Cape Cod Dealers Show
Cape Cod Dealers Show
web
58
Davidian Americana, Dennis, Mass.
65
Betsey Hewlett, Yarmouth Port, Mass.
Â
70
East Chesterfield Antiques, Sudbury, Mass.
Â
80
David Beauchamp Antiques, Brookline, N.H.
Â
84
Mad River Antiques, North Granby, Conn.
Â
106
Windsong Antiques, Harwich Port, Mass.
Â
176
The Cape Cod Antique Dealers Association really means it when they call this show the âhottest.â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
60
Denise Scott Antiques, East Greenwich, R.I.
Â
62
Charles and Barbara Adams, South Yarmouth, Mass.
Â
66
Henry Callan Fine Antiques, Sandwich, Mass.
Â
79
Charles Breuel Antiques, Glenmont, N.Y.
Â
88
Windleâs Antiques, Wilmington, Del.
Â
89
James Dolph Antiques, Durham, N.H.
Â
100
The art of Charles Cahoon was featured in an exhibition at the show.
Â
117
Slocum & Schaffner Antiques, Marthaâs Vineyard, Mass.
Â
118
Indian Pipe Antiques, Portland, Maine.
Â
125
Marvin Wies Antiques, Baltimore, Md.
Â
127
Diamond Antiques and Fine Art, West Harwich, Mass.
Â
132
Mimiâs Antiques, Columbia, Md.
Â
137
Bayberry Antiques, Orleans, Mass.
Â
140
Handpicked, Southampton, Mass.
Â
154
Bradford Trust, Harwich Port, Mass.
Â
157
Antiques and Art, Portsmouth, R.I.
Â
158
The Spyglass, Brewster, Mass.
Â
169
Wittâs End Antiques, Wallkill, N.Y.
Â
186
Decoys Unlimited, West Barnstable, Mass.
Â
189
Jack Tullish Antiques and Fine Art, Scituate, Mass.
Â
190
Charles and Frances Szeglin Antiques, Eastham, Mass.
Â
194
James Lawrence Antiques, Little Compton, R.I.
Â
Â
Orleans
Cape cod dealers show
Story and photos dss
Review and Photos by David S. Smith
ORLEANS, MASS. â The line began forming outside of the Cape Cod Dealersâ antiques show more than an hour prior to opening on a typical hot and humid afternoon on Friday, August 3. By the time scheduled 5 pm entry-time rolled around, a large crowd anxiously awaited the start of the show, now in its 37th year and aptly coined âCape Codâs Hottest Show.â
Presented in an expanded format, the show hosted 11 additional dealers that were set up in a second gymnasium that adjoins the original display area. The show still utilized the cafeteria of the school and the hallways as display areas, keeping with the traditional appeal of the venue.
Also new to the show this year was a special loan exhibition, âHe Painted Cape Cod⦠the life and works of Charles Cahoon.â Several walls had been erected in the new display area and numerous Cahoon paintings depicting local scenes were featured. A gallery talk also proved popular, presented Sunday afternoon by Roy Mennell of Bradford Trust Fine Art.
The Cape Cod Antique Dealers Association (CCADA) is a cordial group and smiles abound at this show. Smiles are also what the association seeks from those that brave the heat and Cape traffic in August to attend the show, and they are quite successful in achieving that goal.
Nautical antiques are always popular on the Cape and the selection at this yearâs show was impressive. Numerous booths kept the theme alive, including Brewster, Mass., dealers The Spyglass. Among the offering was a âmarine rarity,â a Nineteenth Century builderâs half-model of a whaleship, circa 1850. Retaining the original paint and backingboard, the piece was designed by a master builder and the model was then dissected and utilized to âmeasure the lines.â It would have been later reassembled and presented to the whaling merchant or hung in the Custom House office. Termed by the dealer as a âmuseum qualityâ model, it was priced at $25,000. Other items displayed included a late Eighteenth Century banjo barometer in an old surface and a rare marinerâs backstaff, circa 1760.
Not everything in the booth was nautical oriented, however. A nice folky landscape painting attributed to George Shepard Burleigh of the Quaker Hill Windmill, Little, Compton, R.I., was also among the offering.
Paintings were displayed in several booths. including Diamond Antiques and Fine Art, West Harwich, Mass. Numerous local works were offered. including a selection of Provincetown paintings by Colin A. Scott, such as âProvincetown Houseâ and âOver the Rocks.â Pieces by James Merrick, Ross Moffett and Martha Cahoon were also available.
A group of Modern Abstract works joined the usual nautical paintings offered by Bradford Trust Fine Art, Harwich Port, Mass. Included in the grouping were several paintings by Henry Kallem, including âMonhegan House,â circa 1940, and âDancing Shapes.â Marine paintings included a selection of works by Arthur Diehl with âSailboat at the Dock â 1923â capturing the attention of clients.
Charles and Barbara Adams, South Yarmouth, Mass., featured a good assortment of country wares ranging from their usual quality selection of Bennington pottery to a nice sawbuck tavern table with good old color. Charley, the current president of the CCADA, pointed out an interesting item from the booth, a covered firkin that had been ornately painted by Ralph and Martha Cahoon.
A good assortment of stoneware was presented by Mad River Antiques, North Granby, Conn., with two Bennington crocks with decoration featured. A rare sized two-gallon crock decorated in cobalt with a stag reclining amid a whimsical fence and pine tree was attracting attention, as was a three-gallon crock with a cobalt decorated spread-winged hawk in flight over a landscape with fences.
Betsey Hewlett was on hand with a good selection of pressed glass, ranging from Lacy salts to handled whiskey glasses. Dealers typically put special things away and save them for the Cape show, such was the case with Hewlett as she kept a New England tall covered sugar in the pineapple pattern under wraps until the show opened.
Ted and Judy Harmon were on hand, having just finished their highly successful Decoys Unlimited auction earlier in the week, and their assortment included a wide variety of Elmer Crowell birds, including a rare swimming merganser, and a Joseph Lincoln brandt that sold on opening night.
CCADA will be presenting its Fall Seminar on Thursday, September 20, at the Heritage Museums and Gardens in Sandwich. The event runs from 9 am to 3:30 pm; for information 508-760-3290. The Staffordshire Figural Association will be presenting its sixth annual meeting September 5 through 7 in Hyannis. For information, 800-294-0324, or www.elinorpenna.com.