Date: Fri 05-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 05-Feb-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: LIZAM
Quick Words:
Wilton-Gould-Montgomery
Full Text:
Wilton Antiques Show
(with cuts)
By Liza Montgomery
WILTON, CONN. -- Holiday shopping is a drag, to be sure. It helps to have
truly wonderful things to look at if you are destined to fight a crowd, and
that was certainly the case for patrons who attended the Wilton Holiday
Antiques Marketplace.
While the exhibits were festively decorated and dealers exuded the season's
spirit, the crowd had a serious air: shoppers moved quickly from booth to
booth in search of specific items; no-nonsense buying was the name of the
game.
Perhaps this was due to the sheer number of people who turned up. According to
manager Marilyn Gould, Wilton, on December 6, enjoyed its best early buying
for a one-day show and a better attendance than last year's event until 2 pm.
And if you could fight that crowd to get into the magnificent corner booth of
York, Me.'s Withington Wells, you would have seen the epitome of a good Wilton
exhibit. The booth, divided into sections with the use of French doors, wooden
columns and other architectural elements, featured a lovely mix of garden
items, general antiques and decorative accessories -- such as mirrors -- in a
way that worked best for both presentation and sales.
Heller/Washam Antiques, Portland, Me., also took an aesthetic lead with their
beautiful set-up, which featured a pair of cast iron zinc statues of Flora and
Persephone by Fiske, New York, offered for $19,000, and a zinc dog, probably
Fiske, New York City, circa 1880.
Nearby in another attractive booth, one of the busiest exhibitors was
Leatherwood Antiques, of Sandwich, Mass., who featured a rare and charming
1835 double Adam and Eve sampler which read: "Beauties in vain their/Sparkling
eyes may roll/Charms strike the sight/But merit wins the soul." Also shown was
an American mantel in a light blue-gray finish, and a cast iron umbrella stand
with its original, vibrant mustard paint.
Among outstanding furniture items shown, Peter Eaton, of Newburyport, Mass.,
offered a country Queen Anne maple and pine highboy, New Hampshire, circa
1760-70, for $16,000. Frank Gaglio, Rhinebeck, N.Y., was in the spirit with
his circa 1940 Santa store display atop a great Pennsylvania two-drawer,
pine-top work table, circa 1800, in original finish, deaccessioned from the
Betsey Ross Historic House and priced at $5,800.
Joel J. Einhorn, Woodbury, Conn., displayed a 73-inch high Connecticut Queen
Anne tiger maple flat-top highboy, circa 1760, for $29,500, while a circa
1760, maple and curly maple high chest, Rhode Island school, also stood tall
at 68 inches high in the booth of Peg & Judd Gregory, and was tagged at
$19,500. Cheryl & Paul Scott, Hillsboro, N.H., featured a circa 1790
Massachusetts Chippendale four-drawer red mahogany or walnut chest, with
replaced brasses, for $7,300.
Jeffrey Tillou, of Litchfield, Conn., sold a lovely oval top, turned leg,
stretcher-base Queen Anne tea table during the first five minutes of the
show's early buying.
"We're all going through this thing at every Wilton," said Tillou, "where the
good stuff is bought and sold before show opens. But people still come to buy
things of quality. Our Windsor chairs, children's chairs, and decorative
accessories sold during the show, as did a very good Federal mirror with
eglomise panel by a Boston maker.
"We've done every holiday Wilton for the last five years," he continued. "It's
popular. In demand among dealers. That we buy and sell a tremendous amount
during set-up is a sign of a healthy show."
Canadian furniture is climbing the collecting charts these days, and John
Sideli/Melissa Greene, North Egremont, Mass., were up-to-date with a circa
1820-30 Huron County, Ontario cupboard in black, nicely priced at $9,500. On
the other hand, the American South also made a folky appearance in the form of
a Maryland paint-decorated corner cupboard, circa 1825, in red and black over
poplar, 94 inches high, with scalloped bracket feet, shown by Ballyhack
Antiques/Mary Sams, Cornwall, Conn., for $12,500.
A refreshing break from paint could be found in the booth of Paul & Susan
Kleinwald, Inc., Great Barrington, Mass., who offered wonderful classical
pieces, among other things. An American classical Greco-Roman recamier, circa
1835, was front and center, and sold, along with two George III mirrors in
mahogany, with trailing vines, lots of gilt elements and original beveled
glass.
