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    CLASSIC MOTOR INDUSTRY COLLECTIBLES AT THIS AUCTION

    Sunday, February 1st, 2026

    Classic Ford sign among the automobilia collectibles. UPDATE: THIS MADE €840 AT HAMMER

    Collectibles are a major up a coming category in Ireland and there will be plenty to choose from at three days of sales by Aidan Foley in Doneraile on the evenings of February 2, 3 and 4.  The online sale on Tuesday evening features two lifetime collections of automobilia with 277 lots in total including dealership signs, enamel signs, oil cans, banners and petrol globes.  An oval Esso forecourt sign and a Munster Simms Oil cabinet are of particular interest.  Mondays sale offers antique furniture, jewellery and art by Ivan Sutton, Graham Knuttel, Marie Carroll and others.  There will be 150 lots pub memorabilia on offer on Wednesday. The catalogue is online.

    LOTS AND LOTS TO INTEREST COLLECTORS AT FONSIE MEALY SALE

    Saturday, January 31st, 2026

    Irish Georgian mahogany serving table, possibly Cork. UPDATE: THIS MADE €360 AT HAMMER

    With everything from a 1963 Morris Minor and a 19th century decorated hand painted Sicilian cart to a 19th century inlaid boulle credenza and a Irish Georgian mahogany serving table possibly made in Cork Fonsie Mealy’s Making Room sale in Castlecomer on February 4 and 5 has lots to interest collectors of every hue.

    More than 840 lots of antique furniture, paintings, decorative arts and collectibles will come under the hammer.  Estimates are reasonable and all lots are to be sold.  

    There will be Cork interest in a retro wooden mantel clock presented to solicitor John Rearden in September 1950.  A  small plaque on the Edwardian mahogany clock records that it was presented by the Cork Employers Federation Ltd. “In token of their appreciation of his 42 years service as Secretary”.  The lot, complete with a photograph of the presentation, is estimated at €180-€220. An inlaid wall clock by Hilsers of the Grand Parade has an estimate of €120-€180.

    Given that it is reckoned that you could travel around central London in a horse drawn carriage in the old days more quickly than by fast car nowadays the contrasting options of a 19th century pony trap (€800-€1,200) and the four cylinder Morris Minor (€3,000-€4,000) are of interest.  The car was owned by the Odlum family of Portarlington. The Sicilian cart, with spoked and iron clad wheels, has an estimate of €400-€600. 

    Tables, chairs, chests, Oriental screens, display cabinets, paintings, rugs and a converted 18th century spinet, an early 20th century carved wooden hobby horse, a Cork Mansion House service plate, a pair of Dresden bowls and three pieces of Copeland to be sold as one lot and all sorts collectibles vie for attention in an auction where the offerings are comprehensive.  Ebony string inlay marks an Irish Georgian serving table as a possible Cork piece. The estimate is a mere €400-€500. The catalogue is online and the sale is on view in Castlecomer on February 3.

    A pair of Dresden floral bowls, a Copeland dish and two matching plates. UPDATE: THIS LOT MADE €140 AT HAMMER

    REASONABLE ESTIMATES AT MULLEN’S OF LAUREL PARK

    Saturday, January 31st, 2026

     A 19th century inlaid foldover card table UPDATE: THIS MADE €300 AT HAMMER

    The auction by Mullen’s of Laurel Park, Bray on February 1 kicks off a busy week of sales in Ireland.  Estimates for furniture are reasonable and there is no shortage of attractive antique pieces like a 19th century walnut and kingwood foldover card table (€400-€600), a continental display cabinet (€500-€700), a Georgian mahogany chest on chest (€500-€800) and a vintage Beidermeier style kingwood and walnut pedestal desk (€400-€600).

    The most expensively estimated lot, from a total of 633, is a Georgian mahogany bureau bookcase with an architectural pediment and mirrored doors (€1,500-€2,000).    There is value in pieces like an early carved oak court cupboard (€300-€400), an embossed leather five fold screen (€200-€300), a set of ten dining chairs (€500-€800) and a nest of quartetto tables (€300-€400). An Irish four piece silver tea set, made in Dublin in 1973, is estimated at €800-€1,200).

