HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
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New Hampshire Antique Dealers Association
SAVING UP FOR FIFTY/WITH CUTS
By Laura Beach and R. Scudder Smith
MANCHESTER, N.H. â âLetâs take out a big advertisement and say that we were just kidding, that next year is our 50th anniversary,â Paul Scott joked after the New Hampshire Antiques Show, which celebrated its golden anniversary at The Center of New Hampshire Radisson August 9â11.
Given the effort expended by Linda Tate, president of the New Hampshire Antique Dealers Association; show co-chairs Gail Piatt and Bev Longacre; and their colleagues, it is unlikely that the New Hampshire Antiques Show will throw another bash like this one any time soon.
NHADA went all out. An ambitious advertising campaign accompanied a series of tributes, including a visit by New Hampshire Governor John Lynch. Adding, as the showâs 66 exhibitors put it, to the fairâs âair of mystery and magic,â dealers brought their best pieces, waiting to unveil them just as the show opened. Some treasures had been off the market for decades.
NHADAâs loyal public turned out in force. Like a Southwest Airlines gate on Thanksgiving weekend, the sprawling line formed early, snaking and doubling back through the Radissonâs lobby. Camaraderie ran high. Shoppers and their friends lounged with pillows on newspapers on the carpeted floor.
âYou donât want to know,â David Malloy, a North Carolina dealer and collector quipped when asked how long he had been waiting. Third in line, Malloy and his wife have attended the New Hampshire Antiques Show for 25 years.
In the New Hampshire show tradition, crowds rushed in at the appointed hour, surging through the three aisles of the showâs upper level before packing the adjacent lower floor. There were reports from dealers that designer Anthony Baratta of Diamond Baratta Design, known for colorful, casual interiors, came through with clients from California.
Red stickers appeared like hives on walls and furniture. Nearly all exhibitors enjoyed excellent sales, though large furniture seemed to take a backseat to folk art and smalls such as winsome painted boxes.
âI havenât gotten fast figures, but our gate was up. After Thursday, we had a good, steady crowd and dealers sold through the final hour of the show on Saturday,â said Tate.
Many individual milestones were acknowledged. Feted with an ice cream social on Saturday, 50-year veteran Howard Oedel shared his booth with Ron Bourgeault, who first exhibited as a teen.
Portsmouth, N.H., dealer M.S. Carter was there for her 46th time; New Ipswich, N.H., dealer Estelle Glavey, for her 38th time; Newbury, Mass., dealer Peter Eaton for his 35th time; Marlborough, N.H., dealer Tom Longacre, for his 30th time; and Bob Withington, for his 25th time. Along with its emphasis on fresh-picked, unrestored country antiques in a range of prices, continuity gives the New Hampshire Antiques Show the old-time flavor so prized by shoppers.
âSeveral things make this show so terrific,â said first-time exhibitor Amy Finkel, a sampler specialist who agreed that the NHADA show is âmagic.â âOne, this is the only Manchester show that has a weekend day. There are still plenty of people who come up to New England on weekends or canât make it during the week. Two, the show is a perfect size. Buyers get overwhelmed at a 100-plus dealer show. Three, people love NHADAâs variety, they love the fact that not everything is expensive,â concluded Finkel, whose two dozen sales included an important Carroll County, Md., house sampler worked the same year as one at the Maryland Historical Society.
âWe sold to new people we wouldnât have met otherwise. Some were buying their first sampler,â said the Philadelphia dealer.
Early sales around the floor included a distressed and unpainted carved wood cigar store Indian chief at Peter Sawyer Antiques. Priced $38,000, the nearly 6-foot-tall figure was reportedly found at a dump in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., in 1965. A circa 1925 Indian maiden carved by Charles Huntington of Randolph, N.Y., turned up at Meryl Weiss Antiques.
Several hutch tables sold, including one at The Tates. The Sanbornton, N.H., dealers also parted with two circa 1830 appliqued chintz quilts, priced in the $2,000 to $3,000 range. The rarer quilt featured blue-resist fabric reminiscent of Historical Blue Staffordshire for the American market.
