Date: Fri 29-May-1998
Date: Fri 29-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LAURAB
Quick Words:
NYArmory
Full Text:
New York Armory Antiques Show
(With Cuts)
NEW YORK CITY -- While many stylish antiques shows recreate the look and feel
of the American interior, few have quite the handle on the changing seasons
that the New York Armory Antiques Shows do. Winter, spring and fall, the
events organized by Wendy Westchester Management unfurl the carpet for
affluent shoppers whose moods and agendas follow the mercury.
"The phone suddenly starts ringing in late August with people wanting to buy
clocks. They're tired of summer even though it isn't over," explains McLean,
Va., dealer John Snead.
Back from the beach and their country homes, antiques-hungry shoppers turn out
in droves for the first New York Armory Show of the season in September. The
holidays dictate sales in December. Dealers and decorators hit their stride in
February and March, when they've had several cold months to feather their
nests. By late April, when the last New York Armory Antiques Show of the
season gets underway, consumers are stocking up on the goods they won't get
another chance at until September.
Thus the latest New York Armory Antiques Show saw steady sales in the kinds of
things that seem to sell best here: pedestal dining tables and substantial
sets of dining chairs, scatter rugs and fireplace equipment, and fashionable
Continental fare.
Good & Hutchinson & Associates set the pace early in the show with sales of
dining room furnishings, ceramics, small stands, and occasional furniture. The
dealers were contemplating their own summer plans: trips to Florida and
Alaska, and a busy few months in their seasonal shop in Sheffield, Mass. More
dining furniture sold up the aisle at Deacon's Horse. The Darien, Conn.,
dealers are celebrating their 20th year as exhibitors at the Wendy shows.
"The season has been very good to us," Jim Gallagher of Gallagher & Zager
Associates, North Norwich, N.Y., had earlier told us. "We sell a lot of
fireplace equipment. It's a market we developed. This round, we've sold a
little of everything. If we sell at little more, we'll be happy."
Developing a market is an important consideration for regular exhibitors at
the Armory, who count on clients -- amateur and professional buyers alike --
to keep coming back for more. "Deal in basic stock, keep it up, get exposure,
and you'll sell," instructed Camden, Me., dealer Rufus Foshee, whose inventory
includes creamware, saltglaze, Staffordshire, spongeware and other choice
English and American ceramics.
Known for Steuben, Jeffrey Purtell of Amherst, N.H., brought some of his best
pieces of art glass. A rare tall vase by F. Carder was $1,500 in Purtell's
stand. Art glass and art pottery also filled the booth of Leah Gordon.
Pictured here from the New York dealer's stand are a 1921 Rookwood scenic vase
decorated by Sally Coyne, $3,700; a rare, blue Tiffany salt with its original
label, $625; French mother-of-pearl opera glasses, $2,200; a Georg Jensen
footed bowl from the 1920s, $6,800; and a Newcomb College high-gloss pitcher
decorated by Sara Bloom Levy, $7,500.
Creative display also contributes to sales. D & B Antiques of New York City
added dramatic interest to its presentation of mostly English pieces by
fitting its stand with a wooden library ladder. On its rungs were boxes and
other choice smalls.
One of the most creative displays belonged to Lou Marotta, a New York City
specialist in Continental furniture and decorative arts who skillfully
combines color and texture. Marotta created movement by presenting furniture
on pedestals of different heights. Featured was an Eighteenth Century Italian
painted console with marble top, $9,500; a 1920s plaster panel that was hand
built by N. Katz, $3,800; and an Eighteenth Century Italian chair, which sold
early in the show.
Charles and Rebekah Clark, dealers in American Classical furniture who have
recently opened a shop in Woodbury, Conn., occupied the first booth inside the
door. Their centerpiece was a sumptuous New York breakfast table with richly
figured top, canted corners, and beautifully carved legs ending in dolphin
feet. Dating to 1825 and possibly the work of Deming & Bulkley, it was
$18,000. Pulled up to the table were two bergeres. The dealers speculated that
the pair, $9,500, which has a virtual mate at the Bartow-Pell Mansion Museum,
may be Continental.
Fine American and Continental furniture was also for sale at Dagmar's
Antiques, specialists who relocated from Nyack, N.Y., to Monterey, Mass., this
last year. Dealer Dagmar Kubes was justly proud of an English rosewood
tilting-top center table, $9,800, and eight English klismos chairs, $12,000.
"Customers here seem to prefer European furniture," Kubes said. "We've sold
Continental furniture, especially Biedermeier, and an English chest-on-chest.
Straight forms do well. The buyer of the chest-on-chest is mixing it with
Oriental art."
David Lindquist and Chris Allen of Whitehall At The Villa made the trip up to
the Armory from Chapel Hill, N.C. They gave their display a clubby English
feeling by mixing paneling, portraiture, and a fashionable card table and
chairs. Whitehall At The Villa is still dispersing the estate of Frances
Marion, an early Hollywood screenwriter recently commemorated in a book by
Cari Beauchamp and by a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. In a glass
showcase, Whitehall arrayed Marion's toy soldier collection, including a
German army set bought in Berlin in the summer of 1938.
The most recent New York Armory Antiques Show featured several overseas
exhibitors. Among them were Scottish Art Heritage, billing itself as Glasgow's
leading gallery of British and Continental paintings from the Eighteenth to
the early Twentieth Century. A Nineteenth Century Roman pietra dura cabinet
was $18,500 at Elleke Claassen van Steen of Ontario.
Didier Lorence made a splash with four stone and terra cotta urns, $24,000.
The Limoge, France dealer and his companion, Annie Laplaud, stood only a few
inches taller than the massive ornaments, which are illustrated here. Another
French dealer, Lhomand of New York and Paris, papered a wall with original
Aubusson tapestry designs, or "Carton de Paisserie."
"In our spring show, we combine garden ornaments with stained glass and
fireplace mantels," said Francis Purcell. "We've had good trade sales," added
the Philadelphia dealer.
For some, the changing seasons are another reason to return to a favorite
seaside haunt. John and Patricia Snead of McLean, Va., travel time and again
to England, often retreating to little known villages along the Cornwall
coast. A recent trip abroad left them flush with stock, including four Regency
salon chairs, $7,500; a French bureau plat discovered in a house in Hampshire;
colorful Shelley pottery; and tall clocks. Among the latter was a circa 1760
Page of Bristol timepiece with a brass dial and early moonphase mechanism,
$15,500. A Scottish clock by Gil of Aberdeen, circa 1800, was $12,000.