    The auction is on view from 10 am to 4 pm today and tomorrow.  The catalogue is online and the sale kicks of at 6 pm.

    A 1973 Irish silver tea service UPDATE: THE CLOSING BID WAS €1,950

    VIEWING UNDERWAY IN CASTLECOME FOR FONSIE MEALY SALE

    Thursday, January 29th, 2026

    A pair of 19th century Japanese censers. UPDATE: THESE MADE €150 at hammer

    Viewing gets underway in Castlecomer today for Fonsie Mealy’s Making Room sale which will take place over two days on February 4 and 5. There are 633 lots in total including this pair of 19th century bronze Japanese censers of elephant form with pagodas. They are each 13 inches in height and the estimate is €250-€350, The catalogue is online.

    LINLEY AND KNUTTEL CHESS TABLE AND SET AT ADAM’S

    Wednesday, January 28th, 2026
    Graham Knuttel and David Linley with their collaborative project. UPDATE: THIS MADE €40,000 at hammer

    One of Graham Knuttel’s most striking creations is a chess set made in collaboration with the furniture designer and manufacturer David Linley. The limited edition (of 12) square table with marquetry chessboard top designed by Linley and silver and bronze chess pieces created by Knuttel is lot 5 at the Graham Knuttel II sale at Adam’s in Dublin on February 10. The four square table is supported by a tapered column on a walnut base, with a marquetry chessboard. The white chess pieces are made of solid silver, the black pieces are made of bronze. The estimate is €50,000-€80,000. It is the most expensively estimated lot in a sale of mostly paintings with some sculptures with estimates from €300 up. The catalogue is online

    ITALIAN FUTURIST WORK AT IRISH AUCTION

    Tuesday, January 27th, 2026

    Enrico Prampolini – Compoizione Speziale B,1950-1951 UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    An abstract by Italian Futurist Enrico Prampolini, a lithograph by William Scott, three classic Andy Warhol Marilyn’s and a collection of mobile works on paper by Alexander Calder feature at the online modern and contemporary art sale by Lismore based Lot 100 which runs from January 29 to February 10.

    Prampolini’s Compoizione Speziale B was exhibited at Italy’s National Gallery of Modern Art in 1961.  The tempura on paper dates to 1950-51 and is estimated at €6,000-€8,000.  Italian Futurists do not feature regularly at auction in Ireland and this work highlights how Lot 100, now in its second year of operation, is bringing a different set of offerings. Warhol’s Marilyn’s, from the Sunday B. Morning screenprint series are each estimated at €800-€1,000. There are mobile lithographs by Alexander Calder (€250-€600) who will be the subject of a solo show at Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris from April 15 to August 16.  A screenprint triptych of skateboards by Basquiat  is estimated at €600-€800 and William Scott’s Dead Fish, a lithograph from 1970, is estimated at €800-€1,000.

    Among the artists in the auction are Matisse, Sean Keating, Charles Tyrrell, Joan Miro, Norman McCaig,, Maurice MacGonigal, Patricia Jorgensen and Henry Moore.

    William Scott – Dead Fish  UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    CAPTIVATING DIEGO RIVERA INK AND PAPER WORK AT SOTHEBY’S

    Monday, January 26th, 2026

    DIEGO RIVERA – UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR €88,900

    This captivating 1936 ink and colour on paper work by Diego Rivera, Mujer sentada de perfil con sombrero amarillo (Woman sitting in profile with yellow hat) from the collection of Doris Brynner comes up at Sotheby’s in Paris on January 27 with an estimate of €30,000-€50,000. The collector collaborated with Pierre Cardin, married Yul Brynner in 1960 and became a leading figure of elegance in 20th century high society and artistic circles. She had close friendships with Audrey Hepburn, Frank Sinatra and Elizabeth Taylor.  In 1997 Doris joined the House of Dior to re-invent its Maison and Gifts department, a role she held for two decades. Among the lots on offer are a Bulgari emerald, sapphire and diamond brooch once owned by Hepburn, a diamond brooch gifted by Taylor, a sketch by John Galliano, a drawing dedicated to Brynner by Karl Lagerfeld, two photographs by Andy Warhol and a three branch candleabrum by Claude Lalanne.

