heckscher including The Paintings of Eduard Steichen, and Arthur Dove and Helen Torr: The Huntington Years. Important archival acquisitions during her tenure include the personal art library, paints, and painting materials of Arthur Dove; an important body of work on paper by Helen Torr, and the extensive autobiographical archives of Esphyr Slobodkina, a founding member of American Abstract Artists. She has written and spoken extensively about American Modernism.
As director of the Newsday Center for Dove/Torr Studies, she spearheaded research, documentation, and fundraising efforts for the Dove/Torr Cottage since its acquisition, raising more than $100,000 from private foundations and public agencies. She remains a member of its advisory panel and also serves on the board of the Slobodkina Foundation in Glen Head, New York.
Most recently, Ms. DePietro served as director at Spanierman Gallery, LLC at East Hampton, where she focused on the art and artists of Long Island.

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SHANI TOLEDANO
Associate Director
212-427-4141, ext 236
Shani@DoyleNewYork.com


JENNIFER ELLIOTT
Cataloguer
212-427-4141, ext 237
Jennifer.Elliott@DoyleNewYork.com


BONNY MURRELL
Registrar
212-427-4141, ext 235
Bonny.Murrell@DoyleNewYork.com


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| Diamond Ring, Harry Winston, Platinum, set to the center with one pear-shaped diamond*, approximately 17.22 cts., D color and Internally Flawless. Sold for $764,000 |
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| Important
Antique Old Mine Diamond and Emerald Brooch, Formerly
Property of Caroline Astor. Sold for $209,000 |
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IMPORTANT JEWELRY AND WATCHES

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BERJ ZAVIAN
Consultant Appraiser
212-427-4141, ext 209
jewelry@DoyleNewYork.com
Berj Zavian is the Senior Appraiser in Doyle New York's Jewelry Department. He has been affiliated with Doyle since 1974 as a specialist in and appraiser of ancient, Renaissance, antique, period and contemporary jewelry and gems, watches and coins. His responsibilities include appraising, cataloguing and authenticating jewelry, fine watches and objets de vertu.
Mr. Zavian, a second-generation jeweler, has been in the jewelry business since 1955. His family firm, where Mr. Zavian works at the bench as a master jeweler, is now in its third generation and has celebrated its seventy-fifth year in business.
Mr. Zavian received his B.S. degree from Pace College and his Certificate of Design from the Mechanics Institute of Technology. He serves as a consultant specialist to numerous museums throughout the country.
Mr. Zavian is a featured appraiser on the Antiques Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide on the PBS network.
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ANN LIMER LANGE
Vice President, Director
212-427-4141, ext 221
jewelry@DoyleNewYork.com
Ann Lange joined Doyle New York in 2004 as a gemologist and jewelry appraiser. She is responsible for valuing a wide range of property including nineteenth century, period and contemporary jewelry as well as diamonds and colored stones. She frequently participates in estate appraisals and contributes to collecting property for upcoming jewelry sales.
Prior to joining Doyle, Ms. Lange was Vice President and Director of the Arcade Fine Jewelry Division at Sotheby's for fifteen years. She has also acted as a consultant in private sales and in the wholesale jewelry business.
Ms. Lange received a Bachelor of Arts in French from Boston University. After working in her family's jewelry business, she went on to pursue a graduate gemological certificate at the Gemological Institute of America.
Jennifer Rosenthal, G.G. 212-427-4141, ext 210
jennifer.rosenthal@Doylenewyork.com
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| Russian Gilt Silver Stemware, Flatware and Partial Dinner Service, Engraved with the Ruwe coat of arms, marked Morozov, with the Imperial Warrant, and cyrillic initials NB, St. Petersburg, 1908-1917. Sold for $912,000 |
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Selection Tiffany Studios Lamps. From a Prominent
Single-Owner Collection. |
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19TH AND 20TH CENTURY FURNITURE AND DECORATIVE ARTS

