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May 2nd Auction

We’re pleased to have our next auction posted on Invaluable – finally!

It’s a wonderful array of items, from the sublime to the ridiculous….

Silver and Metalwork 
The sale’s silver offerings are anchored by two outstanding pieces.

A French First Empire coffee pot bearing the maker’s mark of Naudin Frères, Paris, circa 1809-19. Made in 950/1000 first-standard silver, the body raised on lion’s paw feet with sculptural horse’s-head mounts and a full Bourbon count’s armorial engraving, and is among the finest pieces of early 19th-century French silversmithing to have appeared in a Moorabool sale. At 980 grams and 34 centimetres high, it is a commanding presence.

The second standout silver piece is a two-handled sterling silver gallery tray by Martin, Hall & Co., Sheffield, 1875, of extraordinary scale and quality: 5kg of richly engraved Victorian silver, the pierced foliate gallery and bright-cut ornament of the highest Sheffield workmanship. These two outstanding lots have a direct connection to a historically interesting early 20th century Melbourne provenance, the collection of Dr Ryan of Tara Hall, Studley Park Road.

Further silver highlights include a William IV seven-bar toast rack, an Edinburgh 1842 presentation salver, a Georgian marrow scoop & toddy ladle, a Georg Jensen Acorn caddy spoon, a Continental .800 cigarette case with fine beautiful enamel figural panel, and many more Sterling lots.

Gold Jewellery and Gems 
The ‘Vertu’ section is especially well represented in this sale. Colonial Australian gold is represented at its finest by an important 15ct gold bar brooch set with three substantial natural alluvial gold nuggets — unworked and rugged in their mounts, the contrast with the refined wirework frame capturing perfectly the romance of the Victorian gold rush. A more modern 18ct gold Cleopatra-collar necklace of 50.8 grams offers significant intrinsic and aesthetic value, while a Victorian 15ct gold Albert watch chain of 27.9 grams in engine-turned torpedo links represents the pinnacle of the English goldsmith’s art for masculine accessories.

Among the rings, highlights include an 18ct gold three-stone diamond ring, an 18ct Ceylon sapphire and diamond cluster ring with bright cornflower-blue stone of approximately 2.25 carats, an 18ct Birmingham 1870 turquoise, pearl and rose-cut diamond dress ring, and an exceptional 18ct gold sculptural ring by Sandy Kilpatrick of 22.2 grams. Loose gemstones include a cushion-cut aquamarine of approximately 10.45 carats of excellent clarity.

Glass – including Uranium

A stylish collection of Art Deco glassware includes figural flower bowls by Muller & Co, Walther & Sohne, and Sowerby. Most startling is a part Moser of Karlsbad dressing table set with acid etched panels, which comes to life under a UV blacklight: they are made from Uranium Glass, rarely seen in this quality. A small perfume is an even earlier piece, and a gold mounted necklace with a large Uranium cut ‘gem’ shows the value placed on this remarkable material in the early 20th century.

Uranium Glass

Horology 
A rare 9ct gold Rolex officers’ trench wristwatch from the Wilsdorf & Davis period, c. 1916, with Aegler Rebberg movement and the characteristic red XII marker, opens a strong watch section. A Movado 18ct gold open-face pocket watch with Grand Prix Bruxelles 1910 engraved to the dust cover is offered from a local estate inheritance, running well. The Zenith 18ct gold half-hunter, c. 1925, with total weight of 115.5 grams including movement, carries a reserve set to reflect substantial intrinsic gold value. Further Rolex pieces include a gunmetal open-face pocket watch retailed by William Drummond & Co., Melbourne, c. 1908–1913. Lady’s watches include an Omega Seamaster Aqua Terra with full box and papers.

Watches
Watches

Works of Art and Sculpture 
A large Continental Art Nouveau cold-painted terracotta figure of an elegant young woman holding a circular mirror, standing over a metre high and raised on a naturalistically modelled base with dolphin heads, is among the most visually striking decorative objects in recent Moorabool sales. A Chinese Qing dynasty Official’s Hat armchair in hongmu hardwood with elaborate openwork deer-and-lingzhi back splat is offered from an old Geelong family collection.

Asian Works of Art 
Early Asian ceramics from a single collector’s estate (active in SE Asia in the 1980’s) form a specialist section of genuine depth. A Khmer stoneware baluster pedestal vase of the Angkor period (11th–12th century), covered in iron-brown glaze with comparable examples in the Musée Guimet and the National Gallery of Victoria, is the outstanding piece. Ming dynasty Zhangzhou export wares include a qilin dish, a susancai lidded box, and a pair of blue and white vessels. Thai Sawankhalok stoneware runs to eight lots including a large animal-finial storage jar and a mangosteen-form lidded box. Vietnamese Chu Dau and Chinese Longquan celadon are also represented.

A Japanese katana brought back from WWII by a RAN soldier and recently discovered in his shed turns out to be an important historical piece, bearing the signature of Fujiwara Kanefusa, 23rd generation (Katō Kōichi, 1900–1977). He was one of the most decorated swordsmiths of the wartime era, ranked first seat at the 6th Exhibition of Swords (1941) and awarded kibin no retsu at the Tosho Banzuke (1942) — the highest competitive honours available to an active Japanese swordsmith. 

A rare Edo-period woodblock print (nishiki-e) by Utagawa Yoshitora, c. 1847, from the Mitate Chūshingura series, rounds out the Asian section.

Indonesian Textiles 
From the same collection as the ceramics come twenty-five lots of Indonesian ceremonial textiles, including East Sumbanese hinggi kombu with horse, deer and rooster iconography, Palembang limar songket, Torajan sekomandi ceremonial cloth, Javanese batik tulis, and cloths from Flores, Timor and the Solor-Alor archipelago — all in natural morinda and indigo dyes.

Victorian ebonized Aesthetic Movement cabinet, of unusually shallow form, circa 1875

Furniture
Notable furniture includes a large Victorian ebonized Aesthetic Movement cabinet with japonesque gilt decoration and bevelled mirror doors; a French carved walnut armoire of monumental scale with original bevelled mirror plates; a rare Art Deco dining suite of burr birch veneer with possible Victorian Railways provenance, including extending table, eight chairs and matching sideboard; and an Australian cedar chevalier mirror, a 2-drawer desk & a large partners desk.

Books, Coins, Banknotes
Australian colonial books include some with an 1850’s provenance of Parliament of Victoria Library, including a rare first edition of Barrett Browning’s Aurora Leigh, 1857, and Legislative Council of Victoria library bindings on a ‘Jerdan Autobiography’ four-volume first edition. Coins include an Imperial Russian collection staring a gold 1898 5-rouble, alongside a collection of Australian gold sovereigns, Roman coins, and some fascinating French Revolutionary period coins. Banknotes span Soviet, Chinese, Imperial Russian, Caribbean, Hong Kong, and early Australian decimal issues including a consecutive DJF one-dollar run.

And of course, there are numerous ‘bargain box lots’ to discover.

Visit the Auction Catalogue >

Sale Details & Catalogue

This is a sale you can attend in person, or follow the action via our live streaming service on Invaluable.

Art Nouveau Maiden Mirror

Sale is to take place on Saturday 2nd May,
starting at 10am.
16-18 Ryrie St, Geelong
ph 03 52292970

This is a sale you can attend in person, or follow the action via our live streaming service on Invaluable.

Bidding can be done in the rooms, or online using the Invaluable app. We also offer absentee bidding, and in some cases telephone bidding.

Commission via invaluable is 23% hammer price; our in-house commission is 20%. There are no other fees.

Shipping is mostly possible in-house. We assume all addresses outside Victoria will need shipping, and send an invoice in the days following the sale.

Visit the Auction Catalogue >

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May Auction

Moorabool is pleased to announce their May Auction is now available on Invaluable.

It’s a ‘Live’ auction , meaning those who would like to attend in person can come & bid in our Geelong premises.

Online, it is hosted by Invaluable.com

There’s over 400 lots for you to browse & bid on, from a very small & very expensive Chinese vase, to a number of ‘box lots’ full of interesting items from a local estate that are offered without reserve – ‘bargain boxes’.

Fine Australiana, Russian Silver & Gold, 18th, 19th & 20th century Pottery & Porcelain including collections of Moorcroft & Royal Worcester, useful Furniture, Art, Silver, Glass, Collectables…. there’s something for everyone.

Sale starts at 11am, Saturday 10th May.