Portsmouth, N.H., dealer Hollis Brodrickâs many sales included a rare late Seventeenth Century pewter plate stamped with the mark of Edmund Dolbeare of Boston and Salem.
Furniture sales included two chests of drawers, an octagonal stand and an eglomise mirror at Peter Eaton Antiques. The double chests that anchored three walls of his stand were unsold, a rare occurrence for the Massachusetts dealer, who often sells to the walls in Manchester.
Hercules Pappachristos parted with an American two-part bookcase cabinet.
Normally not a fan of three-day shows, Lew Scranton was pleasantly surprised when he sold a costly card table late Saturday.
John and Deborah Melby, Eastport, Maine, sold a pewter cupboard with scalloped sides and a Windsor side chair.
Michael and Sally Whittemore parted with decoys, a mirror, a trade sign and a splay leg tavern table.
Stephen-Douglas sold a Nineteenth Century swan trade sign, a mirror with a DeWitt Clinton eglomise panel and a primitive candlestand. A highlight of the Vermont dealersâ stand was a rare Eighteenth Century French Canadian great chair, $12,500.
Jef and Terri Steingrebe sold a rooster weathervane and Bob and Debbie Withington parted with a splay leg stand with a Parcheesi board top. The Weissmans wrote up two primitive wood weathervanes of seamen and whales and a Kerry County, Ireland, table on a sinuous wood base.
One of the first things to go at Phil and Jane Workman was a white and green primitive toy box painted with animals.
Hidden under towels, sheets and swatches of fabric, stored in boxes and bags, âmysteryâ objects generated great excitement and speculation during setup. Nathan Liverant and Son waited for the requisite moment to bring out a rare watercolor of a fish by Charles âShangâ Wheeler of Stratford, Conn.
âAcquired by us in 1985 in Lexington, Mass.,â declared the sign on a precious Merrimac, N.H., redware pitcher displayed by The Tates.
âWe bought it,â said Suzanne Courcier, ending the mystery about who acquired the unusual tripartite wardrobe and cupboard from William Smithâs recent sale of the Backofen collection. Courcier & Wilkins priced the red and yellow grain-painted case piece â not Shaker, though reminiscent of Shaker furniture â at $42,500.
Elizabethtown, Penn., dealer Steven Still proclaimed the patriotic side of the show with a red, white and blue eagle-decorated banner for a side-wheeler. The 13-star banner, marked $28,000, sold quickly. It may turn up in New York in January.
New Hampshire furniture was abundant at Peter Sawyer Antiques, Exeter, N.H., dealers also known for clocks and White Mountain paintings. A Concord, N.H., shelf clock by Nathaniel Munroe was $85,000 in the Sawyer stand, to the right of showâs entrance.
Just in time for the Peabody Essex Museumâs big fall exhibition âSamuel McIntire, Carving an American Style,â Mary Beth Keene and Rory Killeen of Wayne Pratt, Inc, featured a serpentine front sewing table, $85,000, with carving attributed to the Massachusetts cabinetmaker.
âWe sold about five decorated boxes, great portraits, chests, a punched tin lantern and lots of smalls,â said Maine dealer Tom Jewett. A Maine step back chest of drawers painted white with fruit and vine decoration was $21,500.
âWe do a lot with cupboards,â said Pennsylvania dealer Betty Berdan, who featured painted furniture from an old New York State collection. One prize was an early cupboard in soft, inky blue. It was shown with a rare circa 1800 Amish crib quilt from Nickel Mines, Penn.
Saving for the show paid off for Paul and Cheryl Scott, who quickly sold a prized Windsor armchair in old fire engine-red paint, in their collection since 1999, and a Massachusetts oval splay leg tea table. Other sales include a birdâs-eye maple server, a bow front chest, a convex mirror, weathervanes, paintings and accessories.
âWe sold on all levels, stone fruit to Prior paintings, and a pair of fire buckets,â said Massachusetts dealer Pam Boynton.
A pastel portrait of a young red-haired boy holding a whip, probably by Jacob Bailey Moore of the Prior-Hamblen school, was one of several showstoppers at Barbara Pollack Antiques.