    A Chinese Chippendale carved gilt mirror

    Monday, January 26th, 2026

    Chinese Chippendale Mirror  UPDATE: THIS MADE 650 AT HAMMER

    The estimate on this Chinese Chippendale carved wood and gilt mirror surmounted by an eagle is €1,200-€2,200. It comes up as lot 15 at Gormley’s auction of contents from St. Martin’s, Trim, Co. Meath on January 27 at 5 pm. Around 480 lots will come under the hammer. St. Martin’s is the house where actor Mel Gibson stayed while Braveheart was being filmed in Ireland. On offer is the unique collection of Meath publican, hotelier and businessman Gerry Brady, who hosted the cast and crew. On offer is a 60 year collection of furniture, art, porcelain, glass and pub memorabilia. The catalogue is online.

    MARBLE MODEL OF WARWICK VASE WITH IRISH PROVENANCE

    Monday, January 19th, 2026

    Late 18th/early 19th century Italian marble model of the Warwick Vase UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR £6,033

    This Italian marble model of the Warwick Vase – an ancient Roman marble vase excavated from Hadrian’s Villa in Tivoli around 1771 – is at Woolley and Wallis on January 20 with an estimate of £4,000-£6,000. It was previously owned by Earl-Bishop Frederick Hervey, (1730-1803), Bishop of Cloyne, Country Cork Ireland and later the Bishop of Derry, until his death. The vase was housed at the estate he built, the historic Downhill House in Northern Ireland, and remained there until 1950 when the house was sold. It was then given as a gift to prominent Belfast solicitor and connoisseur Peter Rankin (1943-2015), who amassed a large carefully curated private collection and became a leading figure in the preservation and promotion of architectural and cultural heritage in Northern Ireland and beyond. He was a founder member of the Ulster Architectural Heritage Society.

    THE WILD WEST HEADS EAST TO HIGH NOON AT NEW YORK

    Saturday, January 17th, 2026

    Frederick Remington  (1861-1909) – Argument with the Town Marshall. UPDATE: THIS MADE $11.847,500

    High Noon at Christie’s at the Rockefeller Center in New York on January 21 sees the most valuable collection of Western American art in history come under the hammer.  The low estimate for the William I Koch’s collection is $50 million (€42.9 million). This more than doubles the previous record for any Western American art auction.

    Bill Koch, who won the America’s Cup in 1992 with the yacht America3, feels the time has come to pass on this history to other collectors passionate about the American west. “I have been fortunate to collect things that resonate with me,  The treasures in this sale are among my favourites” he said.

    Charles Marion Russel (1864-1926)  – The Sun Worshippers. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    Visions of the West is split into two auctions, an evening sale next Tuesday followed by High Noon on Wednesday.  There are masterworks by Frederick Remington, Albert Bierstadt and Charles Marion Russell in a collection that is acclaimed around the world.

    Remington’s sunset painting Coming to the Call is estimated at $6 million – $8 million (€5.1 million – €6.8 million). Other titles of art by Remington like The Broncho Buster, Argument with the Town Marshall and Coming through the Rye, set the scene firmly in the wild west.

    Newell Convers Wyeth (1882-1945) – Wild Bill Hickok at the Cards. UPDATE: THIS MADE $2,210,000

    Another work of great interest is Wild Bill Hickok at the Cards by N C Wyeth, patriarch of the Wyeth family of artists. It shows American legends Buffalo Bill Cody and Wild Bill Hickok in a card game gone wrong.

    Alfred Jacob Miller’s The Buffalo Hunt dates to around 1850 while G Harvey’s Texas Oil Patch from 1981 focuses on the booming oil industry, the basis of much of the wealth of the billionaire businessman.  

    The old adage caveat emptor (buyer beware) should never be far away from the mind of any collector, big or small.  When it comes to Bill Koch it is a case of the seller beware.  This keen collector of art and wine demands that it must be what it says on the tin.  He has served several high profile lawsuits against sellers, the most notable related to the sale of wine purported to have been owned by Thomas Jefferson. This case is reported to have been settled for $3 million (€2.58 million)  in 2014.

    UPDATE: The total for both sales exceeded $84 million.

    Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902) – Mountain Lake.  All images courtesy Christie’s Images Ltd., 2025. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD