Nakashima-style Table, ca. 1950
GUEST:
I owned a little antique store for about a year. And we were put in contact with a gentleman that was selling his father's estate. He told us that his father worked for a company and that this gentleman that made the furniture for this company was under commission to make special furniture, and that it was an unsigned piece, and that the gentleman gave this table to his father and that it possibly could be a George Nakashima.
APPRAISER:
It is a very natural slab of cypress and probably made at the time, certainly, that George Nakashima was working. Now, we've seen Nakashima furniture here on the "ROADSHOW" before. And of course, he's called the grandfather of the crafts movement here in America. He was a Japanese-American, and made furniture of natural materials. And as we can see, there is this plank which is just as though it were cut off of a tree and, and polished a tiny bit.
GUEST:
Right.
APPRAISER:
But you can see its undulating form, its irregular form. It still has knotholes in it here that have just been polished to use. Let's flip this over. You can see that there are two pieces of metal holding this natural piece of wood together. Now, it is not the kind of construction that we would see Nakashima making. We would have expected him to make a beautiful... what's called "dutchman" in cabinetry, and it would be a butterfly hinge-- it would look like an hourglass or butterfly wings.
GUEST:
Oh, okay.
APPRAISER:
And he would have held the two pieces of wood breaking apart together with that. Another thing that I would look at are these legs and the fact that they are painted black. I would have expected a Nakashima table to have a natural wood and much more of a canted leg. These legs are quite straight. So the table has a little bit of a stiff quality to it, where Nakashima is known for his grace and elegance and, and natural design.
GUEST:
Right.
APPRAISER:
So I'm not thinking that this is a Nakashima table, although possibly made in the New Hope area where he worked by some of the other craftsmen. How much did you pay for the table? Do you..?
GUEST:
We paid $400 for it.
APPRAISER:
$400, okay. A Nakashima table would be selling in the $30,000 range, a lot of money these days. His prices are just continuing because this modern movement is so popular. And I think that that is helpful for this generation of furniture, because it sort of rides on the coattails of Nakashima.
GUEST:
Mm-hmm.
APPRAISER:
This table, I would say probably would bring about $1,000 at auction. We'd call it "in the style of George Nakashima"...
GUEST:
Right.
APPRAISER:
"School of George Nakashima."
GUEST:
Right.
APPRAISER:
But not by him.
Appraisal Details
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