For Information Contact
Peter Dimond, (617) 332-4063
Stephen OBrien, Jr. Fine Arts
For Immediate Release
Antique Duck, Goose Decoys Sold for Record $1.1 Million Each
Bostons Stephen OBrien, Jr. Fine Arts Brokers Record-Setting Sale
(September 19, 2007, Boston, MA) Antique duck and goose decoys were sold today for
a record-setting $1.13 million each in a private sale brokered by Stephen OBrien, Jr. Fine
Arts, of Boston. The decoys were made by renowned carver A. Elmer Crowell of East
Harwich, Massachusetts.
These decoys are no strangers to the limelight: The duck decoy, a preening pintail drake
c.1915, was last sold in 2003 at Christies for a then record-setting price of $801,500.
Following that sale, Christies now Deputy Chairman John Hayes, said, The Crowell
preening pintail is the most important bird in America. It is the best decoy by the best
maker. In 1986, the duck sold for $319,000 at a Richard Oliver auction in Kennebunk,
Maine.
The sleeping Canada goose decoy c.1917 last sold in 2000 at Sothebys for a then
record-setting price of $684,500. Writing in Antiques Roadshow newsletter Nancy
Druckman, Sr. Vice President of Sothebys folk art department said, In my view, this bird
is the best of Crowell and the best that the field has to offer. She noted that The
Holy
Grail among decoys
..would be the sleeping Canada goose. Prior to the Sothebys
sale in 2000, the goose decoy sold at a Skinner auction in 1981 for $48,000.
Decoy broker Steve OBrien, Jr. said, Dealers and collectors have been guessing for
years at which decoy would be the first to reach the million dollar mark. They have to
wonder no longer; there are two.
According to OBrien, If we had had these birds in our summer Copley Fine Arts
auction our presale auction estimate would have been in the $1-$1.5 million range for
each. But, given todays skyrocketing auction market, it wouldnt have shocked me if
each bird had gone for $2-$3 million.
OBrien said, Waterfowl decoys are a uniquely American art form that have moved to
the forefront of the folk art market. Both buyers and sellers have recognized their
potential and prices are beginning to climb. The Crowell pintail drake is one of the most
iconic and famous decoys of all.
The sale of the two million-dollar decoys was part of a larger private sale of 31 decoys
brokered by Stephen OBrien Jr. Fine Arts for $7.5 million, in what OBrien describes as
the largest private sale of decoys ever.
Joe Engers, Editor of Decoy Magazine, noted that OBrien is one of the top dealers of
decoys in the country. Hes represented some of the highest profile birds on the
market, Engers said. Without a doubt, the pintail drake is the most familiar decoy in the
world.
OBrien said, In their heyday at the turn of the century, hundreds of decoys were often
used to attract waterfowl along the major migratory flyways. When federal law curtailed
migratory bird hunting after World War I, decoys evolved into a finely carved and
painted art form. Many of the huge flocks are now long gone, but their
likenessescarved and painted on woodwill live on forever.
OBrien said, Weve seen a tremendous increase in recent years of new collectors
who
have enjoyed decoy exhibits, attended auctions, or witnessed the steady rise in decoy
prices and want to start their own collections.
A. Elmer Crowell (1862-1954), who created the two record-setting decoys, started off as a
hunting camp manager, and carved his record-setting pintail duck and goose to impress
his Boston-area patrons, John C. Phillips and Harry Long. In doing so, he became well
known as arguably the finest decoy carver and painter of all time.
In 1914, a Boston Globe reporter interviewed Crowell and pronounced his work the best
decoys produced by hand in any workshop. U.S. Postage Stamps in 1974 and 1988
featured Crowells decoys.
Founded in 1996, Stephen B. OBrien, Jr. Fine Arts is one of the leading private dealers of
antique decoys in the world. OBrien wrote the authoritative decoy book Masterworks of
the Illinois River. In 2006, OBrien launched Copley Fine Art Auctions, which deals in
decoys, sporting art, Americana, and folk art. Additional information is available at
www.americansportingart.com.
|