Great Estate Auctions By
RENEW GALLERY

DATE OF AUCTION: AUGUST 28, 2014
ONLINE ONLY AT LIVEAUCTIONEERS.COM

LARGE PRIVATE COLLECTION - FRESH TO MARKET
Belonging to Known Vancouver Collector

Vintage Ephemera – Antique American furniture – American Folk Art – Vintage Movie Posters (Quantities Available) – Fine Art Prints – Porcelain – Lamps – Antique Ceiling Fixtures – Early Historic Lighting – Crystal Chandeliers – Stained Glass Windows – Collectables – Bronze Sculpture – Wood Carvings Antique Toys

Ca. 1880, very colourful Victorian stained glass window.
Victorian fan pattern with jewelled glass inserts

19th Century masterpiece in wood. American folk marquetry sideboard features three cabinets and three drawers with shelving.

19th Century bronze statue of a woman dancing in a state of ecstasy with castanets, in flowing robes with small devil at her feet.

Other items include...

  • Ca. 1880 oil lamp profusely decorated cranes, doves and mythical beasts. Original Baccarat etched shade.
  • Ca. 1870, early carved walnut bench with figural motif and lifting top. High back has a whimsical array of carvings of faces, animals and foliate motifs.
  • Ca. 1910, “Tiffany Style” stained glass pendant fixture signed by “Bigelow Studios”, Boston.
  • Ca. 1912, crystal French Empire basket light. Fixture made of brass with all original gold finish and cherub motif.
  • Ca. 1890. A pair of late 19th-century stained glass windows in the aesthetic “Pre-Raphaelite” style. Found in New York.
  • Ca. 1915, a large-scale Mission/Arts & Crafts style fixture with slag glass.
  • Ca. 1955, original vintage movie poster from the science fiction film “Tarantula!”
  • Ca. 1880, rare Victorian “zipper-cut” bevelled window.
  • 19th Century Pair of silver-plated candelabrum
  • Ca. 1870, matching pair of cast brass figural candelabra with original finish and crystal fittings. Attributed to “Mitchell Vance & Co.”
  • 19th Century antique carousel jumper from Coney Island, N.Y.; mounted on later rockers.
  • Ca. 1950, original movie poster for the classic comedy “Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.”