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Vintage Salt and Pepper
Vintage Salt and Pepper Shakers-Forest Animals. Group includes 12 pairs of S&P shakers including a variety of forest animals ranging in size from 1.75"-5.25". A pair of skunks, marked Napco Japan, with stickers on tails that say Phewie, the other says Stinky. Pair of racoons, marked Japan. Running squirrels marked Japan, imperfection on eye & chip on tail of one squirrel. Standing squirrel holding acorn shakers, unmarked, scratch on hand. 6 pairs of bears: bear with beehive is unmarked, tall standing bears marked Japan, bears hugging marked Vantellingen, small bisque bears are unmarked, crawling bears are unmarked, two bears on bench playing music are made of wood and in poor condition with many scratches, paint loss, missing stoppers. Porcelain deer marked A Quality Product Japan, small scratches. A bunny and deer, may not be a pair. Deer is marked Norcrest X357. In overall good condition with minor crazing, scratches, color loss & need to be cleaned. If you have any doubt, please ask questions! We will provide extra pictures, or can schedule an in person or video conference preview at your convenience. In house Flat Rate Shipping of $20 is a domestic shipping estimate for first lot and includes insurance. We will gladly combine multiple lots for your convenience and economy. Each additional lot we can pack in the same box is $5 each. Please feel free to contact us with any questions.
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ROSELLA HARTMAN, NEW YORK, KANSAS
ROSELLA HARTMAN, NEW YORK, KANSAS (1894-1984), STILL LIFE WITH PHEASANT, 16"H X 20 1/4"WRosella Hartman, New York, Kansas, (1894-1984) Still Life with Pheasant, ED 50 lower left, signed lower right. Biography from the Archives of askART: The following is from Amy Hartman: Rosella Hartman was born in 1894 in Kansas of German-Swiss parentage. Like her brother, artist Bertram Hartman, she first studied art at the Art Institute of Chicago, and later the Art Students League in New York. While attending the League's summer workshop in Woodstock, New York, Rosella met local sculptor Paul Fiene, whom she married in 1923. Hartman was greatly inspired by Woodstock's natural setting, studying the population of deer, racoons and fox; she began making wildlife landscapes in lithograph, watercolor and oil. In 1934, her first Guggenheim Award afforded her a year of study in southern Germany and France. Hartman returned to Europe a second time in 1938 and worked with celebrated printer Desjobert in Paris. It was with Desjobert that Hartman did her only color lithographs, "Venice" and "Tiger Tiger". Hartman's intense fascination with nature shows in her many works of animals, "animated by a gentle mysticism" (New Yorker). Her compositions are consistently kinetic: "Your eye should start one place and then go all around in a pleasing way and then come out." Hartman exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum, the Carnegie Institute, the Corcoran Gallery, the Whitney Museum, and the Chicago Art Institute, as well as in numerous galleries throughout New York State and the Midwest. Rosella Hartman survived her husband, and then passed away in 1984 at her studio home in Woodstock, New York. Dimensions: 16"H x 20 1/4"W
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SEVEN LENOX WOODLAND WILDLIFE
SEVEN LENOX WOODLAND WILDLIFE SERIES DESIGNED BY BOEHM PORCELAIN PLATESSeven Lenox Woodland Wildlife Series Designed by Boehm Porcelain Plates, Including Two Racoons, Cottontail Rabbits, Red Foxes, Eastern Chipmunks, Rufous Hummingbird, Robin
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LESTER BREININGER REDWARE BIRDS AND
LESTER BREININGER REDWARE BIRDS AND RACOONSLester Breininger figural redware birds and racoons in stump, 7" h.
Condition:
Very good condition. No apparent damages or repairs.
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GROUP OF JAY STRONGWATER ANIMAL
GROUP OF JAY STRONGWATER ANIMAL FIGURESGroup of Jay Strongwater Animal Figures, comprising two rams, two owls, two racoons and two bears [8 pieces] Dimensions: Ranging from 2 3/4 in. (7 cm.), to 4 in. (10.2 cm.) high Condition: