Review and Photos By Laura Beach
Review and Photos By Laura Beach
WILMINGTON, DEL. â Dealers love the Delaware Antiques Show. Why not? It is beautiful, boasts some of the most prominent names in the business, and sets up in a sleek new exhibition center offering easy set up, loads of parking space and convenient access from I-95. Best of all, perhaps, dealers enjoy interacting with curators, fellows and patrons of Winterthur Museum, the showâs owner and beneficiary.
The 44th Delaware Antiques Show got underway at the Chase Center on the Riverfront in Wilmington November 8â11. Winterthur spokesman Hillary Holland put the gate at 2,600 through the weekend. More than 400 people attended the Thursday evening preview party, a bubbly affair combining a Caribbean steel drum band with Chinese appetizers. Sales were slow on opening night, which dealers say is typical here.
Tom Savage, a fixture in the decorative arts field and Winterthurâs director of museum affairs, is the museumâs new point man for the charity show. Savage wooed celebrity decorator Bunny Williams down to Wilmington to talk about her new book, Point of View: Three Decades of Decorating Elegant and Comfortable Houses. The Friday morning program was standing room only.
âTom will have to pull another Bunny out of his hat next year,â quipped Delaware Antiques Show chairman Susie MacDonnell.
With 62 exhibitors, the show is big, too big in the opinion of some dealers, who think that 50â55 exhibitors would be optimal. Marilyn Gould, the showâs manager since it moved to the Chase Center nearly a decade ago, disagrees. She favors a larger, more diversified fair with less repetition and more color and variety.
Gould brought about 40 percent of the current exhibitors on board. Striving to appeal to younger audiences and different tastes, she widened the fair again this year with the inclusion of Daltonâs American Decorative Arts, a noted specialist in American Arts & Crafts furniture and design; George Subkoff, whose eclectic inventory is rich in Continental furniture, otherwise scarce on the floor; folk art favorites Stephen Corrigan and Douglas Jackman from Vermont and Charles Wilson from Pennsylvania; and Leah Gordon, whose saucy selection ranged from vintage Mexican silver to Midcentury Modern designer jewelry.
The Delaware Antiques Show remains a welcome haven for classicists, a place where collectors enjoy an ample array of Eighteenth and early Nineteenth Century American furniture, silver, painting and textiles; English pottery; and Chinese porcelain. It seems appropriate that this show be keyed to Winterthurâs core collection strengths and the traditional, slightly Southern flavor of the Mid-Atlantic areaâs architecture and interior design.
A 300-point drop in the stock market preceded the preview party, causing exhibitors to wonder if sales might have been better had the economic news been better. Furniture nevertheless sold well, provided that it was moderately, or at least competitively, priced.
New Hampshire dealer George Spiecker generally does well in Delaware. His sales this year included two card tables, a chest-on-chest, a pair of Chippendale chairs and a corner cupboard. Spiecker brings a professional marketerâs flair to what he does â consistent in his selection and presentation of his inventory.
Said Spiecker, âThe antiques business is cyclical and its swings have a lot to do with the housing industry. The antiques market resets itself during these fluctuations. A dealer has to be light on his feet. For instance, I sold a chest for $8,500 that might have been $12,000 three years ago. That is a 30 percent swing.
âThis is a very competitive market and price can make a sale,â he added. âI donât think of my market as the very select buyers at the upper end. I am helping people make beautiful houses. I donât look to make a killing on every piece. I instead want to have a customer for ten or 20 years.â
New Hampshire dealers Cheryl and Paul Scott are also known for good, moderately priced furniture and folk art. They, too, did well.
âWe sold a little of everything except weathervanes,â said Cheryl Scott. The couple parted with a slant lid desk at 4 pm on Sunday. Late sales are part of Delaware Show lore. A Dunlap School figured maple chest-on-chest, $26,000, was one of their more extravagant offerings.
Around the corner from the Scotts, Peter Eaton offered his own Dunlap School chest-on-chest, $25,000, stylishly embellished with a large and deeply carved fan, double carved pinwheels and a shaped and pierced skirt.
âOver 20 years, this has been a very unpredictable show for me, but I did pretty well this time,â said the Newbury, Mass., dealer, who parted with a pair of Sheraton servers, an Albany mirror and a Federal card table, along with a variety of smalls.
âThe show was very well attended and there was a lot of interest,â said Arthur Liverant, who caters to the higher end of the market for New England furniture. Along with Diana Bittel and Skip Chalfant, the Connecticut dealer is one of three dealer representatives to the fair.
âI had a very good show,â said Jesse Goldberg of Artemis Gallery, a formal American Federal and classical furniture specialist whose sales included three pieces of furniture, two mirrors, a silver tea set and a porcelain service.
âThe Delaware Antiques Show is one of the top three shows in the country for American furniture, said Goldberg, adding, âBecause of its association with Winterthur, it should remain that way.â
More unusual furniture offerings included a Baltimore accordion-action dining table, $75,000 at Thomas Schwenke; a miniature Queen Anne flat-top Delaware or Pennsylvania highboy, $49,500 at Greg K. Kramer & Co.; a Federal bed with fluted posts, $48,000, possibly from Philadelphia, at H.L. Chalfant Antiques; and a huge Queen Anne mahogany oval drop leaf table, $165,000, at G.K.S. Bush.
Gemini Antiques of New York made an early sale of a circa 1870 âYankee Notionsâ tin toy made by George W. Brown & Company and Merriam Manufacturing Company. Do not be surprised if the wagon turns up at the Wilton Historical Society, which has been building a collection of Connecticut toys.
Mark and Marjorie Allen accounted for another early sale, a Pennsylvania dough box in old red paint. âIâve never seen one with cabriole legs, ball and claw feet, and a scalloped skirt,â said Mark Allen. The New Hampshire dealers sold two other pieces of furniture and did brisk business in delft pottery, their core specialty.
Known for paint, Michael Newsom and Betty Berdan got off to a good start with the sale of a turned, carved and painted Windsor stool that was ex-collection of Maine dealer Doris Stauble.
âOver the years, Delaware has turned into my best show,â said Victor Weinblatt. âI sold a number of games boards and really good trade signs. The most interesting was a circa 1870 monetary and picket draft sign from Holyoke, Mass.â Two substantial pieces from Weinblattâs booth are on their way to Americana Week in New York, the Massachusetts dealer said.
Leatherwood Antiques of Cape Cod, Mass., enjoys a lively following for Black Forest carvings, Vienna bronzes and childrenâs pottery. Said Mo Wasjelfish, who does only a handful of shows a year, âWe carried on selling throughout the weekend. We are a magnet. People are fascinated by what we do.â
The show included a bumper crop of tall clocks. Downingtown, Penn., dealer Philip Bradley offered a walnut eight-day tall clock, $110,000, by Hugh Bigham of March Creek, Penn., now Gettysburg. Centreville, Del., dealer James M. Kilvington unveiled an example by George Crow, $55,000, Wilmingtonâs best known early maker. There were Pennsylvania tall clocks by Jacob Godschalk and Martin Shreiner at James L. Price. Christopher Rebollo presented a tall clock, $26,000, in a rare Manhattan case.
Of regional interest, âTomâs Shed,â a watercolor on paper of 1960 by Brandywine artist Andrew Wyeth, was $480,000 at Schillay Fine Art. Dixon-Hall Fine Art showcased original illustration art by Frank Schoonover, who studied with Brandywine artist Howard Pyle, and a delicate oil on canvas by Jeannette Slocum Edwards (1950â1953), a Wilmington painter.
Of note at Elle Shushan was a portrait miniature on ivory of Colonel Robert Lloyd Nichols (1750â1836) of Talbot County, Md., by Robert Field. It was signed and dated 1800.
âWe sold two very good pieces from our catalog and made six or eight sales through the weekend,â said antique needlework specialist Amy Finkel. Highlights of the Philadelphia dealerâs display included a 1795 Philadelphia sampler from Mary Zellerâs School and two Baltimore house samplers.
âTo me, this show is the best,â said Mo Wasjelfish. âItâs not heavy on anything. It is balanced.â
âWe get a lot of good feedback from our dealers. Thatâs rewarding,â replied Susie MacDonnell.
The 2008 Delaware Antiques Show is set for November 7â9. For information, 302-888-386 or www.winterthur.org.
The Delaware Antiques Show: A Darling With The Dealers
The 44th Delaware Antiques Show
Delaware Antiques Show
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A great carved and painted eagle plaque attributed to Pennsylvania artist George Stapf. Charles Wilson Antiques and Folk Art, West Chester, Penn.
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Jonathan Trace, Rifton, N.Y.
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A very large Queen Anne mahogany table, $165,000, and a small New England Federal inlaid sideboard, $110,000, were highlights at G.K.S. Bush, New York City.
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Nathan Liverant and Son, Colchester, Conn.
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Washington, D.C., dealer Charles Hollingsworth welcomed interior designer Bunny Williams, who gave the showâs keynote lecture on November 9.
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George and Debbie Spiecker, North Hampton, N.H.
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Schillay Fine Artâs nod to nearby Brandywine, the home of the Wyeth family of painters, was âTomâs Shed,â a 1960 watercolor by Andrew Wyeth.
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New Jersey collector J. Richard Pierce chose 44 flags from his collection of several hundred examples for the loan exhibition, âThe Stars and Stripes: Fabric of The American Spirit.â He holds a New York Star Eagle flag of circa 1861â63.
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Victor Weinblatt, South Hadley, Mass.
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Amy Finkel featured two rare Maryland house samplers, right. The Philadelphia dealer highly recommended the new book A Maryland Sampling: Girlhood Embroidery, 1738â1860 by Gloria Seaman Allen. A related exhibition just closed at the Maryland Historical Society.
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James M. Labaugh Antiques, Pound Ridge, N.Y.
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Peter Eaton and Joan Brownstein, Newbury, Mass.
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Cheryl and Paul Scott, Hillsborough, N.H.
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Samuel Herrup Antiques, Sheffield, Mass.
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A tall clock in a Manhattan-made case, one of only a handful known, a Philadelphia sideboard and a War of 1812 trunk that once belonged to Dr Samuel Gilliland of Adams County, Penn., were highlights at Christopher T. Rebollo Antiques, Mechanicsville, Penn.
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Leatherwood Antiques racked up early sales of figural carvings, its specialty.
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Kelly Kinzle Antiques, New Oxford, Penn.
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Mellinâs Antiques, Redding, Conn.
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Elle Shushan, Philadelphia, saved her left wall for English and Continental portrait miniatures, including a 1775 Danish School example, far right, containing three portraits within a portrait.
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Marcy Burns, New York City
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For his Delaware Antiques Show debut, Westport, Conn., dealer George Subkoff offered a collection of miniature furniture. His centerpiece was a German walnut and kingwood parquetry inlaid bombe secretary desk in two parts.
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James L. Price Antiques, Carlisle, Penn.
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Bradley Kyser of Kyser-Hollingsworth Antiques, Washington, D.C., with a circa 1750 English breakfront bookcase, $95,000, deaccessioned from the Governorâs Mansion at Colonial Williamsburg.
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Don Otto of Peter Warren Antiques with an English salt glaze leaf-form dish with bird and berry decorations. Two matched dishes cost $4,750.
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Pat Bell of Olde Hope Antiques had Winterthur curator Anne Verplanck in stitches.
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âWe just got this,â Doug Jackman of Stephen-Douglas Antiques said of the folk art carving of two musicians, $17,500. The sculpture complemented a colorful two-drawer blanket chest, $47,500.
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Show manager Marilyn Gould and Charles Wilson, a new exhibitor from West Chester, Penn.
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Mrs and Mr Todd Prickett enjoy the preview party with Christieâs Americana expert Dean Failey, center.
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Betty Berdan, right, sold a rare painted Pennsylvania Windsor stool from the collection of the late Maine dealer Doris Stauble.
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Jesse Goldberg of Artemis Gallery, North Salem, N.Y., arrayed a rare black transfer ware tea set illustrated with views of Mount Vernon.
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Show chairman Susie MacDonnell, right, stopped to admire carpets in the booth of Helen and Doug Stock of Wellesley, Mass. Meredith and Winston Stock were the showâs youngest exhibitors.
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Villanova, Penn., Chinese Export porcelain specialist Elinor Gordon says she is looking forward to being back at the Winter Antiques Show in 2008 after being laid up with a broken bone last year.
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Bryn Mawr, Penn., dealer Diana Bittel shows a customer an inlaid table.
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Winterthurâs Brock Jobe, center, visits with New Hampshire dealer Michael Hingston, left, and Dave Rudd of Daltonâs American Decorative Arts, Syracuse, N.Y.
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At work on a book about Pennsylvania hooked rugs, Lancaster, Penn., dealer Pat Herr showed a charming Maryland fireplace-scene rug and embroidered blankets from New England and New York State.
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âI feel like Iâm at home,â West Chester, Penn., dealer Skip Chalfant said of his booth, fitted out with a bed, chests, table and chairs.
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Taylor B. Williams Antiques, Harbert, Mich.
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Greg K. Kramer & Co., Robesonia, Penn.
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This rare Pennsylvania dough box was an early sale at Mark and Marjorie Allen, Manchester, N.H.
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