Art for sale

Auctions and Events

Spring 2025 Sale of Historic Indiana Art
Spring 2025 Sale of Historic Indiana Art
Twenty Paintings by Jerry Smith
Twenty Paintings by Jerry Smith
Prints and Drawings by William Forsyth
Prints and Drawings by William Forsyth
Works On Paper Auction, 2025
Works On Paper Auction, 2025
Fall 2024 Curated Sale of Historic Indiana Art
Fall 2024 Curated Sale of Historic Indiana Art
Spring 2024 Curated Sale of Historic Indiana Art
Spring 2024 Curated Sale of Historic Indiana Art
Fall 2023
Fall 2023
Spring 2023
Spring 2023

Gallery

Artist Title Thumbnail Notes old Media Signature status
Floyd D. Hopper Untitled Untitled Watercolor on Paper Signed Lower Right
Floyd D. Hopper Ducks Landing Ducks Landing SOLD Watercolor on Paper Signed Lower Right
Gustave Baumann Grandma Battin's Garden Grandma Battin's Garden SOLD --- edition 36/125 This Baumann woodblock print was featured in our weekly email on 9/26/13 along with the following gallery comments: Always the most popular image from Baumann’s Brown County period (and possibly of his entire output), Grandma Battin’s Garden was actually created in 1926, after Baumann had relocated to Sante Fe. This particular ‘pull’ is noted as “RC I” indicating it was from a new edition of the print that Baumann initiated in 1956. Housed in the original Baumann-made frame. A singularly iconic example from America’s master woodblock artist. - Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Woodblock Print on Paper Signed Lower Right
Adolph Robert Shulz The Abandoned Road, Delavan Wis The Abandoned Road, Delavan Wis This painting was featured in our weekly email on 10/9/13 along with the following gallery comments: Adolph Shulz began his painting career in Delavan, WI where he found immediate success with his local landscapes. It was in 1900 that he first ventured to Brown County and continued to make frequent trips there before moving to Nashville permanently in 1917. The Abandoned Road, c. 1910 is a fantastic example from this period when he was splitting time between Delavan and Brown County, featuring great use of light and depth and painted to full completion. It is wonderfully representative of Shulz’s style with the intricate foreground contrasted with more tonal background elements. The painting has been cleaned and conserved and contains very minimal inpainting. It’s housed in the original frame that has been re-gilded in 16K pale gold. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Oil on Canvas Signed Lower Right
George Jo Mess Farm in the Valley Farm in the Valley --- This painting was featured in our weekly email on 10/18/13 along with the following gallery comments: George Jo Mess and his artist wife, Evelynne made their home in Indianapolis, less than a mile from Fine Estate’s current location. Much of his art however, emanated from Brown County where they owned a cabin and the Adirondacks where they traveled periodically. This piece, likely from c. 1945 appears to be set in the Adirondacks and features Mess’ trademark abstractions, particularly the interesting perspectives and his signature trees. A nice example from this nationally acclaimed Indiana artist. The painting has been cleaned and conserved and is displayed in a period reproduction frame. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Oil on Board Signed Lower Left
George Jo Mess Valley Road Valley Road (c. 1945) Oil on Board Signed Lower Left
Constance Forsyth Summer Creek Summer Creek Watercolor on Paper Signed Lower Right
Constance Forsyth Seascape with Figures Seascape with Figures Watercolor on Paper Signed Lower Left
George Herbert Baker Richmond Landscape Richmond Landscape --- This painting was featured in our weekly email on 10/25/13 along with the following gallery comments: On offer this week is a very nice, original and intact piece from George Herbert Baker of Richmond, IN. Baker largely plied the local landscapes of Eastern Indiana for his oil and pastel output. In the context of his oils, this painting represents very well. While its subject and composition are both typical Baker the piece exhibits bold coloration and is overall, very ‘painterly’. And painterly tends to be Baker at his best. It’s housed in the original, unrestored, hand-carved frame and the painting itself is clean and in excellent condition. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Oil on Board Signed Lower Left
Carl Rudolph Krafft Back From the Fields Back From the Fields (1935) Oil on Canvas Signed Lower Right
Carl Rudolph Krafft Roadside Cabin Roadside Cabin (1937) SOLD --- This work was featured in our 2nd Annual Curated Sale of Historic Indiana Art, April 8th, 2018 at the Indianapolis Art Center. --- This painting was featured in our weekly email on 10/31/13 along with the following gallery comments: Carl Krafft spent most of his career in Oak Park, IL and tends to be considered a ‘Chicago artist’. But in fact, he travelled frequently for fertile painting grounds. His earlier works focused on the Ozarks and indeed, some Brown County, IN subject matter. Later works such as this week’s Roadside Cabin incorporated more figures, structures and often a tableau in which many things were going on at once on a given canvas. Roadside Cabin is a charming example of Krafft’s later output — a horse and rider approaching a stone bridge in winter with a homestead in the background. Very evocative of man’s working relationship with pastoral beauty. A subject that was endlessly fascinating to Carl Krafft. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Oil on Canvas Signed Lower Right
