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Claude Clark, “Drafting,” oil on board, circa 1940-41, achieved $17,500.

NEW YORK CITY — Swann Galleries opened the winter season with the fourth iteration of The Artists of the WPA. The timed online auction closed Thursday, January 25, with an 89 percent sell-through rate by lot, earning $595,286 and delivering six auction records.

“I’m pleased with another successful auction dedicated to the artists of the WPA. The American artists who participated in the New Deal art programs not only benefited fiscally from the government funding, under the structured easel painting exhibitions, print workshops and juried competitions for federal building decoration projects, these artists put in their 10,000 hours, emerging as seasoned experts of their craft, and the Post-War era of art blossomed in America. Of the many printmakers, photographers, painters and designers represented in our January timed auction, six achieved the highest value, world auction records,” noted Harold Porcher, director of Modern & Post-War Art at Swann and the specialist for the sale.

Records included artist records for James Russell Sherman with two mural studies for the Marion, Iowa, Post Office ($15,000); Isaac Friedlander’s “Our Daily Bread,” etching, 1935 ($15,000); Joseph de Martini’s “Six Day Bicycle Race, Madison Square Garden,” oil on board, circa 1941 ($12,500); and George Rodgers Barber with a circa 1938 painting created for a WPA mural competition funded by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts ($7,000). Print records included “Steel Town Panorama,” a color screenprint, 1941, by Harry Gottlieb ($8,750); and “Cement Finishers,” wood engraving, 1939, by Leon Gilmour ($3,500).

James Russell Sherman, Mural Studies for the Marion, Iowa, Post Office (pair), one tempera on board, one pencil on paper. The price realized of $15,000 is a new world auction for the artist.

Additional highlights featured Claude Clark’s circa 1940-41 oil on board painting “Drafting,” a scarce image of an African American architect or architectural student, and the top lot of the auction ($17,500); Dorothea Lange’s “Migrant Mother, Nipomo, Calif.” (variant), silver print, 1936, printed circa 1990s ($16,250); Palmer Hayden’s “On the Jersey Side,” oil on canvas, circa late 1930s ($15,000); and Raphael Soyer’s Untitled (Portrait of a Student), oil on canvas, circa 1930 ($8,125).

Swann Galleries’ next sale is “An American Century: The Collection of Dr James & Debra Pearl & Fine Photographs,” on Thursday, February 15.

Prices quoted include the buyer’s premium as reported by the auction house. For information, www.swanngalleries.com or 212-254-4710.

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