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IMPROBABLE GIFTS FOR IMPOSSIBLE PEOPLE 15 DECEMBER 6-9PM

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IMPROBABLE GIFTS FOR

IMPOSSIBLE PEOPLE

15 DECEMBER 6-9PM

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15 December from 6pm Auction starts 7pm

At Workshop 74 Mackelvie Street, Ponsonby

Webb’s and Workshop invite you

to our final sale of 2011 to celebrate the stranger things in life.

Offering 50 eclectic pieces, from the curious to the contemporary, ‘Improbable Gifts for Impossible People’

is a chance to acquire something entirely unique for that impossible person in your life.

Throughout the evening, Webb’s will be serving Peregrine Wine, Moa Beer, French Champagne, Toto’s

cuisine and fine music. Come join us.

A range of charitable donations will also be made to the Auckland City Mission throughout the evening.

RSVP to Renee Tanner at [email protected] View the catalogue and place bids online

at webbs.co.nz

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The Colt Revolving Belt Pistol of Naval Caliber, later known as the Colt 1851 Navy was designed by Samuel Colt between 1847 and 1850. It remained in production until 1873, when revolvers using fixed metallic cartridges came into widespread use. Famous “Navy” users included Wild Bill Hickok, John Henry “Doc” Holliday, Richard Francis Burton, Ned Kelly, and Robert E. Lee. Usage continued long after more modern cartridge revolvers were introduced in 1873. This particular example comes of the collection of the late great Professor Denis Dutton (9 February 1944 – 28 December 2010). Denis Dutton was an academic, web entrepreneur and libertarian media commentator/activist. He was a professor of philosophy at the

University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand. He was also a co-founder and co-editor of the websites Arts & Letters Daily, ClimateDebateDaily.com and cybereditions.com.

As a Professor of Philsophy he spent a life debating theories of aesthetics. He was inherently interested in the concepts of taste and beauty. Dutton observed that authenticity in art may be used in the sense of nominal authenticity, in the sense of a work of art being correctly attributed to its author rather than being a forgery, or expressive authenticity, where a work is a true expression of an individual’s or a society’s values and beliefs. He discussed the ambiguity inherent in both definitions,

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1The

Philosopher’s Gun

$400 - $1,200

asking whether crude “native carvings” made for tourists are authentic, and whether a performance of a Shakespeare play with female actresses or a performance of a Bach composition on a piano are inauthentic.

Dutton’s 2009 influential and acclaimed book The Art Instinct: Beauty, Pleasure, and Human Evolution[5] opposes the commonly held modernist view that art appreciation is culturally learned, claiming instead that art appreciation stems from evolutionary adaption’s made during the Pleistocene. Conversation Dutton placed significant albeit challenging artistic merit to the Navy Colt.

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2The Snare

Drum$100 - $500

By Dallas, London. To battle! Taking its name from the metal wires stretched across the bottom head, this ‘instrument of indefinite pitch’ has been making a proper racket since its grandfather the Tabor was devised in the 14th century. Its renown as a military instrument stems from the Ottoman empire’s armies circa 1500, who used it to tattoo commands across the battlefield. Several decades later the instrument was co-opted by the fife and drum corps in Basel, Switzerland, before finally making its way into the full trap-set in the 20th century. Sortie in the comfort of your own bedroom without, to paraphrase Celine Dion, all the flies and death and stuff. This is a ‘new old stock’ snare created by one of the great names in 20th century drum kits.

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3The Camera

$100 - $500

Kiev 60 TTL Camera

A product of the now legendary Ukrainian cannon/camera factory known as Arsenal, the Kiev 60 TTL is a good example of an early SLR - big and ungainly, but capable of shooting stunning imagery if placed in the right hands. Essentially a redesigned Pentacon Six, this camera features an 80mm Volna-3 lens and a removable pentaprism, and is ideal for prospective amateurs on a budget looking to delve into the world of medium format photography.

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4The Spoon$100 - $1000

Sterling Silver Snuff Spoon

Produced in London (1898) this devilish nose spoon you suspect has survived some fairly heady nights over the last 113 years. Finely balanced the crest offers Lucifer himself as a good thing to hold.

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5

The Little Red Book$10 - $100

Reeds “Lilliput” Dictionary Maori English English Maori by Reed, A H, 1960.

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6The English

Suitcase$100 - $500

Handmade by S.Reid London EC4. 90 Fleet Street.

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7The

Art Dog$600 - $1200

Gregor KregarMongrel MobGlazed ceramic2005130mm x 650mm x 420mm Gregor Kregar’s sculpture is concerned with the relationships between art and everyday life. This enigmatic ceramic dog, taken from his Mongrel Mob series of 2005, takes the object out of its everyday context and transfers its original meaning into something more ambiguous, irrational and spectacular.

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8The Clippers

$10-$100

Sheffield Combination UTS

No 1 Sheep Clippers. Iconic in design, these clippers are in excellent condition and work well for shearing in the shed or just tidying up your Significant Other’s unruly fringe.

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9The

Chemists Glassware

$10-$100

17 pieces of ‘Breaking Bad’ interior design ware.

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10The Bubbles$2,500 - $3,500

1995 Krug - clos d’Ambonnay

This single vineyard Champagne is the rarest (and most expensive) in the world. Produced from just one and one half acres of Pinot Noir within the village itself of Ambonnay there were only 3000 bottles made from 11 tiny 200 liter Krug casks. The Clos itself has been around since the year 1700, and the Krug family has been getting the grapes from here for three generations. In 1994 they bought the vineyard and changed the pruning methods and made their first single vineyard wine from the Clos the following year- the 1995. The wine has an encyclopedia of descriptors on its very complex nose; chalk, fine mineral infused black cherry fruit, and brioche. The aroma is so seamless and integrated that it quickly becomes clear that the wine is on the highest possible level. It is compact and layered, with none of the heaviness that one would expect from a 100% Pinot Noir, barrel fermented 13 year old offering. (Gary Westby, K&L Champagne buyer). Quite simply the 1995 Krug “Clos d’Ambonnay” Brut Champagne is an experience one must have before departing.

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11The Art Brooch

$1,800 - $2,800

Octavia Cook, A Captain and A Lady Acrylic, sterling silver, fine silver201068 x 80mm.

Octavia Cook is known for work that evidences an encyclopedic interest in jewellery and its value — monetary, social, sentimental and aesthetic. Her fascination for the discipline she is trained in spans traditional forms like the cameo, mourning brooch and locket, as well as all aspects of the packaging, marketing and provenance of jewels. In particular, she is drawn to the social role of jewellery, especially its identity-projecting possibilities. This particular work was exhibited in “About Face: Aspects of Portraiture” 2010.

‘Cook’s success as an artist may be attributable to the deftness with which she combines contrary elements: Historical and contemporary references; valuable and commonplacematerials, humour and dignity. Her Captain and a lady (2010) is inexplicably satisfying.’ Art News, Winter 2011.

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This superb early Malekula mask presents a double face decorated with multicoloured chevron and dot motifs for use in the Nalawan grade ceremonies. It is made of cane, bark, bamboo, boars tusks, fibre and pigment. Provenance: Julius Carlebach Gallery, New York, 1958; Zanesville Museum of Art, Ohio. 360mm x 230mm.

Wild and mountainous Malekula is the second largest island in the long chain that comprises the Republic of Vanuatu. Malekula does not appear in travel brochures as a tourist destination; rather, it has a dark and foreboding demeanour and its history encompasses black birding, cannibalism, and internecine warfare. The Melanesians of Malekula long ago earned a reputation as being conservative and strongly resistant to the Europeans’ interference in their lives and trespass on their lands. Their art practice is characterized by the use of wildly vivid and energized natural pigments.

12

Tribal Art Mask

$500 - $1500

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13The Gothic/

Tribal$100 - $1,000

Gothic tribal folk art candle stick holder is an ubnlikely mix and probably one of

the more questionable uses of an ancient Aboriginal boomerang. This strangely crafted arts and crafts candle holder

is a mix of the elegant and the bizarre. The boomerang is of significant age and

would have been used for both utilitarian and ceremonial purposes. The linear

notching indicates generational lines. The contrasting and distinctly European

floral work is an unlikely but apt addition as it is now known now that Aboriginal

culture has one of the most complex and advanced linguistic frameworks in the

world for the understanding and worship of flora.

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14The Saturday

Matinee$100 - $200

‘Deadly Duel’ and ‘Bruce - King of Kungfu’. Vintage 35mm films on original Saturday matinee wooden reels. ‘Bruce Le’ (real name Ho Chung Tao) was king of the Brucesploitation movement. His career was kickstarted by Bruce Lee’s death, with Hong Kong film studios noticing the resemblance and dubbing him accordingly, despite his reservations about becoming a marketing gimmick. ‘Deadly Duel’ is a low budget genre classic, featuring truly hilarious English overdubs and some knock-out fight scenes. ‘Bruce - King of Kungfu’ is another fantastically low budget flick which sought to capitalise on the worldwide phenomenon of Bruce Lee. ‘Bruce - King of Kungfu’ follows a young man frequently admonished by his father for getting into fights, and his journey to find a master to hone his skills. ‘Bruce - King of Kungfu’ is a classic example of the sort of hammy, low budget martial arts films which flooded the market in the wake of the master’s death.

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15

The 1975 Telephone

$10 - $100

The Transit Courier, by Siemens, 1975. Priced as low as $79, it sold well. It turned out to be exceptionally comfortable and durable. Siemens offered it worldwide in a wide range of colours. Marbled finishes are known, although these are probably due to factory staff playing around with the moulding compound rather than being a production run. Unlike the network this phone is still in good working order.

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16Art

Magazines$10 - $100

24 Vintage Art New Zealand Magazines

Art New Zealand was established in 1975 by Peter Webb who was both the founding director and the Managing Editor during the publications fledgling years. Consistently surveying

New Zealand’s contemporary art with rigour, vintage Art New Zealand publications have also captured biographical images of artists of an era.

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17Hip Flask$10 - $1,000

Issued by renowned silversmiths G J W Hawkeley of Sheffield, circa 1875, this hip flask offers a silver plated removable cup for those must have moments.

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18The Art Ring

$500 - $1,000

Wunderkammer for Workshop X Poppelwell ring

A favourite piece in the newly launched Wunderkammer for Workshop jewellery collection,

‘Gridded Skull’ is designed by Martin Poppelwell and hand finished in silver by Zora Bell Boyd of

Wunderkammer fame. ‘Gridded Skull’ will be custom fitted for the intended recipient.

Proceeds from this lot to be donated to the Auckland

City Mission.

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19The Dom Perignon

$500 - $1,000

1999 Dom Pérignon Magnum.

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20The Fine

Wine$140 - $200

The 2007 Central Otago vintage has been recognized as one producing

wines of exhilarating concentration, richness, structure and quality. Peregrine celebrated the same

vintage by producing 1000 bottles of extraordinary wine. This is no ‘normal’

Central Otago expression, being brooding with a complex dusty-earthy,

savoury overlay on ripe black and red berry fruits.

Strongly structured with an immense concentration of fine-grained tannins

one can easily sense the layers of fruit, oak and site characters interwoven,

just waiting to unfold. Unlike the 2005 which delivered immediately, the taut

2007 demanded 2-3 years bottle-age before opening. And here it is ready and

waiting, aged to perfection.

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Handmade folding knife with stainless steel blade, brass weighted framing, copper pins, and

wild game handle. Finely balanced, designed and created by an achieved craftsperson.

21The Knife$10 - $500

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22The 1905 Auckland Directory$10 - $100

Proceeds from the sale of this lot will be donated to City Mission

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23The Black

Swan$500 - $1000

The first European to see a black swan is believed to be the Dutch sailor Antonie Caen who described the species during his visit to the Shark Bay area in 1636. Later, the Dutch explorer Willem de Vlamingh captured several birds on the Swan River, Western Australia in 1697, but many people in Europe did not believe him, as at that time it was believed that all swans were white. It is believed that the first black swan reached New Zealand naturally during the 1860s. They continue to migrate from Australia. For most of their life prior to breeding, black swans seem to leave the place where they were born for marine and estuarine habitats. However, when breeding age is attained, they usually return to their birth place and remain there for the rest of their long lives, some 20 years.

