BOSTON, MASS.- Skinner, Inc. will host an auction of American Indian & Ethnographic Art at 10AM on May 6 in its Boston gallery, featuring a wide range of art from Africa and Oceania; American Indian material culture from the American Plains, Northwest Coast, Woodlands and Southwest; and related photography, paintings, and other artwork.
In this auction, Skinner will be presenting some of the finest Native American cultural artifacts ever offered in the companys history, said Douglas Deihl, Director of American Indian & Ethnographic Art at Skinner. In addition to the outstanding Plains material in the sale, there are many other fine and unique items drawn from other major tribal cultures, both in North America and beyond.
African and Oceanic Art
The auction will open with a small selection of tribal material including three Yoruba shrine figures, from the Abeokuta area of Nigeria and attributed to the Adugbologe family (Lots 5-7), and an eclectic group of South Pacific material including a Maori Carved Wood Hand Club (Lot 34, estimated between $6,000 and $8,000) and a fine Solomon Islands Feather Money (Lot 29, $6,000-$8,000).
Plains Indian Art
An outstanding selection of Plains Indian material anchors the sale. The highlight of the auction, a circa 1830 Blackfeet Chief's Shirt and Leggings (Lot 143, $600,000-$800,000) collected by Captain Reymond Hervey de Montmorency, Third Viscount Frankfort de Montmorency, is a rare and remarkable survivor; only one other similar example is known. Also of note is a Rare and Important Plains Apache Womans Dress and Moccasins, c. 1850 (Lot 148, $80,000-$120,000) from the collection of Paul Rabut.
Other exceptional Plains items include four Kiowa Strike-a-Light bags (Lots 83-86) and a group of fine Lakota, Arapaho, Cheyenne and Ute pipe bags (Lots 87-99), including a Lakota Beaded and Quilled Hide Pipe Bag attributed to the Hunkpapa chief Rain in the Face (Lot 96, $8,000-$12,000). Other exceptional beaded items include a Kiowa Beaded Toy Cradle (Lot 126, $5,000-$7,000), a classic Lakota Beaded Buffalo Hide Cradle (Lot 130, $15,000-$20,000), a Lakota Beaded Buffalo Hide Possible Bag (Lot 132, $8,000-$12,000), and two Blackfeet knife sheaths (Lots 169 and 171).
Tomahawks are featured in a fine group of Plains and Great Lakes weapons. Standouts include pipe-form (Lot 154) and perforated (Lot 159) examples and an unusually ornate Plains Spontoon-style Tomahawk (Lot 160, $6,000-$8,000). Also of interest is Lot 163, a Rare Dakota Lance from the second quarter of the 19th century ($4,000-$6,000).
Other Native American Artifacts
From the Northeast and Great Lakes area are two fine Micmac pipes (Lots 187 and 188), a Rare Great Lakes Quilled Hide Double Knife Sheath (Lot 190, $15,000-$20,000), and an extremely Rare and Important Eastern Ojibwa (Saulteau) War Chief's Turban-Headdress, c. 1840s, with a loom-beaded front panel executed with exceedingly small Venetian trade beads (Lot 191, $12,000-$16,000). (To view an in-depth discussion of this rare headdress written by Mike Cowdrey, please visit http://assets.skinnerinc.com/pdf/media/2893B_ojiwaba_headress_191.pdf) Highlights from the Northwest Coast include three fine argillite pipes by the Haida (Lots 207-209), two large kerf bent boxes (Lots 210 and 211), and a rare Tlingit Chilkat Shaman's Dance Apron (Lot 212, $12,000-$16,000) collected by Admiral Robert E. Coontz, who was stationed at Sitka, Alaska, in the 1880s as a young U.S Naval officer. From the Southwest, a Rare Navajo Beaded Hide War Cap (Lot 218, $2,000-$2,500) and Thirty-two Painted Hide Apache Playing Cards (Lot 222, $8,000-$12,000) which are pictured in Playing Cards of the Apaches by Virginia Wayland, Harold Wayland, and Alan Ferg, are standouts.
Photography
A selection of photography, paintings and posters is led by a group of photographs by C.S Fly and others depicting Apache Indians (Lots 224-243), collected by John Nelson Glass and descended in his family; included are rare photographs of Geronimo and of scenes near Fort Apache. Also featured are an Orotone of a Plateau Woman and Baby by Phillip Gibbs (Lot 248, $2,000-$2,500) and two orotones by Edward Curtis, Canyon del Muerto (Lot 249, $5,000-$7,000) and "Canyon de Chelly (Lot 250, $6,000-$8,000).
Domestic Arts
Highlighting this section of the sale are two fine Navajo textiles, a Transitional Wearing Blanket (Lot 260, $10,000-$15,000) woven in a second phase chief's pattern, and a Late Classic Moki Blanket (Lot 262, $8,000-$12,000) woven with natural and synthetic dyed wool in a diamond lattice pattern over stripes of indigo blue and dark brown. Pottery includes Lot 266, a Hopi Painted Seed Jar ($2,000-$2,500), from the Frank Speck collection and attributed to Nampeyo, and a Large Cochiti Painted Ceramic Figure (Lot 269, $5,000-$7,000). The small basketry sampling which closes the sale includes an exceptional Nez Perce Cornhusk Bag (Lot 270, $1,000-$1,500) and an Apache Pictorial Basketry Bowl (Lot 289, $2,000-$2,500).