"We're pleased with the show," said Paul. "We buy things we really like, that
we would like to own -- we don't bring things for the show specifically. And
you don't have to sell a tremendous amount of stuff at Wilton to do well." The
Kleinwalds also sold a Hartford-area Hepplewhite side chair and a pair of
crystal covered sweetmeat dishes, late Nineteenth Century.
Highlighting Harold E. Cole/Autumn Pond Antiques, Woodbury, Conn., was an
English carved, scroll foot, cane-back chair, circa 1670-90, and an "X"
stretcher base, oval top tavern table, New England, first half Eighteenth
Century, with old refinish and some loss to feet (ex. coll. John Walton).
Unusual and whimsical (not to mention delicate), American Sampler,
Barnesville, Md., displayed a circa 1920s, shell-decorated chest of drawers
from a hotel in Galveston, Tex. for $6,500. The thousands of tiny shells which
encrusted the piece, from top to bottom, displayed all the colors of the
rainbow -- a perfect addition to a home on the shores of Long Island.
Among highlights in the categories of fine art and folk art on the floor, the
booth of Julie Lindberg, Radnor, Pa., was dominated by a fabulous folk
portraits of Warren, R.I. sea captain Luther Cole and his wife, by Joseph
Whiting Stock. The pair, painted in 1842 and recorded in the artist's journal,
relined with some restoration, was seen earlier in the year at Ron
Bourgeault's Northeast Auctions.
At James M. Kilvington, of Dover, Del., a George Smith still life, circa 1750,
Chichester, was priced at $18,500, and Hawks Nest, Hinesburg, Vt., was "just
showing off" their Pleissner watercolor of a fisherman and his guide, unusual
for its lack of typical Pleissner detail, tagged at $34,000.
Carter & Kathryn Lavay, of Riverside, Conn., who maintain the "largest
collection of Vanity Fair [fashion] prints" in the country, also featured
vibrant satirical illustrations, and gorgeous original cover art for Fortune
magazine.
Kelter-Malce, New York City, framed a terrific, circa 1845 valentine
watercolor on paper so that one can see reverse side, and offered it for
$5,400. Stephen Score, Boston, Mass., displayed circa 1820 schoolgirl ink and
watercolor works of "Peace," depicting a shepherd and birds, and "Plenty,"
starring acorns, a cornucopia and classical figures, which came out of family
in the Buffalo area. Both were in exceptional condition.
At Hollis Broderick, Portsmouth, N.H., was a Nineteenth Century rare early
reverse painting of George Washington for $895, and John Sideli/Melissa
Greene, North Egremont, Mass., featured an amusing J.D. Clark, circa 1875
watercolor of The Star Inn advertising Georges Stout and Georges Beers, "The
Star Led the Wise Men and It Continues to Lead Them," tagged at $1,600.
Highlights in porcelain and pottery included Jane McClafferty Antiques' rare
English pearlware barber's bowl with an early mend, circa 1790; Peg and Judd
Gregory's wonderful Delft leaping stag jug in salmon, purchased during a
recent buying trip to England; and a delightful, oversized Eighteenth Century
Westerwald salt glaze stoneware jug, with an impressed center "GR" medallion
and rare leaping stags and peacocks below, nicely priced at $3,400 in the
booth of Plummer & Philbrick, Yarmouth, Me.
Among other items of note at this edition of Wilton was a three-masted
merchant sailing vessel model, sailor-made, mid- to late-Nineteenth Century,
at Kuttner Antiques, Sheffield, Mass., offered for $14,500.
"It's the best ship model I have ever seen outside a museum," commented Kathy
Immerman of the shop.
Charles Wilson, of West Chester, Pa., proudly displayed a marvelous "Currier &
Ives" scene hooked rug, circa 1910, found in Maine, featuring a couple in a
sled drawn by two horses, for $650, and an interesting "Eskimo" curlew was
priced $14,000 at Hill Gallery, Birmingham, Mich. Hard to miss at Thomas
Brown, McMurray, Pa., was a pair of WWII tank models used as MGM props.
And if a prize for the Most Sold Tags could be awarded at the show, the booth
of Village Braider Antiques Inc., Plymouth, Mass., would have won hands down.
"We always do well at Wilton," said a modest Anna Emond, who sat surrounded by
a sea of small, red slips of paper.