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24The Black

Bike$8,000-$12,000

1938 Gentlemans rideVelocette Mac 350

In 1934, Velocette released a 350cc ‘high camshaft’ design with enclosed valves. The compact and sprightly machine featured a four-speed gearbox equipped with the company’s new foot-change mechanism. This was the long-stroke MAC. The MAC proved successful

and continued with its rigid frame and, initially, Webb girder forks into the post-war years, giving the adage ‘Don’t fix what ain’t broke’ some real meaning. This example was restored some ten years ago and is in good running order.

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25The Bent Spanners$10 - $100

Organic in form, these three industrial spanners reflect a toolmaker with a great sense of aesthetic purpose resulting in beautiful form as well as utility.

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26The Dom Perignon

$500 - $1,000

1999 Dom Pérignon Magnum.

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27The

Hamster$10 - $100

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Meet Ginny, a stuffed rodent mounted in attack mode on a piece of Kauri. What more is there to say? Ginny makes for an excellent conversation piece if you enjoy talking about Cricetinae.

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28The Sacred

Vessel$15,000 - $18,000

Finely carved cocoon shaped vessel guarded by two tikis offering detailed facial carving and notched

paua eyes. The base is anchored by a composition of rauponga which spiral out in an orthodox rarua form, and centred ribbing extends from either side of the rarua to connect the two tiki. Each quadrant

of the base is decorated with highly refined triple haehae and pataki combinations displayed in

diagonal form. The interior of the waka huia base is finished in a traditional manner with scrapping evident. Designed to be hung from the rafters and

viewed from below, this waka huia base reflects the work of a true artisan.

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29The Kingi

Lure$100 - $500

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A wooden Big Kingi 8” lure, circa 1960. Scales are coloured jungle green and pistachio. Features three large triple hooks and a stainless steel duct board and reflector at the ventral anterior.

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30The E.P.$10 - $100

‘Minerals & Rocks’ by Dudley Benson, 2007. Number 186 of a unique edition of 200. Art work by Peter Stichbury, ‘Untitled (Dudley Benson)’, 2006. Dudley Benson is one of those extraordinary artists who spreads his talent across many mediums. He is a musician, composer, singer (and former chorister at Christchurch Cathedral) and writer, and upon the release of his 2008 album ‘The Awakening’ was described as an ‘indie chamber-pop choirboy’.

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31The Miners

Lamp$100 - $1000

Ferndale Colliery was a series of nine coal mines, located close to the village of Ferndale, Rhondda Cynon Taf in the Rhondda Valley, South Wales. Engraved ‘Colliery No 5’. Colliery No 5 was sunk in 1889 and operated until 1959. At its deepest is was 327m beneath the surface of the earth and at its peak it employed more than 1100 men. This rare example of a miner’s light is in fine condition and is strangely enough entirely wind proof.

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32Fruit

Machine$1,000 - $3,000

A rare 1920s American Vintage Bell Fruit company 5 cent vending slot machine with metal impressed 1776 trademark and stamped 236834. In good working condition. By the 1920s the war on gambling, liquor and all things illicit was well underway. From here on through things got creative. On this slot machine front the pool hall boys commissioned a one armed bandit that hilariously and somewhat cynically incorporated a mint dispensing service (note the vertical 4 windows) as a ploy to ‘legalize’ the gambling machine – arguing that it was a lolly machine as opposed to a gambling vice ripe for cash laundering. ‘Sorry your honour you are mistaken, this is not the short arm of the devil but merely a lolly machine that happens to reward the odd lucky soul.’

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33The Little Anchor

$10 - $100

Made of bronze. Age unknown.

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34The Mint Box Set

$100 - $1000

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Originally delivered to record stores in mid-December 1978, just in time for Christmas ‘The Beatles Collection’ was offered for $132.98, making it the most expensive record set in the history of the universe. The initial run of 3000 sold out within days. Offering 13 records plus original posters this is the ultimate set of Beatles vinyl. All records are in extremely good order.

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35The Big Spanner$10 - $100

One of the more recognisable tools of the late 19th century and now largely extinct in terms

of function, this giant spanner can still be used to apply gigantic volumes of torque to oversized nuts and bolts, and one imagines

might be useful for rescuing damsels and dandy’s in distress.

