HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
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Ephemera show
Must run 4-4
Review and Photos by David S. Smith
OLD GREENWICH, CONN. â âThis is our all-time favorite show,â proclaimed promoters John and Tina Bruno in regard to the Ephemera 28 International Fair and Conference that took place March 14â16 at the Hyatt Regency. Presented by the Ephemera Society of America, the event began on Friday with a series of conferences and seminars, the show on Saturday and Sunday and conferences and collectorsâ forums continued throughout the action-packed weekend.
The popular event has become the pinnacle of paper shows, with dealers traveling from England and Europe to display their stock. It is also an interesting and exciting walk through history.
While the term ephemera limits, for the most part, the offering to items produced on paper, the selection of materials, the broad base of subjects and collecting areas is practically limitless.
For those that have never been to a âpaperâ show, they are filled with great items, and virtually every collector will find something of interest within his or her own collecting categories. Print dealer Robert Newman was seen shopping the show, as was Americana dealer David Schorsch and Eileen Smiles, who both found things and made purchases. âI love this show,â proclaimed Schorsch, âthere are great things here. And they donât break the bank when you buy them.â
There were indeed great things at Ephemera 28. Wanted posters from the âWild West,â autographs by Americaâs founders, wonderful artworks that ranged from original watercolors and gouaches executed for advertisements to first-rate prints, colorful travel posters â including lots of American subjects ranging from midcentury advertisements for Yosemite to the 1982 Gay Olympics â books of all sorts, photographs, postcards, early bill heads and catalogs from potteries, ironworks, glassmakers and gun manufacturers.
It is also a fun and informative event; everyone has the time to talk about their collecting and to help patrons find what it is that they may be seeking.
The event is as much a business meeting/convention for the Ephemera Society of America as it is a show. The weekend got underway on Thursday evening with a meeting of the board of directors, followed by a reception for early arrivals. Conferences begin first thing Friday morning and continue throughout the day. Jeremy Rowe got things started on a lively note, presenting âCollecting Outside the Box,â a look at early Western-themed photographs, followed by a panel discussion presented by academics with unusual collections. Two afternoon sessions were also presented. Collector Forums and additional talks took place throughout the weekend.
Saturday morning brings about the most anticipated event, the opening of the show. A long line of society members anxiously awaited for the Brunos to let them gain access to the mountains of paper material spread about in the ballroom and adjacent hallway. The crowd of society members rushed in at 9 am for their early buying privilege, and a new line began forming soon after for the publicâs general admission at 10 am.
Ascutney, Vt., dealer John Waite offered an interesting selection of historical materials, including an invitation to view Lincolnâs corpse at the executive mansion. Also offered from the Lincoln memorabilia was an invitation to a reading on the assassinated president presented by Walt Whitman and a varied selection of memorial cards. A rare Eighteenth Century printed sermon booklet by Samson Occum was said by Waite to be the first published work by an American Indian, titled A Sermon Preached at the Execution of Moses Paul, an Indian convicted of the 1771 murder of Moses Cook, who had been murdered when leaving a tavern in Waterbury, Conn.
Eric Caren, The Caren Archives, Lincolndale, N.Y., was on hand with a wide variety of historical ephemera ranging from a 1776 broadside protesting the imprisonment of a loyalist, $12,500, to two slave-related pieces, both protesting their treatment. The first, a 1698 broadside from London, was priced $6,000, and the other was an unusual 1794 Quaker appeal for the abolition of the slave trade.
Caren, who, in association with The New York Times Store, sells autographs and ephemera alongside the Timesâ archived photographs, is also a participant in the about-to-open Newseum in Washington, D.C., having sold a major portion of his collection to the institution.
Portland, Maine, dealer Elizabeth Baird offered a collection of very graphic cutout silhouette figures from Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes. âThey were cut out by a school teacher in Lincoln, Mass., right around the turn of the century,â explained the dealer of the pleasing images that included Jack jumping over the candlestick and an image of the Pied Piper in a rendering very much in the flavor of Hunt Diederich.
