TAAS -- AMERICAN ANTIQUES SHOW/WITH CUTS
TAAS -- AMERICAN ANTIQUES SHOW/WITH CUTS
Â
TAAS SHOW FINDS ITS STRIDE
ATTENDANCE JUMPS 25 PERCENT THROUGH FIRST THREE DAYS
Taas headlines
Set 36 pt head
The American Antiques Show Finds Its Stride
Set 18 pt head
Attendance Jumps 25 Percent Through First Three Days
Show Hosts 44 Exhibitors At Metropolitan Pavilion
The American Antiques Show
Â
By Laura Beach and R. Scudder Smith
NEW YORK CITY â âWe had our dealersâ meeting on Sunday morning. It only lasted a few minutes,â Barry D. Briskin, co-chair of The American Antiques Show (TAAS), said cheerfully after the fairâs successful close at the Metropolitan Pavilion on January 21.
TAASâs 44 exhibitors had few complaints and much praise for the event benefiting the American Folk Art Museum. Following a lively preview party on Wednesday, January 17, attendance was up 25 percent through Friday. The gate held steady through the weekend, as did sales.
âWe were very pleased,â said Briskin, crediting the flawless direction of manager Karen DiSaia and TAASâs executive director, Caroline Kerrigan.
Good weather helped. Only an occasional snowflake darkened Manhattanâs glamorous skyline. In Texas, it was another story. An ice storm, coupled with two hairline fractures, prevented San Antonio exhibitor Jackie Radwin from making it to TAAS at all this year. Pennsylvania dealer Frank Martin, who works with Radwin, set up and operated her booth.
In its sixth year, The American Antiques Show has found its stride, offering a handsome selection of furniture, folk art, Native American art, toys, accessories and jewelry of interest to Americana Week showgoers. Painted furniture and folk art, naturally, are top draws.
Buyers no longer have trouble finding the West 18th Street venue, whose scale is ideal for a fair of this size and relative informality.
âI donât know when Iâve ever felt so good after a show,â said DiSaia. âEveryone did business. Most exhibitors were ecstatic. They sold all weekend.â
âIt knocked me out when I saw it,â Stephen Score said of the âCrazy Cityâ cotton crazy quilt that hung on his outside wall. The Boston dealer bought the well-known and much published textile bed covering from fellow exhibitors Tom Woodard and Blanche Greenstein, who owned it for several decades before offering it at TAAS.
Score quickly resold the quilt, along with a double-sided game board that he bought on the floor from Rich and Pat Garthoeffner.
âIt was a very strong show from beginning to end,â confirmed Amy Finkel, whose booth near the entrance gave her an eagleâs-eye view. The Philadelphia dealer sold her most important samplers, including a folky Burlington County, N.J., piece and an elegant New York Adam and Eve sampler on green linsey-woolsey. Finkel also sold most of her furniture.
Joined by their son, Roger, Trish and Don Herr arrayed Pennsylvania pewter, coverlets, quilts and a rare Quaker embroidered work bag of 1771 by Lydia Hooper of Chester County, Penn. Pieces from the same school are in The Metropolitan Museum of Art and on the cover of Historical Needlework of Pennsylvania by Margaret Schiffer.
Darnestown, Md., dealer Stella Rubin offered an 1848 Baltimore album quilt, $55,000, with blocks by Mary Simon.
âWe just got it,â George Allen of Raccoon Creek, Oley, Penn., said admiringly of his deeply sculpted stag and cornucopia Waldoboro rug. On a linen ground, it had its long, original fringe and dated to about 1860. Raccoon Creek also offered a 17-inch wingspan Schimmel eagle, a gift of the artist to the previous ownerâs parents in 1880; Hill Gallery of Michigan unveiled a 66-inch-tall show figure attributed to Charles Dodge; and Kelly Kinzle of New Oxford, Penn., offered a Demuth zinc Indian princess. Her companion, a zinc Indian prince by Fiske, sold opening night.
New to the show, Jewett-Berdan unveiled a large and charming hooked rug depicting a horse enclosed in a block border. Dating to circa 1900, it was $24,500.
âItâs a tour de force,â Elliott Snyder said of his exuberantly turned and painted yellow Pennsylvania bed, sold to collectors on opening night.
âWe bring folkier things to this show,â said Grace Snyder, acknowledging this yearâs success. The Massachusetts dealers sold well across the board, parting with a Schoharie blanket chest, a candlestand, hooked rugs, a theorem and candlesticks.
More outstanding pieces of painted furniture included a New York or New England recamier at Samuel Herrup Antiques; a Dunlap chest-on-chest and a tall clock attributed to Jacob Jones of Pittsfield, N.H., at John Keith Russell, South Salem, N.Y.; a vibrant Lancaster County step back cupboard with smoked and grained decoration at Greg K. Kramer & Co, Robesonia, Penn., and a Vermont shoe-foot hutch table in gray-blue paint at The Garthoeffners, Lititz, Penn.