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35aDom

Perignon$500 - $1,000

1999 Dom Pérignon Magnum.

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36The Coin

$500 - $1,500

Metal currency pre-dated minted coinage in Africa by many centuries. Deeply sculptural currency blades evolved from traditional functional objects such as weapons, tools and adornments. While some continued to be functional, for work or decorative purposes, most evolved into ‘pure’ currency, deliberately unusable except as objects recognized, prized and accepted widely as payment and as wealth signifiers. Used to close a variety of important transactions or to signify a transfer of wealth at major events, such as birth, coming of age, marriage, or death, the currency blade was most frequently used as bride-wealth, to compensate a family for the loss of a daughter through marriage. Today their prestigious history remains only in their pleasing modernist sculptural form. Idoma people, Benue river valley, northeastern Nigeria.

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37The Ancient Adornment

$10,000 - $15,000

Early Hei Tiki. A beautiful and early example of Maori lapidary art with well defined features, a large head tilted to the right, and a worn, hourglass-shaped suspension hole. This Hei Tiki pendant is carved from nephrite with a lustrous chatoyancy, probably sourced from the waters of the Dart River in Central Otago.

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38The Religious

Icon$1,500 - $2,500

A large alabaster figure of Jesus in benediction. For

wall mounting, old repairs and losses. Circa 1900.

H1060 W660

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39The Ginga

Turtle$50 - $500

A charming ginger turtle with smooth scutes on the carapace and a wrinkled underbelly, a slightly weathered patina and incredulous expression.

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40The

Art Toy$1,500 - $2,500

Hand carved and painted Dunny figure by Tristan Eaton. 490mm x 380mm x 300mm. Created by Paul Budnitz (of Kidrobot) and Tristan Eaton in 2003, the Dunny is based on a rabbit figure with distinctive tubular ears and has become one of the most transformative urban toys in existence. The name Dunny comes from a combination of street slang and one of the early ‘Devil Bunny’ prototypes. The trend towards the art toy becoming a new fixture in pop art began in Hong Kong in the early 2000s with Michael Lau creating ‘one of a kind’ hip hop action figures for art galleries. Their popularity and exclusivity exploded onto the scene from that point on. Tristan Eaton continues to be a force in the contemporary Pop Art scene. This custom hand carved Dunny was designed by Tristan Eaton and produced by Thunderdog Inc. The Dunny is today a cult figure, used by artists worldwide as a canvas.

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41The

Michael Parekowhai$1,500 - $3,000

Spaceman Cigarettes’, 2010. Screen-print on paper, edition of 70, signed, 1000mm x 700mm. Accompanied by signed copy of Michael Parekowhai book.

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42Modernist

Lights$100 -$1,000

Anglepoise floor lamps from Kifa Industries. Circa 1970.

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A Pair of Vintage Don Armchairs. Re-upholstered in a khaki webbing with later inlaid detailing.

43The

Modernist Chairs

$800 -$1,000

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44The

Revolving Library

$500 -$1,000

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‘The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde’. Published by Doubleday, Page & Company, Garden City, New York, 1923. Twelve volumes in dustjackets, displayed on a custom-built wooden carousel. Dustjackets worn. The full set of the writings of this master of humour and pathos, including such classics as ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’, ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’, ‘De Profundis’, ‘The Happy Prince’ and ‘The Ballad of Reading Gaol’.

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‘A Family in Dusk Bay, New Zealand’, after W Hodges. Published by Alexander Hogg, London,

circa 1785. 208mm x 332mm. Card mount.

45The NZ

Summer Print

$150 - $300

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46The NY

Print$300 - $600

David EllisBubble7/301100mm x 770mm

US based artist, David Ellis’ dynamic art practice revolves around the inter-relationship between the visual, aural and kinetic. His work is a sophisticated and succinct combination of his aptitude for percussion, graffiti art and animation. Working both independently and collaboratively, Ellis commonly invites sound artists, performers and musicians to interpret his motion paintings during exhibition.Ellis’ art practise continues to include installation and performance alongside the more traditional art form of the two-dimensional surface. His work is focused on the interpretation of sound and motion with his paintings being recorded in a form of digital time-lapse animation that Ellis refers to as “motion painting”.Presenting a conglomeration of the audible and the visual along with movement, Ellis’ works engage and enthral most of the senses with works such as Heap (2008) featuring a large pile of rubbish collected from Brooklyn and Manhattan. Paint cans, bottles, tinfoil and aluminium beams are among the items were specifically wired up with electronic gadgets and recorded to provide the work with an idiosyncratic soundtrack. Ellis’ paintings contain an element of improvisation and he frequently works directly onto the walls of spaces, which are accessible to the public throughout his process.