âIt is as close as you can get,â stated Southbury, Conn., dealer Marc Chabot of his pulled-from-stone lithograph by Rembrandt Peale depicting a copy of the painterâs âporthole portraitâ of George Washington. âThis is really autographic,â said Chabot. âPeale painted Washington from life, as did his father, but one very interesting thing about this is that the litho is Rembrandt after himself.â Chabot stated that the extremely rare image was one of no more than ten known and that he had discovered it at a flea market. âIt was just leaning up against a piece of furniture, framed, but without any glass protecting it. It is amazing it survived.â Even more amazing is that the litho retains its full margins and restoration is minimal.
Fairfield, Conn., dealer Paul Brzozowski displayed a wonderful studentâs art book that belonged to William Sonntag Jr that was filled with interesting letters and well-executed watercolor illustrations throughout.
Jeanâs Books, Hatfield, Penn., was across the aisle with a selection of childrenâs books that included a colorful Pictorial Gift for The Little Ones from 1863, as well as other important books, such as Picture Companions and Lyrics Pathetic and Humorous from A to Z by Edmund Dulac. On a different note, Richard Bishopâs tome Bishopâs Birds, Etchings of Waterfowl and Upland Game Birds, a signed and dated edition, was attracting attention.
âTalk about some rare cards, if they were only in here,â said Gil Rodriguez of the Toppâs 1951 baseball card box that was in his booth. Empty now, the box would have been used to send packets of baseball cards to retailers, and it originally contained 120 gum packs. âThey just donât exist,â said the dealer of the rare and colorful mint condition box. A varied offering was presented by the dealer; also shown was a Maurice Sendak pen and ink drawing done when he worked as a window designer at FAO Schwartz. A rare albumen print of Alexander Hamiltonâs New York City home, then his country home and now being moved from its current location, was also displayed.
Ephemera 29 will take place next year March 20â22. For information, www.ephemerasociety.org, or contact Flamingo Eventz at 603-509-2639 or www.flamingoeventz.com.
The Ephemera Society Show
Delights The Crowds
WEB
091
Lincoln items in the booth of John Waite, Ascutney, Vt.
107
Western items from the Caren Archive, Lincolndale, N.Y.
153
Marc Chabot, Southbury, Conn., offered a rare litho pulled from stone by Rembrandt Peale, one of only ten impressions known to exist.
259
Travel posters from the booth of Bob Veder, Bolton Landing, N.Y.
268
Gil Rodriguez, Darien, Conn., with a 1951 Topps baseball card box, unfortunately without the original card packets, but extremely rare nonetheless.
290
Bill Panagopulos of Alexander Autographs, Cos Cob, Conn., with a rare Kennedy wedding photo signed by both JFK and Jackie, and a Beatles publicity photo signed by each band member from 1967.
114
Dennis Holzman, Albany, N.Y.
116
Austinâs Antiquarian Books, Wilmington, Vt.
128
Robert Newman from the Old Print Shop was seen shopping the show.
138
Elizabeth Baird, Portland, Maine, with Mother Goose fairy tale art.
164
Patriotic materials were offered at Bruce Shyer, Oakland, Calif.
165
Tamerlane Books, Havertown, Penn.
180
John Brooks Dodge, Bedford, Mass.
185
John Scott from Historystory, Dorset, UK, chats with a customer.
189
US poster stamps were featured by Robert Bradbury, Worcester, Mass.
193
John Grossman, Tucson, Ariz.
197
Ian Brabner Bookseller, Wilmington, Del.
207
William Sonntag Jrâs studentâs art album, filled with âgreat letters and 14 watercolorsâ was offered by Paul Brzozowski, Fairfield, Conn.
211
Curtis Lindner, Redding Ridge, Conn.
218
A selection of rare childrenâs books from Jeanâs Books, Hatfield, Penn.
232
Willis Monie, Cooperstown, N.Y.
239
Eclectibles, Tolland, Conn.
241
An unusual poster in the booth of Honey and Joe Freedman, Merion, Penn.
256
James Arsenault, Arrowsic, Maine
287
John and Tina Bruno, managers of the Ephemera Society Show.
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