Paintings By Renowned Canadian Artists Maud Lewis And Joe Norris Share Spotlight
Six Original Paintings By Lewis Combine To Sell For $184,680
January 05, 2024
As expected, the acclaimed Canadian folk artist Maud Lewis (1903-70) dominated the list of top lots in Miller & Miller Auctions Ltd.'s online-only Folk Art Auction on Oct. 14, but this time she shared the spotlight with two other Canadian luminaries, Joe Norris (1924-96) and Joe Sleep (1914-78). The work from all three artists posted high dollar results. Six original paintings by Maud Lewis combined to bring $184,680. They included a mixed media-on-masonite from 1967 titled "The Lobsterman," bringing $53,100, and a 1950s oil-on-board titled "Two Birds in Winter," for $44,250. All prices quoted here are in Canadian dollars and include an 18-percent buyer's premium. Four original works by Joe Norris totaled $57,230. They included a 1993 enamel-on-board titled "Hauling the Herring Nets," selling for $21,240, and a 1995 enamel-on-board titled "Boat Landing," for $17,700. An early 20th-century Victorian side table, later painted by the artist, with an autumn homestead in on top, brought $8,850, and a 1978 latex and marker-on-masonite by Joe Sleep, titled "Cat," achieved $5,900. "This specialized sale was a celebration of contemporary, post-1950 folk art," said Ethan Miller of Miller & Miller Auctions Ltd. "It was exciting to witness the support for both highly recognized and emerging artists. Maud Lewis, Joe Norris, Joe Sleep, Charlie Tanner, Collins Eisenhauer, Edmond Chatigny, Everett Lewis and Patricia Promaine were just a few of the artists represented, and I'm quite confident a few benchmarks were set for these artists in the auction." "Patricia Promaine (1918-2012), who created approximately 200 pieces during her lifetime, is starting to get recognition. Her painstakingly detailed folk paintings have a similar aura to those of American folk master Grandma Moses," added Miller. Her painting, a hard-to-find ca. 1980 busy village scene painted on canvas board, realized $2,750. "While I expect that is a new record, I believe we will start to see even higher prices from Ms. Promaine moving forward," commented Miller. "We strive to focus on the 'better and best' examples of artists, and in doing so the market responds with driving exceptional outcomes. The works by Maud Lewis, Joe Norris, Charlie Tanner, Collins Eisenhaur and others bore this out." The 269-lot auction featured carvings and sculptures, paintings and drawings and walking sticks. There was no live in-gallery bidding, but 256 registered online bidders place a total of 5,069 bids. Online bidding was provided by LiveAuctioneers.com and the Miller & Miller website. Nearly all lots (99 percent) were sold, and 58 percent of the top 50 lots exceeded estimate. The total gross was $432,260, another feather in the cap for one of Canada's premier auction houses. The item that shocked many was a ca. 1900 diorama out of Lehigh Corners, Leeds County, Ontario, titled "A Great Catastrophe, Shoot Dat Dog," which blasted through its $600-$900 estimate to finish at $8,260. The pine and glass cigar box diorama, depicting a black figure dressed in a striped shirt and rust-colored trousers sitting astride a donkey painted in a cream color, was distinguished by interesting design and detail. Maud Lewis has become one of Canada's most renowned artists, the subject of numerous monographs, novels, plays, documentaries, and even a feature film. She was born into relative comfort and obscurity, and died in poverty, though enjoying national fame. She overcame severe physical challenges to create a unique artistic style and sparked a boom in folk art in her home province of Nova Scotia. Though she rarely left her tiny house, her works have travelled around the world, and in the decades since her death, she has become an iconic figure, a symbol of Nova Scotia, and a beloved character in the popular imagination. Joe Norris spent most of his life in the small hamlet of Lower Prospect, Nova Scotia. He began painting in 1972, after a heart attack forced his early retirement from the fishing and construction trades. His works depicted life along the seacoast, with scenes of wildlife, nature and landscapes painted in bold, saturated colors. Norris's work included painted chairs, tables and chests, in addition to his two-dimensional paintings. After his work was discovered in 1975 by Maine antiques dealer Chris Huntington, Norris was able to live off of his income as an artist rather than disability from the government. Work by Joe Norris can be found in the collections of the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, the National Gallery of Canada, the Canadian Museum of History, and in several corporate and private art collections across North America. Joe Sleep grew up in Saint John, New Brunswick. He spent his life working in the fishing industry and as a jack-of-all-trades before becoming a worker for the Bill Lynch Shows travelling carnival. It was not until 1973, when Sleep was hospitalized at the Halifax Infirmary, that he discovered his passion for drawing. The nurses requested he draw posters for them and provided him with paper and art supplies, a gesture that started him on his late-life career as a painter. Sleep later opened a small art studio on Argyle Street in Halifax. His folk art pieces incorporated many materials, including latex, cardboard, canvas, masonite, felt markers and even spray paint. Work by Joe Sleep is in the collections of the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Dalhousie University Art Gallery, National Gallery of Canada and the Canadian Museum of History. To learn more about Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd., visit www.millerandmillerauctions.com.
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