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47The Art T Shirt

$300 - $600

Max Gimblett hand painted Workshop Denim T-shirt

WORKSHOP’s on-going collaboration with New Zealand artists continues with Max Gimblett. Gimblett, who was born in New Zealand but works in NYC, created a series of unique paintings directly onto garments for Workshop’s AW12 New Zealand Fashion Week show. The handpainted pieces capture the spontaneity and concentrated energy of The Red Sea (1995) and

You Can’t Chase Two Rabbits (1998). “Working with WORKSHOP was a truly inspired collaboration. Crossing over from art to fashion was seamless and makes all the sense in the world,” says Gimblett. This one-off size small Workshop Denim men’s t-shirt will be supplied with a video of Max producing the Fashion Week works. Proceeds from this lot to be donated to the Auckland City Mission

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48The

Lamp$500 - $1,000

Fold table light from Established & sons.The process of folding sheet steel to achieve three-dimensional structure earned the series of Fold lights their name. The T1 (smallest) Fold light is

manufactured from just a single sheet of steel, folded several times, with no need

for additional fixings.The resulting silhouetted form of the

Fold is representative of the basic outline of a traditional light, a reference that

is furthered by the addition of a classic braided fabric cable. These nostalgic references to traditional lighting are

made all the more potent by the comparatively modern materials and

construction techniques applied in the manufacture of the lights. Celebrated internationally the Fold light is in the Permanent Design Collection, MOMA,

New York and the Permanent Collection, Chicago Museum of Modern Art and Design. A true contemporary classic.

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49The

Art Rug$500 - $1,000

Martin PoppelwellHEAD (blue) Ed 1/10.46 x 0.83 metresCollaboration with Dilana Rugs

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50The Wrapped

Thing$1,300 - $1,800

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CONDITIONS Of Sale fOr buyerS1. Bidding. The highest bidder shall be the purchaser subject to the auctioneer having the right to refuse the bid of any person. Should any dispute arise as to the bidding, the lot in dispute will be immediately put up for sale again at the preceding bid, or the auctioneer may declare the purchaser, which declaration shall be conclusive. no person shall advance less at a bid than the sum nominated by the auctioneer, and no bid may be retracted.

2. ReSeRveS. All lots are sold subject to the right of the seller or her/his agent to impose a reserve.

3. RegiSTRATion. Purchasers shall complete a bidding card before the sale giving their own correct name, address and telephone number. it is accepted by bidders that the supply of false information on a bidding card shall be interpreted as deliberate fraud.

4. BuyeR’S PRemium. The purchaser accepts that in addition to the hammer or selling price Webb’s will apply a buyer’s premium of 15% on all items in the improbable gifts for impossible People sale, together with gST on such premiums.

5. PAymenT. Payment for all items purchased is due on the day of sale immediately following completion of the sale.

if full payment cannot be made on the day of sale a deposit of 10% of the total sum due must be made on the day of sale and the balance must be paid within 5 working days.

Payment is by cash, bank cheque or eftpos. Personal and private cheques will be accepted but must be cleared before goods will be released. Credit cards are not accepted.

6. LoTS SoLd AS vieWed. All lots are sold as viewed and with all erros in description, faults and imperfections whether visible or not. neither Webb’s nor its vendor are responsible for errors in description or for the genuineness or authenticity of any lot or for any fault or defect in it. no warranty whatsoever is made. Buyers proceed upon their own judgement.

Buyers shall be deemed to have inspected the lots, or to have made enquiries to their complete satisfaction, prior to sale and by the act of bidding shall be deemed to be satisfied with the lots in all respects.

7. WeBB’S ACT AS AgenTS. They have full discretion to conduct all aspects of the sale and to withdraw any lot from the sale without giving any reason.

