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  • Unknown Artist 19th Century “Girl with Yarn” 10 x 8 ½ in.
  • Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini (Italian, 1675-1741) “The Young Bacchus” Oil on panel 11 x 7 ½ inches (27.9 x 19.2 cm) Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini (29 April 1675 – 2 November 1741) was one of the leading Venetian history painters of the early 18th century. His style melded the Renaissance style of Paolo Veronese with the Baroque of Pietro da Cortona and Luca Giordano.  He travelled widely on commissions which brought him to England, the Southern Netherlands, the Dutch Republic, Germany, Austria and France.  He is considered an important predecessor of Giovanni Battista Tiepolo. One of his pupils was Antonio Visentini.  Pellegrini was a pupil of the Milanese painter Paolo Pagani. He travelled with his master to Moravia and Vienna in 1690 and was back in Venice in 1696 where he painted his first surviving works.
  • Raphael (Raphael Sanzio da Urbino)(Italian, 1483-1520) “HeligaFamiljen” Oil on canvas 48.4 x 36.6 inches CL102794-32 351002-2 @AL 7/13
  • Dunlavy Portrait Former Property of Great Grandson of A. Lincoln Oil on canvas 9 ½ x 13 inches @AC-NB
  • Camille Bombois (French, 1883-1970) “Le pecheur aux grands arbres” Oil on canvas 25 ½”x 36 ¼” Signed bottom right COA by D. Vierny PROVENANCE: Dr.Franz Meyer-Mahler, Zurich Perls Galleries, NY EXHIBITED: Basel, Kunsthalle, June-Aug. 1995 #62
  • Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness Oil on Canvas
  • Gabriel Metsu ‘The Game Seller’ oil on panel 19 x 16 in. (48.3 x 40.7 cm) CL102794-239 654401-2 @AC-NB
  • Henri Gascars ‘Portrait of a Lady, half length in a blue Dress with a white Chemise and a brown Wrap, holding a Spaniel' Bears inscription on a label on the reverse ‘Mrs. Cunliffe' oil on canvas, in a painted oval 27 x 19 ½ in. 68.6 x 49.5 cm. Henri Gascar (1635 – 1 Jan 1701) (also Gascard, Gascars) was a French-born portrait painter who achieved artistic success in England during the reign of Charles II.  He painted many leading ladies at court, including several of the King's mistresses, before returning to Paris. He subsequently relocated to Rome, where he died in 1701.  Gascar came to England about 1674, probably at the behest of Louise de Keroualle, Duchess of Portsmouth, Charles II's favourite mistress.  Gascar (or Gascard, as he seems to have spelt his name at first) was already known as a skillful portrait-painter; among the portraits already painted by him was that of Nicolas de Lafond, author of the "Gazette of Holland", painted in 1667, and engraved by Peter Lombart. The patronage of the Duchess of Portsmouth ensured Gascar a rapid success in England.  His flamboyant style, contrasting with the stolid English approach, seemed to suit the frivolity of the time and he painted many of the ladies of Charles II's court. His lack of attention to detail in the likeness he made up for by the sumptuous draperies and tawdry adornments around the subject. For a short time he became fashionable, and is said to have amassed a fortune of over £10,000.  
  • A Bronze and Mahogany Clock Set with Three-Light Candelabra. Clock Dimensions: Height: 24 inches Width: 10 ½ inches Depth: 10 ½ inches Candelabra Dimensions: Height:24 ½ inches Width: 10 ½ inches Y&D MAYER AUG2902 AC40000 F-1145
  • Hippolyte Petitjean (French, 1854-1929) “Le bois de bruxellex” Oil on canvas 15” x 21 5/8” Signed lower left PROVENANCE: Hammer Galleries New York
  • Bernard Buffet (French, 1928-1999) “World Trade Center” Oil on canvas 38” x 57” Signed and dated 1989 upper right and left
  • Charles Felix Edouard Deshayes (French, 1831-1895) Windmill Near Paris Signed and dated ‘Ch Deshayes 1874 Paris’ Oil on canvas 26x 32 in. (66 x 81.2 cm)