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MALCOLM N. MAC NEIL
Appraiser
212-427-4141, ext 218
decorative.arts@DoyleNewYork.com
Malcolm N. MacNeil is the specialist in charge of the 19th and 20th Century Decorative Arts Department at Doyle New York. In this role, he coordinates and catalogues Doyle's popular Belle Epoque auctions, which are held three times each year and feature the decorative arts of the Victorian, Art Nouveau and Art Deco eras. Mr. MacNeil also performs general estate appraisals for the firm.
Malcolm MacNeil received a Master's Degree from The Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design and Culture in 1997. He is a member of numerous professional organizations, including the Appraiser's Association of America, Decorative Arts Society, Victorian Society of America, Art Deco Society, New York Silver Society, and National American Glass Club(NAGC). In addition, Mr. MacNeil is an adjunct professor at New York University's School of Continuing and Professional Studies where he has taught in the Appraisal Studies Program since 1999. During the past two years, he had participated as an appraiser on The Antiques Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide on the PBS network.
Mr. MacNeil has a specialized interest in American and European art glass and has lectured on the subject for Winterthur Museum, The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art, The Bard Graduate Center, New York School of Interior Design, FIT, the Appraiser's Association of America and the National American Glass Club. He is a former board member of the National American Glass Club and he the founder and past president of the New York Metropolitan Glass Club, which was established in May 2000. His articles on glass have been published in The Magazine Antiques and The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles.
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| William Hunt Diederich, Fire Screen, circa 1925, Wrought iron and wire mesh, Signed in a shield with the artist's cipher, height 47 inches, width 64 inches. Sold for $121,000. An Auction Record For A Screen By Diederich |
Georges Jouve
Sculpture, circa 1950, Ceramic, Signed, Height 36 inches. Sold for $121,000. An Auction Record For A Ceramic By Jouve |
| Finn Juhl, Chieftain Chair, designed in 1949, produced by Niels Vodder, Teak and original leather. Sold for $40,000 |
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20TH CENTURY DESIGN

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DAVID A. GALLAGER
Senior Vice President
Director, 20th Century Design
212-427-4141, ext 271
DoyleDesign@DoyleNewYork.com
David A. Gallager has twenty-five years of experience in the appraisal and cataloging of works of art and furniture. He has appraised collections and estates for private individuals, international auction companies, museums and fiduciaries throughout the United States.
Mr. Gallager joined Doyle New York in 1994 as Senior Estate Appraiser and Director of the American Furniture Department. He is responsible for appraising important estates, as well as researching and cataloging American furniture and related decorative arts for twice yearly sales. Additionally, he assists in cataloguing important English and Continental furniture for auction. Mr. Gallager spent several years as an independant appraiser and served as the President of the Appraisers Association of America from 2005 through 2006, after which he returned to Doyle New York as a Senior Vice President, Director of American Furniture and Decorative Arts, and Specialist in Charge of the newly introduced Doyle+Design auction category.
Prior to Doyle New York, Mr. Gallager was employed for fourteen years by Sotheby's as the director of a furniture department, a cataloguer of decorations, and for eight years as one of the two full-time general appraisers. As an appraiser for Sotheby's, Mr. Gallager performed a wide range of insurance and fair market value appraisals for institutions and private clients, and he advised clients as well as the gallery's specialty departments on the sale of fine and decorative arts. He was responsible for creating reports in defense of appraisals by other Sotheby's specialists, which were reviewed by the IRS Art Panel.
He is Certified Member of the Appraisers Association of America, the leading professional organization of personal property appraisers. From 1998, he has served as a member of the Board of Directors of the Appraisers Association of America. Mr. Gallager is on the adjunct faculty of New York University/Appraisal Studies Program where he teaches courses on the connoisseurship of furniture and appraisal methodology.
Mr. Gallager holds a Master Degree in the History of Art from Boston University, is a graduate of the Attingham Summer School for the Study of the English Country House, and the Victorian Society Summer School in Britain. He is a member of the Furniture History Society.
Mr. Gallager is a participating appraiser on the Antiques Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide on the PBS network.
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| Gilded
Sheet Metal Archangel Gabriel Weather Vane, circa
1810. Sold for $64,625. |

The
Smith Family Set of Eight Chippendale Mahogany Side
Chairs
Philadelphia, circa 1775-1785. Sold for $335,625. |
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AMERICAN FURNITURE AND DECORATIVE ARTS
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DAVID A. GALLAGER
Senior Vice President
Director, American Furniture and 20th Century Design
212-427-4141, ext 271
American@DoyleNewYork.com
David A. Gallager has twenty-five years of experience in the appraisal and cataloging of works of art and furniture. He has appraised collections and estates for private individuals, international auction companies, museums and fiduciaries throughout the United States.
Mr. Gallager joined Doyle New York in 1994 as Senior Estate Appraiser and Director of the American Furniture Department. He is responsible for appraising important estates, as well as researching and cataloging American furniture and related decorative arts for twice yearly sales. Additionally, he assists in cataloguing important English and Continental furniture for auction. Mr. Gallager spent several years as an independant appraiser and served as the President of the Appraisers Association of America from 2005 through 2006, after which he returned to Doyle New York as a Senior Vice President, Director of American Furniture and Decorative Arts, and Specialist in Charge of the newly introduced Doyle+Design auction category.
Prior to Doyle New York, Mr. Gallager was employed for fourteen years by Sotheby's as the director of a furniture department, a cataloguer of decorations, and for eight years as one of the two full-time general appraisers. As an appraiser for Sotheby's, Mr. Gallager performed a wide range of insurance and fair market value appraisals for institutions and private clients, and he advised clients as well as the gallery's specialty departments on the sale of fine and decorative arts. He was responsible for creating reports in defense of appraisals by other Sotheby's specialists, which were reviewed by the IRS Art Panel.
He is Certified Member of the Appraisers Association of America, the leading professional organization of personal property appraisers. From 1998, he has served as a member of the Board of Directors of the Appraisers Association of America. Mr. Gallager is on the adjunct faculty of New York University/Appraisal Studies Program where he teaches courses on the connoisseurship of furniture and appraisal methodology.
Mr. Gallager holds a Master Degree in the History of Art from Boston University, is a graduate of the Attingham Summer School for the Study of the English Country House, and the Victorian Society Summer School in Britain. He is a member of the Furniture History Society.
Mr. Gallager is a participating appraiser on the Antiques Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide on the PBS network.
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| Pair
of Kakiemon Hampton Court Jars and Covers.
From the Estate of Lady Sarah Consuelo Spencer-Churchill.
Sold for $90,500. |
| Louis
XVI Gilt-Bronze Mounted Mahogany Console Desserte,
Jean-Henri Riesener (1734-1806). Sold for $115,625 |
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ENGLISH AND CONTINENTAL FURNITURE AND DECORATIVE ARTS
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SEBASTIAN CLARKE
Vice President
212-427-4141, ext 269
Sebastian@DoyleNewYork.com
Sebastian Clarke is a Vice President in Doyle New York’s English and Continental Furniture and Decorations Department. Born in Wales, Mr. Clarke hails from a family of art experts, including both of his parents.
Moving to the United States from the United Kingdom in 1995, Sebastian Clarke immersed himself in the fine art and auction world as an apprentice restorer and art handler at the renowned Manhattan studio of Simon Parkes Art Conservation. He then spent three years with auctioneers C.G. Sloan & Co. in Rockville, Maryland, where he eventually moved into the role of Chief Registrar for the firm.
In 2000, Mr. Clarke joined Doyle New York, where he served first as a Junior Cataloger, then as a General Furniture and Decorative Arts Appraiser before moving to Sotheby's, New York in 2004 as a Specialist in the European Furniture Department. In January 2007, he joined Freeman's, America's oldest auction house based in Philadelphia, as Vice President and head of the English and Continental Furniture and Decorative Arts Department.
In August 2008, Mr. Clarke returned to Doyle New York where he is an auctioneer and a Vice President in the English and Continental Furniture and Decorations Department. He is also in high demand as a charity auctioneer.
Mr. Clarke is a featured appraiser on the Antiques Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide on the PBS network.
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FURNITURE AND DECORATIVE ARTS
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RODNEY LANG
Senior Executive Vice President
English and Continental Furniture and Decorations
Mr. Lang has been a strategic leader in the business growth and development of Doyle New York for over thirty years. He excels at recognizing auction trends and the importance of positioning property in the marketplace. Mr. Lang aims directly at delivering the highest quality of personalized service and information to dealers, collectors and consignors to drive the success of sales.