Boasting bold color and graphic strength, a primitive landscape stopped traffic at Jef and Terri Steingrebe, New London, N.H.
Nathan Liverant and Son unveiled a portrait of a girl in the distinctive hand of Deacon Robert Peckham. âWe sold it about 30 years ago and just got it back,â said Arthur Liverant. The booth also featured a New York or Connecticut crewel embroidered blanket, indigo blue on white, inscribed âD.M. Smithâ and âHebronâ and dated 1849; it was $9,750.
âWe are a menagerie booth,â said Russ Goldberger, pointing to the ducks, shorebirds and horses that joined a brilliant hooked rug in a polka dot pattern, $11,500, and a New York State pine and poplar apothecary chest, $38,500.
Eagles were everywhere at Ron and Penny Dionne, Connecticut dealers who quickly sold the star pinwheel on their back wall.
Seaver & McClellan brought a galleried pyramid for displaying toys and other holiday items. The folk art construction was $12,500.
âWe brought tribal weavings here and sent our more formal rugs and carpets to Newport,â said Karen DiSaia, who set up in New Hampshire while husband Ralph and son Adam were in Newport. The back wall was devoted to a great old Serapi with an expansive, open field and warm, soft color. A small Kurdish rug in a geometric pattern reminiscent of a hooked rug was DiSaiaâs surprise item.
Congratulations to the New Hampshire Antiques Show on its first half century. Hereâs to the next 50 years. For information, 603-585-9199 or www.nhada.org.
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CUTLINES
Arthur Liverant unveils a clock, one of the âheld backâ items in his booth to be shown at 10 am on opening day.
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Two former dealers enjoying the show, Bert Fendelman and Stephanie Wood.
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Doug Jackman was responsible for the picture display in the lobby featuring early days of the New Hampshire Show.
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âMy wall bracket didnât work,â Ed Weissman said as he looked for another place to put his large fish weathervane.
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Gail Savage, left, visited the show and spent some time with her longtime friend, Pam Boynton.
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New Hampshire Governor John Lynch and his wife, Dr Susan Lynch, visited the show, here in the company of dealer Hollis Brodrick.
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Linda Tate, left, president of the New Hampshire Antique Dealers Association, and Gail Piatt, right, chairman of the show, flank Governor John Lynch and his wife, Susan. The governor got a firsthand look at the show just prior to its opening, and also visited with some of the people waiting in the lobby for the start of the show.
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Ted Hayward of The Yankee Smuggler.
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âRugs are Usâ is what Karen DeSaia says about the antiques business as she unrolls one of the pieces she has for sale.
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Kevin Tulimieri tried a balancing act, that worked, while helping Arthur Liverant set up the booth.
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Melvyn Wolf, left, well-known pewter dealer, finds time to confer with show floor manager Michael Sczerzen before the show opens.
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âWe always have a mirror so Paul can put on his tie,â Cheryl Scott said as Paul made final adjustments to his attire.
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Barbara Pollack, with book in hand, describes an object in her booth to customers on Thursday.
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No telling who this is from the angle of the shot. But a hint: she has one of only a few booths where this angle is possible, and she shares the location with a guy named Robert.
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Lewis Scranton had a good show right from the start, finishing with a strong sale on Saturday afternoon.
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It must be 10 am â In they come.
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Bill Lary assisting a customer at the start of the show.
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Ron Bourgeault arrived an hour before the show opened and attracted a group of dealers as he unpacked his goods. Assisting were Pan Boynton, Bob Withington, left, and Frank Blanchette.
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Two of the dealers who did the show 50 years ago, Ron Bourgeault, left, and Howard Oedel, who hasnât missed one. He is the only dealer to claim this honor.
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A small wooden carved and painted horse was uncovered by Russ Goldberger as the show opened.
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Sandy Jacobs, on her way to the storage area with packing boxes.
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âWell, I will tell you all about it,â Tommy Thompson appears to be telling one of his customers. He, too, reported having an excellent show.
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The annual group shot, but this time with the Governor of New Hampshire and his wife in the front row.
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By 9:30 am, the large lobby area was filled and people were out on the sidewalk.
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A packed lobby area waiting for the show to open.
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