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LiveAuctionTalk com Highlights Philip Desind Collection in its Weekly Free Article

Released on = September 28, 2006, 1:58 pm

Press Release Author = Rosemary McKittrick

Industry = Internet & Online

Press Release Summary = Rosemary McKittrick's weekly collecting column is one of the
top sources for auction, antique and collectible news.

Press Release Body = September 28, 2006--Philip Desind's obsession was collecting
art painted in his lifetime. As a well-known collector and dealer of 20th century
American Realism, Desind's treasure hunts in the 1930s took him to cities like New
York, Washington and Philadelphia.

He believed if you threw a coin on a map of the United States wherever it landed
would turn up at least "one" good artist. He called the 20th century the "Golden
Age of American Art."

As a collector, Desind had no interest in abstract painting. He appreciated the
photographic, straightforward manner of realism. Nothing on pedestals. No rules of
formal theory.

"I realized that I was a hopeless collector with an unrequited passion for
accumulating beautiful and imaginative art objects skillfully rendered," he said.

In 1964, Desind opened Capricorn Galleries in Bethesda, Md. Over 32 years he put
together a collection of 2,500 works of art.

Robert Riggs, a successful artist in the 1930s and 1940s was one example. Prize
fighting and circus scenes were Riggs' hallmark. His painting \"The Brown Bomber,\"
showing the boxing victory of Joe Louis over Max Schmeling was one of the works of
art that earned him election into the National Academy of Design in 1946.

Desind died in 1996. With the help of his daughter who continues to operate the
Capricorn Galleries in Rockville, Md., Desind's collection went on the auction
block. Freeman's in Philadelphia conducted the sale on June 9.

Read the entire article at www.LiveAuctionTalk.com.

RSS: http://www.liveauctiontalk.com/rss/lat.rss



Web Site = http://www.LiveAuctionTalk.com

Contact Details = info@LiveAuctionTalk.com
www.LiveAuctionTalk.com

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