Sale of Important Milton Avery Painting, Birds Over Sea, 1957 to benefit The Luther W. Brady Foundation at Brunk Auctions Saturday, October 3, 2020
- ASHEVILLE, North Carolina
- /
- September 13, 2020
September 13, 2020, Asheville, NC: An important, poetic, mature-period work by Milton Avery (1893-1965) Birds Over Sea, 1957, will highlight Brunk’s Premier Auction on Saturday, October 3, 2020 at Brunk’s main saleroom in Asheville, NC. The sale of the painting is to benefit The Luther W. Brady Foundation. It is estimated at $800,000 - $1,200,000.
Dr. Luther W. Brady, who passed away in 2018, was a world-renowned radiation oncologist and life-long art collector, whose passion and enthusiasm for science and for the arts led him to give -- both in life and in death -- to the public trust, to institutions, and to all for the benefit of future generations. It was his desire that Birds Over Sea would help to ensure his work to support students of both science and the arts, would continue in perpetuity. In his extraordinary life, he was a world-class pioneer of advancements in medicine and beginning in 1953, a friend to artists, gallerists, directors, and curators of major museums.
Milton Avery, Birds Over Sea, 1957
Oil on Canvas
56 x 42 in.
Signed lower left “Milton Avery 57”
and titled, dated and signed verso canvas
Collection of Luther W. Brady
© Milton Avery Trust / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Est. $800,000 - $1,200,000.
Provenance: Collection of the Artist; Milton Avery Trust; with Grace Borgenicht Gallery, New York, New York, circa 1980’s; with Riva Yares Gallery, New York, New Mexico, Arizona, purchased 2003-2006 (accompanied by the final statement from the gallery); Estate of Luther W. Brady, Philadelphia, PA, sold to benefit the Luther W. Brady Foundation.
Milton Avery (March 7, 1885 Altmar, NY - January 3, 1965, New York, NY) was an American modernist painter who famously created a unique style of representational art, abstracted into its most basic colors and shapes. His paintings remained relatively unknown until 1929, when the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C. became the first museum to purchase his work. Exhibitions at the Phillips Collection and at the Whitney Museum of American Art further solidified his reputation as a seminal American artist. He died on January 3, 1965 in New York, NY at the age of 79.
Birds Over Sea, 1957, is the embodiment of Avery’s mature period. The subtle color harmonies are those he favored, and the tremendous sense of order, color and space that occurred from his many years of exploring paint, brush, and its effects on canvas. The result is a simple but powerfully controlled composition, flattened but expansive, exquisitely organized and intentional.
In the summer of 1957, Milton Avery arrived at Provincetown, Massachusetts to enjoy the coast, paint, and reconnect with two old friends, Mark Rothko and Adolph Gottlieb. The home which he, his wife, Sally, and his daughter, March, would share provided a larger space on the second floor in which to paint. He would usually do oil paintings on paper in the summer and then translate those to larger canvases in the winter. This summer, motivated by a larger space and perhaps his two friends, he began to paint large scale paintings on canvas.
These larger scale paintings coupled with the subtle color harmonies that he had been using since he suffered a massive heart attack in 1949, would mark a breakthrough in his painting and usher in this “mature period.” His wife Sally, in an interview after Avery’s death in 1965, said of the period following his heart attack that he went on to do his “most meaningful work.”
His friend, Mark Rothko would eulogize this great artist in his Memorial Address, January 7, 1965, in what stands as a lasting and intimate tribute: “Avery is first a great poet. His is the poetry of sheer loveliness, of sheer beauty. Thanks to him this kind of poetry has been able to survive in our time. This - alone - took great courage in a generation which felt that it could only be heard through clamor, force and a show of power. But Avery had that inner power in which gentleness and silence proved more audible and poignant. There have been several others in our generation who have celebrated the world around them, but none with that inevitability where poetry penetrated every pore of the canvas to the very last touch of the brush. For Avery was a great poet inventor who had invented sonorities never seen nor heard before. From these we have learned much and will learn more for a long time to come.”
Today, Avery’s works are held in the collections of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Tate Gallery in London, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, among others.
About Brunk Auctions
Based in Asheville, North Carolina, Brunk Auctions has been conducting sales of fine and decorative arts for over 30 years, handling a diverse mix of fine art, antiques and design, spanning across furniture and paintings to jewelry, with an active and dynamic institutional and private following. The auction house employs a full time staff of 22 specialists, with a combined 100+ years’ experience in New York and Boston with auction houses, galleries, and major museums.
Auctions are held in Brunk’s North Carolina saleroom and are attended – via phone and internet – by bidders from around the world. Its 26,000 square-foot state-of-the-art multimedia auction gallery, evaluation center and auction venue are based in Asheville, North Carolina. Consistent with public health directives, Milton Avery’s Birds Over Sea will be available for viewing by appointment at Brunk Auctions’ Asheville gallery at 117 Tunnel Road. For information, 828-254-6846 or www.brunkauctions.com.
For viewing and auction information, please contact: Brunk Auctions
117 Tunnel Road Asheville, NC 28805
P.O. Box 2135 Asheville, NC 28802
For information, 828-254-6846 or www.brunkauctions.com