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REID DUNAVANT
Mid-Atlantic Regional Director
Vice President, Furniture and Decorative Arts
Reid Dunavant joined Doyle New York
as a General Appraiser of Furniture and Decorative Arts in 2000. From 2002-2004, he was the specialist in charge of Doyle New York’s 19th and 20th Century Decorative Arts Department. In 2004, Doyle opened its first office in Washington, DC. Mr. Dunavant relocated to that office where he supervises estate appraisals and general art and antiques evaluations. He also frequently travels throughout the United States aiding in business development for the company.
Mr. Dunavant has over seventeen years of experience in the auction industry having been with the Maryland firm of C.G. Sloan & Co. Auctioneers as the Director of Decorative Arts, and prior to that with Dawson’s Auctioneers and Appraisers. A native of Tennessee, Mr. Dunavant was graduated from the University of Tennessee with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Art History.
Mr. Dunavant is a participating appraiser on the Antiques Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide on the PBS network.



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KAREN CANGELOSI
Appraiser
212-427-4141,
ext 248
karen.cangelosi@DoyleNewYork.com
Karen
Cangelosi joined Doyle New York as a General Appraiser
of Furniture and Decorative Arts and Jewelry in
2004. She is a specialist in Doyle At Home sales.
In this role, she coordinates and catalogues the
auctions of this category, which are held nine
times each year. She also assists the jewelry
department and is also frequently called upon
to do estate appraisals for the firm.
Ms.
Cangelosi has over twelve years of experience
in the auction industry having been with Phillips,
De Pury & Luxembourg in New York in the European
Furniture Department and with Ivey Selkirk's
in St. Louis as well as C.G. Sloan & Co. Auctioneers
in Maryland.
Ms. Cangelosi holds a BA in French at Art History
from Louisiana State University and attended the
New York University Appraisal Studies Program.
She completed the Graduate Gemologist Program
from the Gemological Institute of America. She
has been a guest appraiser on WGBH's Antiques
Roadshow since 1999.