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August 10 Auction

We’re pleased to announce our next auction date will be August 10th.
We’re under instructions from multiple vendors to sell – some items you will recognise as being in Moorabool Antiques stock for the past few years, while a good amount of the sale is ‘Fresh to Market’, from a dozen local collections.

Here’s a quick glance at some of the 300+ choice items that will go under the hammer, many with no reserve:

Have a browse on the Invaluable site – there’s always some bargains!

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David Roberts ‘Oberwesel’ 1829, re-discovered.

David-Roberts-Oberwesel-on-the-Rhine-1829

A local customer recently inherited a small number of Antiques from an uncle, including a most interesting oil painting.
Set in its original frame, it was in ‘untouched’ condition, and in dire need of a clean.

The way it was framed, and the thick yellowing varnish hid the small monogram and date on the lower right, and the back was covered in browning paper. Investigating the back by prising off the backing paper, a fragment of an inscribed pasted label was found, and carefully exposed – it is a descriptive label in what may well be Robert’s own hand:

“Round Tower of Oberwesel on
the Rhine. between …obleuty and… ….(?)
by D R 1829″

This is repeated in a printed catalogue entry, attached to the outer layer of backing paper, dated in pencil top right “2/2/8? (for a date in the 1880’s). It reads:

DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.

14. Oil Painting” “The Round Tower of Oberwesel-on-the-Rhine” (1829)

A Scottish Painter, born in Edinburgh , 1796, who attained great eminence as an architectural painter. This example represents him in his middle period, which is considered to he his best ….. (He is) … represented by many pictures in the National Gallery London, South Kensington, Melbourne, and Edinburgh National Galleries. Died in 1864″

Liberating the wooden panel from the frame revealed the reason for the unusual arched top of the original framing; the top-left corner has been broken off & lost. It also makes the monogram ‘DR’ to the lower right completely visible, and alongside the date ‘1829’. An interesting feature is a round impression like a pinhole, centred right in the middle of the ‘9’: a corresponding one can be seen on the upper right corner, origin unknown.

An online search reveals the print that was made from this painting. The example shown here is in the British Museum, from the first publishing instance in ‘The Literary Souvenir’, published 1832.

David Roberts -Oberwesel- 1831 Print
David Roberts -Oberwesel- 1831 Print by Goodall, published in the 1832 “The Literary Souvenir” – British Museum

The ‘Literary Souvenir’ original editorial published alongside this print is interesting, and possibly misleading;

…since he has taken up watercolour painting… he appears to have developed new and more extended powers; as the charming view of Oberwesel, engraved by Goodall…..

This is claiming the origin of the engraving is a watercolour; however, while several watercolours are known, and recorded by Roberts in his memoirs, they are all after 1832, with one exception: a work on the English art market recently is the same view, signed & dated 1824. However, this was lacking one important detail, suggesting it isn’t the origin of the print either. The oil we are discussing is the closest prototype when we examine the details of the image. Clearly, the watercolour ‘origin’ is an assumption by the ‘Literary Souvenir’ editor, obviously not aware of the source Goodall used when he made his engraving.

The detail that definitely links the oil, not the watercolour, to the print is the occurrence of flags on the masts of the boats.

It’s an interesting exercise to compare the print with the painting: it illustrates the ‘artistic license’ of the engraver, as they seek to reproduce a complex composition but inevitably ‘improve’ on the work through their own artistic intuition. The two works become a ‘Spot the Difference’.

Left ImageRight Image

There are a few variations between the print and this oil, such as the spire on the church on the far right. However, the composition is fundamentally the same, and shows clearly that Goodall copied this 1829 painting when he engraved the print in 1831.

In an article titled “The Annuals of Former Years” published in “The Bookseller” December 24, 1858, the high prices paid by “The Literary Souvenir” for scenes are referred to, including “… one hundred and fifty guineas… was paid for .. the “Oberwesel” of David Roberts, by Goodall, executed for this work.”

(see this on Google Books >)

Today, that is more than £10,000! In real terms, that was more than two years wages for a skilled workman.

In the various outlines of David Robert’s early years, the 1829-32 period is not discussed much.

Roberts is recorded as travelling to Paris in 1829. He obviously went the long-way around, via the Rhine, as the 1831 print of Oberwesel was obviously published after sketching visit in the years prior. With this newly discovered oil, we can date this visit to pre-1829.

An interesting historical detail supports this dating. The Rhine boats alongside the riverside road have a flag flying from each mast tip. The later watercolours have no flags identifiable; the print doesn’t clearly show what flags they are; but the oil painting shows them very clearly to be French flags. This is accurate for the period; the town of Oberwesel was part of the Palatinate, the remnant of the Medieval Holy Roman Empire; in 1802, the French Empire under Napoleon had annexed it. This ended in 1815 with the defeat of Napoleon, when the 1815 Congress of Vienna gave the region to Prussia – but clearly, the French presence was still there in the river traffic.

This work shows the importance of the Rhine to the regions it flows through, the ‘super-highway’ along which vast amounts of trade goods were moved. In the David Roberts depiction, the boat in the foreground carries one of the region’s most important products, a vast iron-bound cask of wine. Perhaps this is a transaction in progress, with French ships awaiting the arrival of the wine-ship to trade with.

Provenance for this piece has proven to be elusive. It doesn’t appear in the publication compiled from Robert’s notes after his death, where he set out to record his achievements each year of his career, including small ink sketches of the works he recalls for each year. It seems the work slipped his mind. However, the print is the definitive proof of its existence. It was found in a Geelong, Australia, collection, amongst paintings that were part of a family inheritance. This collector had most probably found the piece in Melbourne in the mid-latter 20th century.

Moorabool is pleased to offer this important oil in their August 10th Auction on Invaluable.

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Auctions!

2001 Auction Flier…..

Moorabool has some exciting news to share: we now run regular Auctions!

We once ran a successful auction rooms in Geelong, ‘OldBank Auctions’ for 10 years – the last sale being in 2004. It began when a good customer/collector asked us to sell his collection; today, it’s the exact same scenario.
We have a large collection of lush ceramics to sell on behalf of a good customer of 50 years, with most of it coming directly from us at some time. Along with the many other groups of items that have come in on consignment, we suddenly have a very full building….


So Auctions are our solution. There are many other auction houses accessible online today, so how will we stand out?

Back in the ‘OldBank’ days, we had a unique selling advantage: every lot was illustrated on a website, in the early days of the web. We had one of the early digital cameras, purchased in the late 1990’s. This resulted in bids from all over Australia – unique for the time! Today it’s normal, and bids come in from all over the world – but we still have a way to stand out in the crowd, along the same lines as ‘Moorabool Antiques’ has stood out at the retail level.


We can auction items using our usual clarity of the important things such as condition and date – we’ve been called ‘pedantic’ when it comes to these details, but it’s a good thing in the Antique Auction World. Have you ever seen the term ‘a/f’ describing the condition of a piece? As-found, or all-faults is the meaning. This could be describing anything, such as the entire head of a figure replaced with plaster, and stuck together from many pieces & painted over….. or it could mean a small inconspicuous hairline crack at the back which is hard to spot. ‘A/f’ is not at all helpful in making a decision to bid – and therefore not suitable when describing condition. As you’ll know by Moorabool’s descriptions, we talk you through any damages or flaws.

Eye

Bid with confidence

We’ll be pedantic in our condition reports and ensure items are photographed extensively. If we’ve missed something, it is a simple thing to request more images or information.

First of many Auctions

Moorabool Auctions will hold its first auction on June 1st. This is possible through Invaluable; they provide a robust platform, where we upload our items and run the auction on the day.

We plan to have a regular monthly sale, with the following sale scheduled for the first week of July. We’re open to accept items for upcoming sales at any time.

Bidding is simple.

It’s a simple procedure; you register your details on their site, and when the auction starts, just like a real one you’ll see the item being sold on your screen, and the amount. To bid, there’s a button: once you click, it sends your bid to the auctioneer…. and if no-one else bids, it’s yours. If someone else does bid, you’ll see you are no longer the highest: that’s decision time…. to bid or not to bid, how much do you need it……?

We are also able to bid on your behalf with left bids, which also saves you the 5% Invaluable adds to purchases on their platform…..

Shipping

We’re able to offer a shipping service along the same lines as our shop. This is a major point-of-difference with other salesrooms, where the bidding & buying is the easy part: when it comes to getting your goods shipped, there’s so often a rude shock in the form of shipping quotes.

Our shipping is very reasonable: a cup & saucer, for example, will be around $20, Australia-wide – or around $50 to the US or UK, safely double-boxed & insured.