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RARE CARVED AND PAINTED DIORAMA OF AN AMERICAN SHIPYARD America, 19th Century
A fine example exhibiting professional quality and detail yet holding an American folk art appeal. Multi-wood construction depicts the building of three-masted sailing vessel, complete with scaffolding, ramps, ladders, a crane, a small woodshed, a larger detailed building, and 17 figures, including some in formal dress gathered around blueprints and others in overalls engaged in various tasks. Vessel with plank-on-frame construction, the deck and hull with thin planks individually fastened with tiny wood trennels. Deck fully planked, with framed hatch openings and a metal and brick oven mounted near the center of the deck. One section of the hull near the keel intentionally unplanked to view frame construction. The anchor is mounted off the starboard bow and the rudder is fastened to the ground behind the stern. Diorama and mahogany base in a natural wood finish save for the sloping platform, which is painted green. Height 17". Length 58". Width 16.25".
Provenance:

Property from the Westervelt Company, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, purchased and given to his company by Jack Warner. Jack Warner (d. 2017), a businessman and philanthropist, was renowned for assembling one of the greatest private collections of American art, which included hundreds of paintings, sculpture, furniture and decorative art representing masterpieces from the 18th Century through the early 20th Century, notably works by Thomas Cole, Frederic Church, Albert Bierstadt, Asher B. Durand, John Singer Sargent, Mary Cassatt, William Merritt Chase, Edward Hopper, Winslow Homer and Andrew Wyeth. He was also an avid collector of nautical antiques and established the North River Yacht Club in 1978, where he displayed many of his fine marine antiques at the club house. In recognition of his collection, Warner was awarded the Frederic Edwin Church Award in 2010. Warner's collecting achievement was also recognized in 2011 by the naming of the newly-opened Jack and Susan Warner Hudson River Gallery in the Metropolitan Museum of American Art in New York. Warner's remarkable collection was displayed and operated by his foundation in the Westervelt-Warner Museum of American Art from 2002 until 2011, attracting thousands of visitors to Tuscaloosa, Alabama each year
.

A fine example exhibiting professional quality and detail yet holding an American folk art appeal. Multi-wood construction depicts the building of three-masted sailing vessel, complete with scaffolding, ramps, ladders, a crane, a small woodshed, a larger detailed building, and 17 figures, including some in formal dress gathered around blueprints and others in overalls engaged in various tasks. Vessel with plank-on-frame construction, the deck and hull with thin planks individually fastened with tiny wood trennels. Deck fully planked, with framed hatch openings and a metal and brick oven mounted near the center of the deck. One section of the hull near the keel intentionally unplanked to view frame construction. The anchor is mounted off the starboard bow and the rudder is fastened to the ground behind the stern. Diorama and mahogany base in a natural wood finish save for the sloping platform, which is painted green. Height 17". Length 58". Width 16.25".
Provenance:

Property from the Westervelt Company, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, purchased and given to his company by Jack Warner. Jack Warner (d. 2017), a businessman and philanthropist, was renowned for assembling one of the greatest private collections of American art, which included hundreds of paintings, sculpture, furniture and decorative art representing masterpieces from the 18th Century through the early 20th Century, notably works by Thomas Cole, Frederic Church, Albert Bierstadt, Asher B. Durand, John Singer Sargent, Mary Cassatt, William Merritt Chase, Edward Hopper, Winslow Homer and Andrew Wyeth. He was also an avid collector of nautical antiques and established the North River Yacht Club in 1978, where he displayed many of his fine marine antiques at the club house. In recognition of his collection, Warner was awarded the Frederic Edwin Church Award in 2010. Warner's collecting achievement was also recognized in 2011 by the naming of the newly-opened Jack and Susan Warner Hudson River Gallery in the Metropolitan Museum of American Art in New York. Warner's remarkable collection was displayed and operated by his foundation in the Westervelt-Warner Museum of American Art from 2002 until 2011, attracting thousands of visitors to Tuscaloosa, Alabama each year
.
Condition: Overall excellent condition. The model is dirty and needs a light cleaning. There are numerous figures on deck, some of which need minor re-touching to the paint.


Please contact Eldred's 48 hours prior to the auction start time with condition report requests. Please do not bid on any item without reading the condition report. The absence of a condition report does NOT imply that an an object is free of defects or restoration. Please contact Eldred's before bidding with any questions as to condition. Condition reports are provided as a complimentary service and only reflect the opinion of Eldred's and should not be taken as a statement of fact. Condition reports only detail flaws or restorations and do not take into account wear, fading, or other issues consistent with an object's age.

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August 13, 2020 10:00 AM EDT
East Dennis, MA, US

Eldred's

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