8. CoLLeCTion. Purchases are to be taken away at the buyer’s expense immediately after the sale, or from Webb’s the following day, except where a cheque remains uncleared. if this is not done Webb’s will not be responsible if the lot is lost, stolen, damaged or destroyed.

Any items not collected within seven days of the auction may be subject to a storage and insurance fee. A receipted invoice must be produced prior to removal of any lot.

9. LiCenCeS. Buyers who purchase an item which falls within the provisions of the Protected objects Act 1975 or the Arms Act 1958 cannot take possession of that item until they have shown to Webb’s a license under the appropriate Act.

10. FAiLuRe To mAke PAymenT. if a purchaser fails either to pay for or take away any lot, Webb’s shall without further notice to the purchaser, at its absolute discretion and without prejudice to any other rights or remedies it may have, be entitled to exercise one or more of the following rights or remedies:

A. To issue proceeding against the purchaser for damages for breach of contract.

B. To rescind the sale of that or any other lot sold to the purchaser at the same or any other auction.

C. To resell the lot by public or private sale. Any deficiency

resulting from such resale, after giving credit to the purchaser for any part payment, together with all costs incurred in connection with the lot shall be paid to Webb’s by the purchaser. Any surplus over the proceeds of sale shall belong to the seller and in this condition the expression ‘proceeds of sale’ shall have the same meaning in relation to a sale by private treaty as it has in relation to a sale by auction.

d. To store the lot whether at Webb’s own premises or elsewhere at the sole expense of the purchaser and to release the lot only after the purchase price has been paid in full plus the accrued cost of removal storage and all other costs connected to the lot.

e. To charge interest on the purchase price at a rate 2% above Webb’s bankers’ then current rate for commercial overdraft facilities, to the extent that the price or any part of it remains unpaid for more than seven days from the date of the sale.

F. To retain possession of that or any other lot purchased by the purchaser at that or any other auction and to release the same only after payment of money due.

g. To apply the proceeds of sale of any lot then or subsequently due to the purchaser towards settlement of money due to Webb’s or its vendor. Webb’s shall be entitled to a possessory lien on any property of the purchaser for any purpose while any monies remain unpaid under this contract.

H. To apply any payment made by the purchaser to Webb’s towards any money owing to Webb’s in respect of any thing whatsoever irrespective of any directive given in respect of, or restriction placed upon, such payment by the purchaser whether expressed or implied.

i. Title and right of disposal of the goods shall not pass to the purchaser until payment has been made in full by cleared funds. Where any lot purchased is held by Webb’s pending i. clearance of funds by the purchaser or ii. completion of payment after receipt of a deposit, the lot will be held by Webb’s as bailee for the vendor, risk and title passing to the purchaser immediately upon notification of clearance of funds or upon completion of purchase. in the event that a lot is lost, stolen, damaged or destroyed before title is transferred to the purchaser, the purchaser shall be entitled to a refund of all monies paid to Webb’s in respect of that lot, but shall not be entitled to any compensation for any consequent losses howsoever arising.

11. BiddeRS deemed PRinCiPALS. All bidders shall be held personally and solely liable for all obligations arising from any bid, including both ‘telephone’ and ‘absentee’ bids. Any person wishing to bid as agent for a third party must obtain written authority to do so from Webb’s prior to bidding.

12. ‘SuBjeCT BidS’. Where the highest bid is below the reserve and the auctioneer declares a sale to be ‘subject to vendor’s consent’ or words to that effect, the highest bid remains binding upon the bidder until the vendor accepts or rejects it. if the bid is accepted there is a contractual obligation upon the bidder to pay for the lot.

13. SALeS PoST AuCTion oR By PRivATe TReATy. The above conditions shall apply to all buyers of goods from Webb’s irrespective of the circumstances under which the sale is negotiated.

14. CondiTion oF iTemS. Condition of items is not detailed in this catalogue. Buyers must satisfy themselves as to the condition of lots they bid on and should refer to clause six. Webb’s are pleased to provide intending buyers with condition reports on any lots.

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New Zealand’s Premier Auction House18 Manukau RoadNewmarket, Auckland+649 524 [email protected]

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