âItâs one of the rarest things Iâve ever owned,â Newbury, Mass., dealer Peter Eaton said of his circa 1725â40 Connecticut River Valley documents box, boasting its original butterfly hinges, flattened ball feet and dry red painted surface.
Colchester, Conn., dealers Nathan Liverant & Son sold their most important object, a signed Asa Munger of Herkimer, N.Y., musical tall case clock, $225,000.
âItâs a masterpiece,â Woodbury, Conn., dealer Don Heller boasted of his circa 1775 Queen Anne high chest of drawers, probably from Glastonbury, Conn., $195,000.
Beautiful wood came in small sizes, too.
âItâs the only one of its kind Iâve ever seen,â Brooklyn, N.Y., dealer S. Scott Powers said of his catalog piece, a circa 1760â80 New England ash-burl double bowl. Still for sale was an Eastern Great Lakes effigy bowl, $95,000, of circa 1680â1720. Centuries of careful use had polished its surface silky smooth.
âWe self-published the group,â explained Anna Bono, flipping through a catalog created by Trotta-Bono to document the companyâs centerpiece, a collection of Eighteenth Century Omaha Tribe bowls, ladles and a trunk, $245,000.
Retailed by the Cherry Gallery, a circa 1910 Algonquin birchbark canoe, $25,000, was decorated with scenic panels depicting a reclining man reading a book, hunting game birds, a bull moose and a bear.
Marcy Burns offered a large Zia polychrome storage jar attributed to Trinidad Medina; Brant Mackley featured an important Crow shield with bear imagery, circa 1860â70; and David Cook displayed a large, colorful Navajo Germantown pictorial rug.
Phoning in after the show from Texas, where he was hunting, decoy expert Stephen OâBrien reported the sale of his star piece, a Gus Wilson preening duck, $225,000, to a New York folk art collector. The Boston dealer also sold a rig of four flying mallards, plus shorebirds. A tiny male puffin, $20,000, was by George Boyd (1873â1941) of Seabrook, N.H. Cape Cod dealers Courcier & Wilkins own its mate.
TAASâs other leading decoy dealers, Russ and Karen Goldberger, sold birds as well as weathervanes, a set of five painted pantry boxes, barber poles, a decorated dome-top box, a salesmanâs sample of a canoe, a patriotic shield and a whirligig. The New York Times published the Goldbergersâ late Nineteenth Century sea lion carousel figure, $49,000, the talk of the show.
Allan and Penny Katz of Woodbridge, Conn., were off to a brisk start, having sold their life-size cast iron âVega-Calâ roadside advertising figure and a variety of other sculptural objects.
James and Judith Milne of New York City showed a Jewell & Co., horse and rider weathervane, $78,000, with a Nineteenth Century bonecrusher big-wheel bicycle, $5,800.
Gemini Antiques presented a Calamity mechanical bank by J&E Stevens, $42,500, in pristine condition, along with a Denzel carousel mare, $34,500, circa 1895.
âWeâre the nudie booth,â joked Andrew Flamm of Odd Fellows Art & Antiques, who presented four life-sized carnival sideshow paintings, $34,000, from a series entitled âNations in The Nude.â Oil on board, they dated to circa 1930.
âI had to scramble to get my paintings framed,â said Joan Brownstein, who sold all her advertised pieces preshow, including a Moses B. Russell portrait of a miniaturist, acquired by Yale. Against Brownsteinâs wall was a trio of arrestingly primitive portraits by Upstate New York painter Henry Walton, done in a stark palette of black, white and coral.
Metals experts included Robert Lloyd, with pieces by Henricus Boelen of New York, Charles Allen of Jamaica, and John and Joel Sayre of Southampton, Long Island; Mark and Marjorie Allen of Manchester, N.H., with a selection of rare armorial-engraved brass; and pewter dealers Wayne and Phyllis Hilt, who featured two Eighteenth Century American tankards, including one by Frederick Bassett of New York City and Hartford.
Leah Gordon, who deals in Mexican modern silver, featured a unique William Spratling leather-covered carved wood table, $20,000, circa 1940â45.
Said Briskin, âThe American Folk Art Museum is fully committed to the American Antiques Show. It is up and running beautifully now. A big part of the credit goes to Karen DiSaia, who is a great manager and a wonderful person, and to Caroline Kerrigan.â
ADD to HEADS AND CUTS FOR AMERICAN ANTIQUES SHOW (TAAS)
3605
Philadelphia dealer Amy Finkel and her staff had a setup picnic.
Â
615
Massachusetts dealer Elliott Snyder sold his boldly turned and painted Pennsylvania bed on opening night.
Â
3616
For the record books: Manhattan dealer Judy Milne and her husband, Jim, set up at three Americana Week shows.
Â
3617
Haddam Neck, Conn., dealer Wayne Hilt with one of two Eighteenth Century American pewter tankards he brought to the show. This one is by Frederick Bassett of New York City and Hartford.
