two-antique-southeast-asia-bronze-rain-drums
Lot 524
Two Antique Southeast Asia Bronze Rain Drums
Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Early 19th century, of circular form with incised ring decoration and frog forms to surface. 20.75 x 27.25 in. diameter; 20.75 x 26.5 in. diameter

Estate of the Late Evangeline Brewster Johnson Merrill and by descent to the consignor

With photograph of the drum tables in the residence of the estate, 270 North Lake Trail, Palm Beach, Florida. Daughter of Johnson and Johnson Pharmaceutical founder, Robert Wood Johnson, Evangeline Brewster Johnson Merrill was a prominent supporter of the arts at a very early point in her life. In 1943, she was made a Fellow in Perpetuity of the Metropolitan Museum of Art; throughout her life she was a patron of several museums, including the Peabody Museum of Yale University. Her philosophy and passion for art is well defined in a letter to a family member dated January 20, 1970, in which she seeks support for The Norton Gallery, "Art, together with Science, constitutes the highest form of human evolution, and I think you will agree that their preservation and development become a most important civic responsibility of us all. Museums preserve the inspired art of the past and the challenging art of the present in order to stimulate and enlarge our culture pattern." Evangeline was particularly interested in promoting contemporary artists, encountering many throughout her travels and work with the United Nations. She had a particular interest in Middle Eastern and Continental artists, as illustrated in the collection offered here. She lived with her collection, sharing it with others while entertaining at her home. Numerous works from her collection, by such important artists as Klee and Kandinsky, are in the collections of MOMA and The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

With roughness; one with area of loss to base.

$500 - 1,000