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Modernist Jewelry Monographs, twenty-seven
Modernist Jewelry Monographs, twenty-seven
estimate: $500–700
result: $1,375
provenance: Collection of Mark McDonald
Allan Adler: Handwrought Silver, Allan Adler, Studio City, CA. 12 pages, Softcover.
Masterworks for Contemporary American Jewelry: Sources and Concepts Ann Adelman, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1985. 48 pages, Softcover with dustjacket.
From the Village to Vogue: The Modernist Jewelry of Art Smith Barry R. Harwood, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, 2008. 20 pages, Softcover with dustjacket.
Jewelry by Ed Wiener Dr. Milton W. Brown and Dr. Blanche R. Brown, Fifty/50 Gallery, New York, 1989. 72 pages, Softcover.
Arthur Smith: A Jeweler's Retrospective Camille Billops, Jamaica Arts Center, Jamaica, NY, 1990. 8 pages, Softcover.
The Extraordinary Jewelry of Alexandre Reza David Bennett, Sotheby's, Paris. 40 pages, Hardcover.
Bettina Speckner: Things of this World Keeping Their Difficult Balance, Sienna Patti, Lenox, MA. Softcover.
Bettina Speckner: A Rose is a Rose is a Rose, Sienna Gallery, Lenox, MA, 2010. Softcover.
Master Metalsmith: Lisa Gralnick. Scene of the Crime Carissa Hussong, National Ornamental Metal Museum, Memphis, 2018. 86 pages, Softcover.
The Jeweler's Art: Four Provincetown Silversmiths, 1940s-1960s Claire Sprague and Irma Ruckstuhl, Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, MA, 2003. 32 pages, Softcover.
Mark McDonald has always been at the epicenter of the world that is mid-century design, to a large extent, it is a world he created. For over forty years, Mark has pioneered whole fields of collecting, providing the scholarship and creating the market for mid-century furniture, studio jewelry, ceramics and Italian glass.
In 1983, Mark opened Fifty/50 with partners Mark Isaacson and Ralph Cutler. This groundbreaking gallery defined collectors’ taste. At the time, modern works were still largely overlooked; Mark and his partners collected and presented the rarest and most interesting pieces, often working with the makers themselves, to create compelling exhibitions accompanied by catalogs documenting the work.
In the 1990s, Mark opened Gansevoort Gallery, where he continued to curate collections and exhibitions of lasting impact. Over the years, he established relationships with artists and their estates becoming the go to authority on the designs of Art Smith, Ilonka Karasz and Leza McVey, among others. His enthusiasm for the material extended beyond the gallery floor to the back room where lucky visitors got to flip through Mark’s impressive design reference library and discuss the importance of works with him.
A connoisseur and wealth of knowledge, Mark became a resource for prominent collections across the globe—private and public alike. He inspired a generation of collectors and dealers introducing designers and their production to an audience that continues to grow. In 2002, Mark closed Gansevoort and established 330 gallery in Hudson, New York. Now, semi-retired, Marks splits his time between New York and Florida. He still collects, curates, supports, and shepherds the scholarship of mid-century design.