Hudson Estate Sales is proud to announce an extraordinary auction:

Register to bid on AuctionNinja.com | Bid Live Sept. 11—Closing September 21, 7pm

Cultural Artifacts, Fine & Decorative Arts

Highlights include luxury brands:

Rene Lalique | Vignaud Frères, Limoge | Baccarat | Georg Jensen | Tiffany | Steuben | Minton | Dansk

Artifacts linked to age-old traditions and ancient world cultures:

Navajo, Quechua and Zapotec hand-loomed textiles | Tibetan Buddhist Zanpar molds | Mali ceremonial headdresses | Norwegian ale bowl | Chinese Foo-dog/dragon architectural fragment

Fine and Decorative Arts

Prints by Julius Block, Arthur Piza, Hiroaki, Lars Bo | Vintage Qashqai Kashkuli rug | Antique Chinese oxblood vase | Antique Chinese foo dog incense burners | Steuben glass candelabras | Vintage Navajo saddle blanket | Historic 17th Century map of ancient Rome | Antique Russian Icon “Kazan” | Qing Dinasty Chinese blanc-de-chine vase

Heirlooms that bring an elevated aesthetic to your table:

Danish vintage cookware | 19th Century Hand-blown flint glassware | Finnish China by Arabia | Antique American Bar Glass Tumblers | Antique Federal dresser mirror | Antique Chinese export coffee set | Moser Roemer stemware | Large antique bronze candlesticks | 19th Century Silver peppermill, salt shaker, mustard pot and tea strainer | Staffordshire pink lusterware tea set

This auction promises to attract collectors, historians, and connoisseurs alike with its blend of historical and cultural significance and exquisite artistry.  This exceptional event offers a rare opportunity to acquire significant cultural objects from around the world that preserve the stories, technical expertise and design developed over past generations … for generations to come.

Items in this auction have descended to and collected by the a distinguished Hudson Valley family. He was a physics professor and the scion of a New England whaling family; she was a hand-weaver and the daughter of a poetry professor. Their blended intellectual and artistic backgrounds can be seen in many of the objects, which celebrate the practical in the artistic—and the artistic in the practical.