Kenneth Reeve Untitled Untitled Graphite on Paper Signed Lower Right
Kenneth Reeve In My Merry Oldsmobile In My Merry Oldsmobile Aquatint Etching Signed Lower Right
Kenneth Reeve The Country Store, Brown County, Indiana The Country Store, Brown County, Indiana Aquatint Etching Signed Lower Right
Kenneth Reeve The Oil Mill The Oil Mill Aquatint Etching Signed Lower Right
George Jo Mess In the Garden of Paradise In the Garden of Paradise (1931) --- This painting was featured in our weekly email on 8/22/13 along with the following gallery comments: George Jo Mess channels his inner Maxfield Parish. We’re pleased to offer one of the most significant pieces to ever come to market by this Indiana treasure. The theme, that of water nymphs (or ‘girls on rocks’ as Parish is quoted) was quite popular from 1910-1930. This masterwork highlights Mess’ inimitable treatments as well as his broad artistic range. We would place this painting’s creation at c. 1930. It has been in the same family since purchased from the artist and is completely fresh to market. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Oil on Canvas Signed Lower Right
John (Jan) Zwara Bison in the Big Horns Bison in the Big Horns (1944) This painting was featured in our weekly email on 8/26/13 along with the following gallery comments: Zwara’s body of work features more than a few pieces containing Western subject matter like this week’s Painting of the Moment. He was retained by the rail lines to paint pieces to hang in the passenger trains which traveled to the West Coast. That said, it’s also possible this was painted from a magazine image as he was also known to do. In viewing the painting, barely visible is the ‘grid’ that Zwara began with on the panel to keep the elements of the composition properly arranged and in perspective against themselves. It’s a common technique but interesting to view it here – an insight into the artist’s technique. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Ar Oil on Board Signed Lower Left
Harry Engel Rag Rug Rag Rug (1940) This painting was featured in our weekly email on 9/5/13 along with the following gallery comments: Harry Engel enjoyed a 42 year career as a professor of painting at Indiana University in Bloomington and counted among his friends such noted art luminaries as Thomas Hart Benton, Robert Laski, Robert Motherwell , John-Paul Darriau and many others. His watercolor work tends to be traditional and representational. Yet his oils and encaustic pieces are fantastic abstractions featuring bold elements, screwed perspectives and often verge entirely into abstract expressionism. Rag Rug, which was exhibited in a 1971 IU retrospective of his work, is a classic example of his oil technique with the stilted interior and the playful treatment of the central figure and of course, that rug. Engel was vastly prolific and it’s somewhat of a mystery to me where his paintings are hiding. Though we’ve had a handful, I anticipate over time more will find their way to market and significantly raise the profile of Harry Engel – a true Hoosier treasure. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Oil on Board Signed Lower Right
John Elwood Bundy Winter on the Whitewater Winter on the Whitewater (1914) --- original hand-carved frame re-leafed in 22K gold This painting was featured in our weekly email on 9/13/13 along with the following gallery comments: Winter on the Whitewater, painted in 1914, depicts one of Bundy’s favorite subjects, the Whitewater River running through Eastern Indiana. Downstream on the same river, the subject was famously portayed by T.C. Steel and J. Ottis Adams from various perspectives in Brookville, IN. Contrasting with the more literal interpretation of interior beech forests, this very impressionistic winter piece shows Bundy painting at the height of his power, rendering his beloved Whitewater Valley in the full splendor of the season. A very similar, larger painting, also created in 1914 and depicting the same scene and season is part of the Indiana University art collection and is currently displayed behind the registration desk at the IU Memorial Union (See end of this email to view). The IU painting is referenced in William Gerdts’ monograph on the artist: Although autumn may have been his favorite season of all, many of Bundy's paintings are truly winter scenes, in which he concentrated on streams flowing between snowy banks, such as his 1903 Winter Afternoon (private collection) and his Winter on the Whitewater and Wane of Winter, both of 1914. In fact, Bundy's earliest contributions to the shows of the Richmond Art Association were pictures of "winter time." Bundy surely would have enjoyed, with John Burroughs, "the warmth that lurks in the frost" and might have agreed with him that "Winter has its own beauty, but let us admit it is not the beauty of life, of the leaf and the petal, but the beauty of the crystal or the gem." (William H. Gerdts, “A Walk in the Woods: The Art of John Elwood Bundy” (1853-1933); Quoting from John Burroughs, "The Tonic of Winter," Country Life in America 19 (December Mid-Month, 1910)) A very important work by one of the most acclaimed painters in the history of Indiana art. –Curt Churchman, Fine Estate Art Oil on Canvas Signed Lower Left
Anthony Buchta Bean Blossom Overlook Bean Blossom Overlook (1947) Exhibited in the 1948 Hoosier Salon(tag, verso) Oil on Canvas Signed Lower Right

Highly sought artists