Maud Lewis painting found in thrift shop enters final week of auction - Action News
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Maud Lewis painting found in thrift shop enters final week of auction

The online auction of the Maud Lewis folk art painting Portrait of Eddie Barnes and Ed Murphy, found among thrift centre donations in New Hamburg, Ont., ends Friday.

Online bidding hits $45,000 as auction heads for Friday deadline

This Maud Lewis painting was discovered by volunteers at the Mennonite Central Committee Thrift Centre in New Hamburg, Ont. The painting is being auctioned off to support the MCC. (Ken Ogasawara/MCC Photo)

Thepainting found in a New Hamburg, Ont. thrift shop a little over a year ago willfinally be sold this week in the second round of an online auction.

By Monday the bidding had reached$45,000. The auction ends Friday.

The painting is by the prolific Canadian folk artist Maud Lewis, who's the subject of an independent biopic that took Atlantic Canada by stormthis spring.

The auction had to be stopped and restarted, becausesomeone bid $125,000 in "bad faith," RickCoberBauman, the executive director of Mennonite CentralCommittee Ontario, told CBC News.

Lewis life

Lewis lived in poverty for most of her life and sold herpaintings from her home near Digby, N.S., for as little as $2 and
$3. She died in 1970, but her paintings have since sold for up to$22,000.

Cober Bauman said it's been an exciting journey since Portrait of Eddie Barnes and Ed Murphy,Lobster Fisherman, Bay View, Nova Scotia,was found in donations made to theMCC thrift shop.

"It just so happened that one of our volunteers that day had ahunch that it might be something out of the ordinary," he said.

Louis Silcox, a volunteer, and Karla Richards, the general manager of the New Hamburg Thrift Centre, hold an original Maud Lewis painting discovered at centre amongst donations. (Ken Ogasawara/MCC Photo)

Painting traveled

After having it appraised and valued at approximately $16,000 the painting has been ferried back and forth between New Hamburg, an exhibit at a Nova Scotia art gallery and a Waterloo, Ont., theatre.

"We were always planning to go to some sort of an auction," Cober Baumansaid.

The proceeds will further MCC's relief work, including inSouth Sudan, where the organization is working to help alleviate theeffects of a famine.

Cober Bauman said the $45,000 bid that has been made would more thansatisfy his organization, given that it's twice what Lewis'spaintings have garnered in the pastand it's nearly three times thevalue at which the work was appraised.

Cober Bauman said he thinks the high bid may be in part because of thebuzz surrounding the Lewis biopic, but that people also may bedriven to pay more because they know the money is going to charity.

With files from Canadian Press