Â
3620
Frank Martin stood in for Jackie Radwin when the Texas dealer missed the show.
Â
3622
Lititz, Penn., dealer Pat Garthoeffner put her gray-blue chair table to use.
Cutlines for the TAAS show â The American Antique Show
Â
Raccoon Creek at Oley Forge, Oley, Penn.
Marcy Burns American Indian Arts, New York City
Wayne & Phyllis Hilt, Haddam Neck, Conn.
Philadelphia Print Shop, Philadelphia
Fleisher-Ollman Gallery, Philadelphia
Russ & Karen Goldberger, Rye, N.H.
Jewett-Berdan, Newcastle, Maine
Jeff R. Bridgman American Antiques, York County, Penn.
Leah Gordon Antiques, New York City
Pat & Rich Garthoeffner Antiques, Lititz, Penn.
Carl Hammer Gallery, Chicago
Cherry Gallery, Damariscotta, Maine
Samuel Herrup Gallery, Sheffield, Mass.
Judith & James Milne, New York City
Elliott & Grace Snyder, South Egremont, Mass.
Peter H. Eaton-Joan R. Brownstein, Newbury, Mass.
Peter H. Eaton-Joan R. Brownstein, Newbury, Mass.
Allan Katz Americana, Woodbridge, Conn.
Ricco/Maresca Gallery, New York City
Mark & Majorie Allen, Manchester, N.H.
Harvey Art & Antiques, Evanston, Ill.
Clifford A. Wallach, Greenwich, Conn.
Hill Gallery, Birmingham, Mich.
S. Scott Powers Antiques, Brooklyn, N.Y.
Jackie Radwin, San Antonio, Texas
Charlton Bradsher American Antiques, Asheville, N.C.
Greg Kramer, Robesonia, Penn.
Brant Mackley Gallery, Hummelstown, Penn.
Odd Fellows Art and Antiques, Mount Vernon, Maine
Heller Washam Antiques, Woodbury, Conn. & Portland, Maine
M. Finkel & Daughter, Philadelphia, Penn.
Woodard & Greenstein American Antiques, New York City
Gemini Antiques Ltd, Chester, N.J.
Diana H. Bittel, Bryn Mawr, Penn.
David Cook Galleries, Denver
Trotta-Bono, Shrub Oak, N.Y.
Nathan Liverant & Son, Colchester, Conn.
Stephen Score, Boston
Stella Rubin, Darnestown, Md.
Robert Lloyd, Inc, New York City
The Herrs, Lancaster, Penn.
Kelly Kinzle, New Oxford, Penn.
John Keith Russell, South Salem, N.Y.
American Primitive Gallery, New York City
Stephen B. OâBrien Jr, Fine Arts, Boston
Â
In time for the preview, John Russell put the last cufflink in place.
Â
Show manager Karen DiSaia, here with husband and right hand, Ralph. The couple was celebrating their wedding anniversary on preview night.
Â
The largest crowd ever lined up early for the 5 pm opening of the first preview.
Â
Aarne Anton of the American Primitive gallery making some last-minute labels.
Â
Is Tom Woodard in a hurry, disappointed with the drink in his hand, or what?
Â
Karen Goldberger in one of her most photogenic moments.
Â
The Jeff Cherry family as the show opened, Kass Hogan and Jeffâs mother.
Â
Auctioneer Ron Bourgeault never misses an antiques show opening and catches up with many of his friends, including Barbara Johnson.
Â
Victor Johnson was happy to be at the show, especially after talking to the âpersonâ to his right.
Â
Arthur Liverant, center, and Kevin Tulimieri, left, checking out all aspects of a chest of drawers with a customer.
Â
Peter Eaton and Joan Brownstein with a small footed chest that sold opening night. The couple have the perfect marriage; she hangs paintings on the walls and he covers the floor with furniture.
Â
Senior corresponding editor for Antiques and The Arts Weekly, Laura Beach, with Stephen Fletcher, the man behind Skinner auctioneers.
Â
Sam Herrup had his booth together with hours to spare this time, with thanks to his helper, dealer Barbara Ardizone.
Â
Allan Katz finally got the point.
ADDED
3605
Philadelphia dealer Amy Finkel and her staff had a setup picnic.
Â
615
Massachusetts dealer Elliott Snyder sold his boldly turned and painted Pennsylvania bed on opening night.
Â
3616
For the record books: Manhattan dealer Judy Milne and her husband, Jim, set up at three Americana Week shows.
Â
3617
Haddam Neck, Conn., dealer Wayne Hilt with one of two Eighteenth Century American pewter tankards he brought to the show. This one is by Frederick Bassett of New York City and Hartford.
Â
3620
Frank Martin stood in for Jackie Radwin when the Texas dealer missed the show.
Â
3622
Lititz, Penn., dealer Pat Garthoeffner put her gray-blue chair table to use.