Fake antiques can fool even experts

  • By Terry Kovel
  • Wednesday, September 16, 2009 12:33pm
  • Life

Ever been fooled by a fake or fantasy collectible? It can happen to anyone, even experts. Two Ohr pottery vases recently were withdrawn from a sale at Sotheby’s, the prominent New York auction gallery.

The assumption of most observers is that the vases were spotted as fakes before the sale began. Experts say that George Ohr (1857-1918), an eccentric potter from Biloxi, Miss., claimed he never made two identical pieces.

The vases in the sale were the same except for their glazes. There also were other problems with the two pieces: the thickness of the pots and the texture and appearance of their glazes.

George Ohr pottery is extremely popular with art pottery collectors, and is very expensive. He is known for the originality of his work: He crumpled, pleated or stretched clay into odd shapes.

Glazes were multicolored and irregular, often with flaws. Although he worked from 1883 to 1906, his work looks very modern. Recently, many fake pieces have been offered online and at shows because collectors can be fooled by trusting the mark, not the pot.

Fakes had the correct incised mark, “George Ohr,” in either his cursive handwriting or block letters. Be cautious. Authentic Ohr pottery was offered at major auctions at least five times last year.

Prices ranged from hundreds of dollars for very small pieces to a large vase that sold for a record $84,000.

A 4¾-inch bulbous vase with a twisted body section and a mottled blue glaze sold for $3,075 at the Rago Arts and Auction Center in Lambertville, N.J., this summer.

Q: I have a spinet desk, the kind that has a fold-back top and looks like a spinet piano. I inherited the desk from my mother, who bought it from the H.E. Shaw Co. of Grand Rapids, Mich. But I don’t know when she bought it, and I’d like to know how old it is.

A: The H.E. Shaw Furniture Co. was in business from 1919 to 1933, so your desk is 75 to 90 years old. Shaw made oak, walnut and mahogany desks, including spinets, as well as secretaries and dining-room sets. The company specialized in colonial and Revival styles.

Q: I inherited a large framed poster advertising Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. It’s in pretty good condition. What can you tell me about the company and my poster?

A: Dr. James Cook Ayer (1818-1878), of Lowell, Mass., was the world’s most successful producer of “patent medicines.” (Patent medicines, widely popular during the second half of the 20th century, were medically questionable concoctions that contained a large portion of alcohol or drugs.)

Ayer’s first recipe, introduced in 1841, was called Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It was a mixture of morphine, ipecac, herbs and wild-cherry syrup that was marketed as a cure for “pulmonary ills.”

Ayer’s Sarsaparilla was first made in 1848. Sarsaparilla, a mixture of vines, roots, bark, clover blossoms, juices and alcohol, was sold as a cure for syphilis, boils, acne, piles, tumors and tuberculosis.

Your large poster, in excellent condition, could sell for close to $2,000.

Q: My dishes are marked “Losol Ware by Keeling.” Can you tell me how old they are?

A: Losol Ware was made by Keeling &Co., a pottery in Staffordshire, England, founded in 1886. Early products were mainly blue-and-white wares. Losol was made from 1912 until the pottery closed in 1936.

Write to Terry Kovel, The Herald, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019.

&Copy; 2009 by Cowles Syndicate Inc.

On the block

Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions.

Deadwood, S.D., “Prospectors Club” pinback, 1948, “Days of ‘76” silver anniversary, Wild Bill Hickok image, celluloid, 2 1/4 inches, $55.

United Motors Service sign, “Can You Stop in Time,” free brake inspection, enamel on cardboard, man crossing street by car, 1930s, 16 x 26 inches, $190.

Penny Playpal doll, by Ideal, hard vinyl, sleep eyes, red cheeks, open/closed mouth, curly brown hair, jointed, blue nylon dress, 1959, 30 inches, $250.

Steuben perfume bottle, green ribs, etched grapevine design in center, amber foot and stopper, elongated green tip, 4 x 12 inches, $770.

Quilt, Princess Feather design, 4 appliqued squares, central flower, oak leaves and feathers, red-and-tan ground, tan border, 1885, 76 x 70 inches, $1,610.

Wedgwood Black Basalt Egyptian candlestick, applied leaves to sconce and feet, 3 sphinx forms with lion’s-paw feet, impressed mark, c. 1800, 6 3/4 inches, $2,485.

Rolex Submariner diver’s wristwatch, inner and outer box, sapphire crystal, Oyster stainless-steel band, flip-back extension, 27-jewel movement, $3,600.

FADA Bullet radio, marbleized blue, green-and-white Bakelite case with amber knobs, handle and dial, c. 1945, $3,880.

Huntboard, yellow pine, shaped backsplash, 2-board top, dovetailed drawers, tapered legs, traces of mustard paint, c. 1820, 54 x 55 x 22 inches, $5,200.

Madame Gres strapless black silk cocktail dress, boned bodice, pleated V-front with bow, wrap skirt, lining with attached garters, 1950s, 32-inch bust, 26-inch waist, $5,750.

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