Part 2 of the Ken Fee bottle collection will be sold online, Feb. 14-23

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, April 26, 2024


Part 2 of the Ken Fee bottle collection will be sold online, Feb. 14-23
E.G. Lyon’s early San Francisco bitters bottle in a yellow amber color, expected to fetch $5,000 or more.



SACRAMENTO, CA.- Part 2 of the legendary Ken Fee collection of mostly Western bitters bottles will be offered in online auction #67 that begins on Friday, February 14th, and ends on Sunday, February 23rd by American Bottle Auctions. Part 1, held in November, featured a bluish teal Cassin’s Grape Brandy Bitters bottle that soared to $155,000.

Almost no one had seen Ken Fee’s collection of over 300 bottles in four decades. It only came to light following his death in November 2018. Jeff Wichmann of American Bottle Auctions has been working with the family ever since to sort through it all. Many are outstanding examples that were expected to bring anywhere from a few hundred dollars to many thousands of dollars.

Now, with Part 1 in the books, collector attention will turn to Part 2 and the second half of Mr. Fee’s collection. More exciting and rare Western bitters bottles will come up for bid, as will some hard-to-find bitters from the Eastern part of the country. “What people saw in Part 1 will be repeated, with new specimens taking the place of the previous rare items,” Mr. Wichmann said.

Just a few of the expected top achievers in the auction are as follows:

• An American Life Bitters bottle (Peiler Manufacturer, Omaha, Neb.) with applied top, a rare cabin-shaped bottle in near-perfect 9.5 condition, expected to sell for $7,000.

• A Wonser’s Indian Root Bitters bottle, not a super rare bottle but one that’s popular with collectors and always in high demand. It should bring $10,000.

• A Chalmer’s Catawba Wine Bitters bottle in a beautiful blue aqua, a great specimen and one that should easily top the $10,000 mark.

• A Lacour’s Sarsapariphere Bitters bottle, a rare green variant in mint condition that’s estimated to sell for a minimum of $10,000.

• An E.G. Lyon’s early San Francisco bitters bottle in a yellow amber color, expected to fetch $5,000 or more.

• A Catawba Wine Bitters bottle in a beautiful green color, with loads of whittle and crudity, in mint condition. This bottle should reach $5,000.

• A Rosenbaum’s Bitters (N.B. Jacobs, San Francisco) with applied top, circa 1864, off-green, a smaller version than the first variant, graded 9+, estimated to go for $3,000.

American Bottle Auctions has reduced the buyer’s premium for this auction to 13 percent for everything purchased under $10,000, and a flat 10 percent for everything over that. Many of the bottles in the auction were previewed at the Roseville show in early November (in California).

Standard auction rules will apply. American Bottle Auctions does not do callbacks but, rather, has a 10-minute rule that applies to bids at the end of the auction. In essence, every bidder has a last opportunity to make a last winning bid. An online printable color catalog will be available soon, and all of the lots will be photographed and displayed in pictures and a streaming video.










Today's News

January 20, 2020

McNay Art Museum pays tribute to 90's icon Selena with photography exhibition

Fighting to preserve the magic of Lower Fifth Avenue

How 17 outsized portraits rattled a small southern city

Christie's announces highlights included in its The Art of the Surreal Evening Auction

Ellen Day Hale painting added to the collection at Eustis Estate

Lisson Gallery debuts the entirety of Roy Colmer's seminal Doors, NYC (1975-76) project

Galerie Karsten Greve exhibits more than thirty vintage prints by Sally Mann

Camden Arts Centre opens the first London exhibition of work by Vivian Suter

Annely Juda Fine Art opens an exhibition of recent work by Lesley Foxcroft

Cristina Iglesias awarded the 2020 Royal Academy Architecture Prize

Scarred but resilient, a Uighur town clings to its cultural past

Hugh Hayden sculpture installation examines history, slavery and American identity

Heather Gaudio Fine Art opens an exhibition of recent paintings by Charles and Natalie Arnoldi

Barry Tuckwell, French horn virtuoso, is dead at 88

Zeitz MOCAA announces appointments to lead the institutional advancement team

McMaster Museum of Art opens 'Deanna Bowen: A Harlem Nocturne'

History-changing artists exhibited at The Hyde

In Hamlet and in life, Ruth Negga does not hold back

Beili Liu: One and Another exhibition kicks off Texas Asian Women Artists Series

Anita Shapolsky Gallery opens a retrospective of Amaranth Ehrenhalt's prolific body of work

Edinburgh Printmakers opens an exhibition of new work by Scottish artists working in photography

Cecilia Brunson Projects opens a group exhibition of nine UK-based Latin American artists

Part 2 of the Ken Fee bottle collection will be sold online, Feb. 14-23

Tramway opens a new site-specific solo show by France-Lise McGurn

'Divine Illusions: Statue Paintings from Colonial South America' on view at the Snite Museum of Art

5 Tips for Simple Record Keeping for Small Business Owners

6 Simple Ways To Help Your Employees Deal With Stress at Work




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful