heads and cuts at bottom of release
heads and cuts at bottom of release
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Cape Cod Dealers Show
Must run 8-22
Dss
Review and Photos by David S. Smith
ORLEANS, MASS. â Taking place annually during a week filled with regional auctions and antiques shows, one of the highlights that has been firmly established over the years is the ever-popular Cape Cod Antiques Show. Taking place over the weekend of August 1â3, the show, expanded in size and scope in 2007 and again for this year, now hosts 50 dealers.
Presented by the Cape Cod Antique Dealers Association (CCADA), this show, now in its 38th year, has long drawn serious crowds, especially for the Friday evening preview, and this year was no exception. The crowd began forming outside the Nauset Middle School a couple hours prior to opening, and by the time preview began at 5 pm, buyers were ready and anxious.
Long touted by CCADA as âCape Codâs Hottest Show,â it again lived up to its reputation in one aspect, but fell short in another. While buying and selling was âhotâ for many of the dealers, the weather this year was quite tepid when compared to the sweltering âdog days of Augustâ that usually hound this showâs nonair-conditioned facility. It was all that CCADA members could do to get patrons to even take one of their handheld paper fans that sports their logo, although that was usually because buyers had their arms filled with purchases.
Several of the dealers at the show were transplants from the Chatham event, including Fishkill, N.Y., dealers Louis and Janet Dianni, whose advertisement for the show took on a humorous air as it depicted the fully clothed dealer diving from the bow of a ship with the proclamation, âWeâre Jumping Ship.â Dianni thanked his loyal customers and announced that after many years in Chatham, they would be presenting their selection of marine art in Orleans. A fine selection of ships portraits was offered from the booth, including a portrait by Edouard Adam of the American immigrant ship Jacob A. Stamler leaving the port of Le Havre under full sail.
Another item of interest was a large sailor-made macramé frame, circa 1875, that housed a portrait of a presumed sea captain with ships under sail in the background. Not all was nautical in the booth, however, with a winter landscape titled âWoodland Streamâ by Walter L. Palmer attracting attention.
Henry Callan is one of the locals that exhibits in the show and, as always, he was on hand with an exceptional selection of Staffordshire figures, rewards of merit cups and plates, early glass and, one of the dealerâs favorite items, early samplers.
Booth chats on Sunday afternoon were presented in three different booths, with Steve German discussing the different aspects of collecting early American stoneware and its rise from a lowly utilitarian ware to its treasured place in the hearts of Americana collectors. The dealer offered a good selection of stoneware in his booth, with an early incised jar with a dark blue-filled sprig decoration on both sides. Typical of early pieces from the New York City region, it had freestanding applied handles. Numerous other pieces were offered, with bird decorated examples prevalent and other unusual pieces with strong cobalt designs.
Betsy Hewlett was another of the CCADA members to present a booth chat on Sunday, with her early American pattern glass specialty the subject of the talk. The dealer discussed a wide variety of topics pertaining to the field, using examples from her display, which included everything from tiny salts to large compotes and covered the gamut as far as patterns.
Charles Szeglin presented a popular booth chat, with his subject matter including the wide variety of items that would have been found in a typical early American home. A specialist in wrought iron, the dealer spent a great deal of time discussing its various uses in the home, ranging from lighting to hearth tools. Also discussed were other utilitarian smalls such as redware, as well as furnishings and drawings and paintings from the American School.
William Wibel always has a good selection of country wares on hand and highlighting his selection this year was a rare and early sailorâs carpentry chest, or perhaps a rigging chest, filled with more than 200 pieces of nautical-related tooling. The dealer commented that the chest, mounted atop two Windsor-style turned four-leg bases, had been discovered in the region and may have had roots going back to Nantucket.
Two wooden weathervanes were also attracting attention from Wibelâs booth, a flying goose in good paint was one of them, the other a swordfish. A neat pushcart in old blue paint was another featured item â filled with flowers, it was catching the eye of many of the local ladies.
Maps of Antiquity offered a variety of maps and posters, including a colorful New Haven Railroad travel poster advertising âThe Berkshires.â The depiction of a large tree in the foreground and a quaint village with a white church steeple dominating the background village scene made for an attractive subject. Among the maps was a large and early representation of Cape Cod, while at the other end of the spectrum was a Sanson map, circa 1700, depicting North America and showing California as an island.
Art was offered in many of the booths, some regional in nature, while other examples represented the American School. Sheila and Roy Mennell of Bradford Trust Fine Art and Antiques, Harwich Port, Mass., brought a good selection of paintings ranging from traditional New England themes, such as Arthur Diehlâs oil on canvas depicting a schooner and dory at dockside, to a Modernist watercolor by Karl Knaths titled âClam Diggers.â
Arthur Diehl paintings of a different nature were offered by Ralph Diamond Antiques and Fine Art, with two trompe lâoeil oils, including one depicting an early $1 silver certificate bill. The dealer also featured a Diehl shore scene with fishermen and boats alongside their building.
Priscilla Hutchinson offered a nice selection of Americana with an assortment of blue and white spatterware featured on the side wall of her booth. A large shorebird decoy was displayed, along with a small case of eight drawers in old blue paint and a large and early hooked rug with rooster decoration.
Country furniture was featured in the booth of William Bakeman, Wilbraham, Mass., ranging from transitional William and Mary period ladder back chairs with mushroom capped arms to a nice Queen Anne drop leaf table with a cabriole leg terminating in a pad foot. An early pine step back cupboard with an unusual overhanging cornice top was filled with early pewter, glass and colorful redware.
Next yearâs event will take place on the weekend beginning July 31. For information, www.ccada.com.
38th Annual Cape Cod Antique
Dealers Association Show
Another âHotâ Show On The Cape
The 38th CCADA Show
The 38th CCADA Show
Web
96
Davidian Americana, Dennis, Mass.
100
Charles and Barbara Adams, South Yarmouth, Mass.
142
Mad River Antiques, North Granby, Conn.
160
William Bakeman, Wilbraham, Mass.
203
Louis Dianni Marine Art and Antiques, Fishkill, N.Y.
222
Betsey Hewlett, Yarmouth Port, Mass.
98
Denise Scott, East Greenwich, R.I.
103
Henry Callan, East Sandwich, Mass.
117
Maps of Antiquity, West Chatham, Mass.
123
David Beauchamp, Brookline, Mass.
125
Priscilla Hutchinson, East Denis, Mass.
127
Charles & Francis Szeglin, Eastham, Mass.
134
The Spy Glass, Brewster, Mass.
138
Marvin Wies Antiques, Baltimore, Md.
146
Derek Pulito, Kensington, Conn.
155
Past Tense Antiques, Osterville, Mass.
157
Ed and Charlene Dixon, Eastham, Mass.
163
Bradford Trust Fine Arts, Harwich Port, Mass.
167
Ester Gilbert, Southampton, Mass.
169
David Hutton, Accord, Mass.
173
Charles Breuel, Glenmont, N.Y.
177
Diamond Fine Art, West Harwich, Mass.
180
Bayberry Antiques, Orleans, Mass.
186
Antiques of Hingham, Hingham, Mass.
206
Windsong Antiques, Harwich Port, Mass.
211
Coleman & May, Annandale, Va.
229
William Wibel, Brewster, Mass.
234
East Chesterfield Antiques, Sudbury, Mass.
241
Wittâs End Antiques, Wallkill, N.Y.
247
Two By Two, Centerville, Mass.
252
Decoys Unlimited, Barnstable, Mass.