SLUG: NEWPORT ANTIQUES SHOW/with cuts
SLUG: NEWPORT ANTIQUES SHOW/with cuts
Newport Antiques Show Looks To Be A Winner
By Laura Beach
NEWPORT, R.I. â Attention, shoppers: The new Newport Antiques Show looks to be a winner.
Benefiting the Newport Historical Society and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Newport County, the glamorous, 42-exhibitor show opened with a gala preview on Friday, August 10, at St Georgeâs School. The event continued through the weekend.
We are told that this is the most ambitious antiques fair ever mounted in Americaâs yachting capital. It took the determination and experience of two dynamos, Anne Hamilton and Diana Bittel, to pull it off.
Hamilton, past-chairman of the Philadelphia Antiques Show, served as preview party chairman. Bittel, a Philadelphia Show exhibitor, managed the show. Three pillars of Newport society â Oatsie Charles, Maureen Donnell and Dorrance âDodoâ Hamilton â were honorary co-chairman. These practiced Newport hostesses threw a preshow dealersâ party not to be forgotten. âIt was, wow, we are back to the 1920s,â said one impressed guest.
âAnne and I had been talking about doing this show for years. I finally said, âitâs now or never,ââ Bittel told Antiques and The Arts Weekly. After initially lining up a hospital charity, the organizers ultimately joined forces with the Newport Historical Society, which operated a show of its own, and the Boys & Girls Clubs.
âWhen I met Ruth Taylor, the Newport Historical Societyâs executive director, I knew she was someone we could work with,â Hamilton said appreciatively.
Hamilton, a part-time Newport resident, lined up backers. Celebrating its 20th anniversary in Newport, William Vareika Fine Arts was the presenting sponsor. Sothebyâs helped underwrite the preview party. Other corporate sponsors included Antiques and Fine Art, Flather & Perkins, and Northeast Auctions.
Hamilton and Bittel knew when to schedule the show. âOnly one weekend in August would fit into the Newport calendar,â said Hamilton. Bittel, meanwhile, shrewdly targeted dealers on their way to or from other summer shows in New England. Half of Newportâs exhibitors came directly from the August 2â5 Nantucket Antiques Show, managed by Bittel on behalf of the Antiques Council.
The Newport Antiques Show was a rich stew: Newport with a bit of Nantucket and a dash of Charleston and Palm Beach. The Newport-Palm Beach connection seemed especially pronounced at the preview party, which treated 650 colorfully attired, bejeweled patrons to passed hors dâoeuvres and live jazz.
Exhibitors loved the facility, a level, spacious skating rink with a high ceiling and plenty of parking space. The rink is on the grounds of St Georgeâs School, whose 125-acre campus offers sweeping views of the bay. Through historic Newport, down Memorial Boulevard, and past the Atlantic Beach Club, St Georgeâs is reasonably easy to find if you follow directions posted on the schoolâs website.
Dealer selection reflected Newportâs formal, eclectic style, strategically splashed across the âHouse & Homeâ section of The New York Times on August 2 in a story describing the decorating activities of Oatsie Charles, Howard and Nora Cushing, Guy and Mary Van Pelt, Nuala and Claiborne Pell, and other Newport notables.
The showâs strongest suits were fine art, marine art and artifacts, Chinese Export porcelain and paintings, American and English furniture, ceramics and garden antiques. Rockwell Stensrudâs new book, Newport: A Lively Experiment 1639â1969, was in every booth and Ralph Carpenter, the Newport fixture behind the book project, signed copies during the show.
Exhibitors agreed that, if first year sales were not as dazzling as wished, the Newport Antiques Show has immense promise.
âItâs going to be a major show,â said New York dealer Paul Vandekar, who had greatest interest in his China Trade watercolors and sailorsâ woolwork pictures. âEveryone in Newport is from somewhere else. I saw clients from Palm Beach, New York, Ohio and other wealthy places. I didnât stop talking all weekend. It was exhausting, but encouraging.â
âAnne and Diana did such a terrific job. It was far and away the best first-time show that I have ever been involved in. Attendance was through the roof. There must have been 800 people on opening day,â said Elle Shushan, a Philadelphia specialist in portrait miniatures.
American furniture was well represented by Heller-Washam Antiques of Woodbury, Conn., and Portland, Maine, who featured two reverse serpentine chests of drawers, a Queen Anne burl-maple flattop highboy, and a Queen Anne wing chair.
âThis show has all the potential in the world,â said Don Heller. âIt enjoyed enormous local support. Patrons were engaged and sophisticated. About 30 percent of the people who came through I knew from other shows. The rest were new faces.â
âI came to Newport one summer on my way to law school and never left,â said American paintings dealer Bill Vareika. In celebration of its 20th anniversary, William Vareika Fine Arts, Ltd, is presenting âA Precious Muse: Art of The Narragansett Bay Then and Nowâ through September 9 at its 212 Bellevue Avenue gallery. Occupying a prime spot in the center of the floor, Vareikaâs booth showcased major American paintings of Newport interest, including two monumental works, âBreakers: Narragansett Bayâ by William Trost Richards and âCoast of Newportâ by Martin Johnson Heade. Side walls supported portraits by Gilbert Stuart and Charles Bird King.
Joseph A. Hekkingâs watery landscape âAn American Littoralâ was a centerpiece at The Cooley Gallery of Old Lyme.
Boston fine arts dealer Walker-Cunningham included the Gilded Age portrait âA Lady and Her Companions (Mrs Elenor Feigenspan Ballantine)â by Ernest Ludwig Ipsen. The gallery also specializes in the work of Lemuel D. Eldred, whose atmospheric Gaspe Peninsula landscape, âOff the Coast,â was marked $125,000.
Marine arts expert Louis Dianni treated visitors to a period painting of the 1930 Americaâs Cup Race by James Gayle Tyler. The artist observed the first Cup race ever held off the coast of Newport.
Newportâs formal gardens found their match in Barbara Israel, a New York specialist in garden statuary. Pieces of interest ranged from a George II lead cistern, $17,500; to a pair of composition stone game birds, $12,500; and a circa 1930 curved cast and wrought iron bench manufactured by Leinfelder of Wisconsin, $10,500.
Sales included a clock at Charles Edwin, Inc, and a bagatelle table at Jane McClafferty Antiques. Diana Bittel, Gary Sergeant, Georgian Manor Antiques, Danielle Ann Millican and Carlson & Stevenson were said to have had good shows.
âThis show was my whole summer,â said Hamilton, busy getting her children off to school after the fair ended. âI put out every card and posted every sign, but it really came together.â
For information, 401-846-2669 or www.newportantiquesshow.com.
New Newport Show Looks To Be A Winner
Newport Antiques Show
By Laura Beach
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Walker-Cunningham Fine Art, Boston
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Heller Washam Antiques, Portland, Maine, and Woodbury, Conn.
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Christopher Banks, Sampson & Horne Antiques, London
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Anne Hamilton and Diana Bittel mustered considerable expertise and resources to create the new Newport Antiques Show.
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Bill Vareika and his daughter, Hope. Celebrating its 20th anniversary, William Vareika Fine Arts, Ltd, of Newport was the showâs 2007 presenting sponsor.
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Barbara Israel Garden Antiques, New York City and Katonah, N.Y.
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Danielle Ann Millican, Inc, Florham Park, N.J.
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Charles Edwin, Inc, Louisa, Va.
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Earle D. Vandekar of Knightsbridge Inc, New York City
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The Robertsons, New Hope, Penn.
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Roberto Freitas, Stonington, Conn.
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G. Sergeant Antiques, LLC, Woodbury, Conn.
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The Cooley Gallery, Old Lyme, Conn.
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Elle Shushan, Philadelphia
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Carlson and Stevenson, Manchester Center, Vt.
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Priscilla Boyd Angelos, Fort Washington, Penn.
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Dennis Easter, Made In Russia, Palm Beach, Fl.
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Janice Paull, Portimao, Portugal
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Karen DiSaia set up at the New Hampshire Dealers Show while her son, Adam Demorest, and husband, Ralph DiSaia, sporting Bermudan attire after tearing his Achilles tendon playing tennis, stocked the family booth Newport with an antique Serapi plus more formal pieces. Ralph was the go-to guy during set up. âHe helps me with facilities in Nantucket, too. Heâs terrific,â said Bittel.
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David Bernard, Taylor B. Williams Antiques, Harbert, Mich.
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Louis J. Dianni, Fishkill, N.Y., and Sunrise, Fl., with James Tylerâs portrait of the first Americaâs Cup race off of Newport.
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John Goddard Shop, Inc, Newport, R.I.
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Jerry S. Hayes, a majolica specialist from Oklahoma City.
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John Lapinski of Antiques & Fine Art magazine with Charles and Teresa Puckett, Akron, Ohio, specialists in illuminated manuscripts and maps.
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Melissa Williams and Doug Solliday, Columbus, Mo.
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John Peden, Dawn Hill Antiques, New Preston, Conn., with a set of five Historical Blue platters, $16,500, from Hallâs Quadruped Series.
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Michael Donovan, Nashua, N.H.
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Jane McClafferty, New Canaan, Conn.
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Autumn Pond Antiques, Woodbury, Conn.
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Denise deLaurentis, Washington Square Gallery, Philadelphia
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John Suval, Philip Suval, Inc, Fredericksburg, Va.
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