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Axminster
Carpet,
England, second quarter of the 19th century, Approx.
17'3" x 16'9". Sold for $126,625. |
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RUGS,
CARPETS AND TAPESTRIES
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MARK
TOPALIAN, Consultant Appraiser
212-427-4141,
ext 244
mark.topalian@DoyleNewYork.com
Mark
Topalian has been a consultant appraiser in Rugs
and Carpets at Doyle New York since 1994. His
duties include appraising and cataloguing all
rugs and carpets for estate appraisal services
and auction purposes.
Mr.
Topalian utilizes almost two decades of extensive
training in antique and semi-antique Persian,
Caucasian, Chinese and European rugs and carpets
in his family's antique Oriental rug business.
He
received his Bachelor of Science at Boston University,
where he graduated from the School of Management
in 1982. After his studies at Boston University,
Mr. Topalian completed the certificate program
at the New York School of Interior Design.
Mr.
Topalian is a featured appraiser on the Antiques
Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide
by the PBS network.
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Massive
Blue and White Porcelain Pilgrim Flask,
Yuan Dynasty, Circa 1345, height 14 1/2 Inches.
Property From The F. Gordon Morrill Collection.
Sold For $5,831,500. A WORLD AUCTION RECORD FOR
CHINESE PORCELAIN
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| Chinese Enameled Vase, 18th Century, Height 5 inches. Sold for $276,800 |
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ASIAN
WORKS OF ART
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MARLEY
RABSTENEK, Consultant Appraiser
212-427-4141, ext 299
asian@DoyleNewYork.com
Marley
Rabstenek is an independent and consultant appraiser
at Doyle New York in Asian Works of Art. Prior
to her affiliation with Doyle New York, Ms. Rabstenek
was Director of the Asian Works of Art Department
atdealer Christies East and Senior Specialist
in the Chinese Department at Christies Rockefeller
Center from 1999-2001. She was also Director of
the Asian Works of Art Departments at Philips
International Auctioneers in New York from 1997-1999
and Skinner, Inc in Boston, Massachusetts from
1994-1997.
Ms.
Rabstenek received a Bachelor of Arts in Studio
Art from Mount Holyoke College in 1987. She then
went on to pursue her Masters in Irish Studies
at the Queen's University in Belfast, Northern
Ireland. In 1992, Ms. Rabstenek received a post-graduate
certificate in the Asian Arts Course at Sotheby's
Educational Studies/School of Oriental and African
Studies at the University of London. In 1993,
Ms. Rabstenek received a post-graduate certificate
from Sotheby's Educational Studies in the
Works of Art Course.
Ms.
Rabstenek is a featured appraiser on the Antiques
Roadshow, a WGBH production televised nationwide
on the PBS network.
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| Prince
Maximilian Alexander Philipp zu Wied-Neuwied,
Reise in das Innere Nord-America in den Jahren
1832 bis 1834, after Karl Bodmer. Sold for
$332,500. |
| Bookplate
from J.F. Herring. From the Sporting Library of
P.A.B. Widener, III. Sold for $40,250. A WORLD
AUCTION RECORD. |
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BOOKS,
AUTOGRAPHS AND PHOTOGRAPHS
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EDWARD RIPLEY-DUGGAN
Consultant Appraiser
212-427-4141, ext 606
books@DoyleNewYork.com
Born in England in 1953, Edward Ripley-Duggan started in the book trade in 1975. He has been a member of the Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America for well over a quarter-century and has published over forty catalogues. He has experience in evaluating a wide range of rare books. Mr. Ripley-Duggan is a Consultant Appraiser in Rare Books and Manuscripts for Doyle New York. |
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United States 1876 Centennial Year Proof Set of Fourteen Coins With the Original Presentation Case. The Estate of Samuel Mills Damon, Honolulu, Hawaii. Sold for $548,000.
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Kingdom of Hawaii 1880 $10 Certificate of Deposit, Serial #1. The Estate of Samuel Mills Damon, Honolulu, Hawaii. Sold for $268,000.
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COINS,
STAMPS AND COLLECTIBLES
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NORMAN
SCRIVENER, Consultant
212-427-4141,
ext 616
norman@DoyleNewYork.com
Born
and educated in England, Norman Scrivener began
his philatelic career in 1962 with the prestigious
London stamp auctioneers, H. R. Harmer Ltd., and
in 1964 transferred to their New York office.
After eight years he joined the world-renowned
firm of Stanley Gibbons International, where he
established a New York branch and created their
first public stamp auction in the United States.
At this time he obtained his New York City auctioneers
license. After a short period with Greg Manning
Auctions, again helping to establish their philatelic
auctions, Scrivener established his own business
in 1976. Through the years, it has expanded to
include rare coins, autographs and early sports
cards, and memorabilia. Additionally, he has built
strong relationships with an ever-increasing number
of trust and estate professionals who confidently
rely on his expertise in these areas.
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| After
John James Audubon, Snowy Heron, or White Egret,
Hand-colored engraving and aquatint by R. Havell,
1835. Sold for $88,125. |
| James
Abbott McNeill Whistler, Nocturne: Palaces, Etching,
1879-80. Sold for $52,875 |
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PRINTS
AND POSTERS
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CYNTHIA
KLEIN, Vice President, Director
212-427-4141,
ext 246
prints@DoyleNewYork.com
Cindy
Klein joined Doyle New York as Director of the
Prints Department in 2000 and is responsible for
the cataloguing and sale of prints and drawings
in over twenty-five auctions each year. Ms. Klein
has been in the appraisal and auction business
for thirteen years, having previously been with
C.G. Sloan and Company Auctioneers of North Bethesda,
Maryland since 1991, where she was the Director
of Prints and a Specialist in the Paintings Department.
Ms.
Klein received her Bachelor of Arts degree in
Art History and her Bachelor of Business Administration
degree in Marketing at the University of Massachusetts
at Amherst with honors, and is a member of Phi
Beta Kappa. She also pursued graduate studies
in Art History at Rutgers University. Ms. Klein
is a member of the Society for Japanese Arts and
the American Historical Prints Collectors Society.
Ms.
Klein has participated as a featured print expert
on the Antiques Roadshow, a WGBH production televised
nationwide on the PBS network. Ms. Klein is frequently
invited to serve as an appraiser for museums and
historical societies.
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