HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
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Paris Chatou Spring Fair
Paris in the spring
Review and Photos by Ivor Hughes
PARIS, FRANCE â There are numerous weekly street markets throughout Paris, but the beginning of the Parisian open-air season of longer events does not begin until March. The 800- exhibitor, ten-day and 100,000-visitor event in Chatou, a town on the western outskirts of Paris, marks the start of that season.
The fairâs full name is âFoire a la brocante et aux jambonsâ â loosely translated as âflea market with ham.â It started as a cooked meat fair, a centuries-old tradition of French culture and cuisine. Interrupted only by the French Revolution, the brocante element arrived in the 1840s.
The dealers in bric-a-brac, secondhand clothes and scrap metal quickly outnumbered the butchers. In 1869 it was moved from Notre Dame to boulevard Richard-Lenoir, a road in central Paris connecting place de la Republique and place de la Bastille.
SNCAO, the French trade association for secondhand dealers, took responsibility for the event in 1970. It had become so large that it was relocated to a nine-acre site on Isle des Impressionistes, an area on the outskirts of Chatou.
France was hit by violent storms during week commencing the fairâs opening. Chatou was affected so badly that it remained closed on Monday.
Merchandise at the fair was representative of all the goods you might expect to find at French trade fairs, flea markets and weekend salon events. The only items that seemed in relatively short supply were large furniture and fine jewelry.
Fields on the perimeter tend to be for bric-a-brac and larger decorative items. The covered area in the center has dozens of what are effectively small fine antiques shops. The rows of stalls between the center and the perimeter are predominantly midrange goods.
The next Chatou starts September 26. For information, 0033 1 40 39 90 75.
At The Paris Chatou Market
Paris Chatou Spring Fair
By Ivor Hughes
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Alain Golleau of Paris offered this early Nineteenth Century Sèvres porcelain and ormolu garniture with silk escapement at 8500 euros.
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Ethnic art is big business in France â part of a display by Michel Leruez, Himalasia, Paris.
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Larger and more modestly priced items are generally to be found on the perimeter.
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Fine shop units are located in the center; this is part of a large display of Nancy School art glass at Ghyslaine Marlot, Auvergne, central France.
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Nautical artifacts are popular with interior designers. They are a specialty of Au Coeur du Temps Sarzeau, Brittany, northwest France.
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Au Temps Jadis of Paris offered the six enamel pots and canister holder for 220 euros.
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Antique kitchenalia is plentiful at Chatou. These examples are from James Joulin, Le Thor, southern France.
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Organ grinder, restorer and dealer Denis Lambotte of Meaux, a suburb of Paris.
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Patrick Guerin of Juke Box Gallery, Paris, deals in Americana.
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Bernard Riconti of Vernaison Market, Clignancourt, Paris, was offering a selection of goods at 10 euros each.
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Le Bonheur du Jour, Aire sur la Lys, northern France, took one of several fine furniture units in the central arcades.