Date: Fri 28-May-1999
Date: Fri 28-May-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Wenham-Inaugural-Jackman
Full Text:
Successful Inaugural Wenham Show
(with 26 cuts)
By Bob Jackman
SOUTH HAMILTON, MASS. -- On May 7 and 8 the Wenham Museum hosted its first
annual antiques show. Thirty-eight dealers presented fine quality antiques in
room settings. The Friday evening preview party was attended by over 250
enthusiasts. Saturday's attendance was smaller, and sales were variable. The
show was presented in the gymnasium of the Pingree School.
The preview crowd arrived promptly at 6:30 and lingered for half an hour
beyond the scheduled 9 pm closing. This was definitely the new "in" place to
be seen, and there was a strong turnout of local business and professional
leaders. Wenham is centrally located in the Gold Coast area of the North
Shore, and the people who attended the preview were precisely the people
exhibitors had hoped to see.
Previewers split their time between socializing and buying. Several items sold
as they were being photographed. One of these was a circa 1950 drum with skin
heads. One head was painted with the words "The Rainbow Revelers, Scranton,
Penn.," and with a landscape scene spanned by a rainbow. A local collector
purchased the drum as a display prop for his Newburyport restaurant.
Dealer Alan Goodrich of Erwinna, Pennsylvania, explained, "Drums painted on
one side were used by jazz bands or combos, and drums painted on both sides
were used by marching bands. I have had five or six over the years.
Occasionally they have dancers, but usually they had nature scenes like
forests, waterfalls, or canoes."
Dealers were encouraged by the success of the preview and the high quality of
the show. At the conclusion of the preview, exhibitor Mary Carden Quinn
suggested "This could be the start of something big."
Any first-time show is a mutual exploration on the part of exhibitors,
promoters, sponsors, and the public. Planning aims toward a good match, but
when the show opens everyone is on a steep learning curve. This show featured
many strong booths with country antiques and folk art, but the public most
aggressively bought jewelry, formal furniture, and paintings.
On the day before Mother's Day, Portebello Square of Towson, Maryland, had the
good fortune to be the only jewelry dealer at the show. Reflecting on the show
Drauga Gilmore said, "We feel good about the show. It was a great party, and
it will only get better as it grows and becomes well known. We sold estate and
antique jewelry, and earrings were a popular item. We had one customer who
drove from Brookline, Massachusetts, so some people did travel a distance for
the show. I hope to see the show repeated."
Kevin Clark Antiques presented formal antiques with a strong English
representation. Kevin volunteered, "Given it was a first-time show and a
one-day show, we did very well. We sold four major pieces of furniture and a
bunch of smalls. We also met a number of new clients who expressed an interest
in visiting our Salem shop."
Painting exhibitor Donna Kmetz was highly pleased. "I had the best show I ever
had. I was really happy. We sold four oils, three watercolors, one Oriental
rug, and other accessories. These were primarily retail sales. The sponsoring
organization was wonderful. They were there both days, and they were actively
shopping the show."
One of the most successful country exhibitors was Lynne Weaver of Wenham. She
commented, "I had an excellent show. I sold a set of six Pennsylvania painted
chairs, a Nineteenth Century cast-iron garden urn, other cast-iron garden
furniture, and three tables. As co-chairman of the event, I found the preview
very exciting. It was a great turnout, and people were having great fun. For
the museum, the preview party was hugely successful."
Dealers were enthusiastic about this inaugural show. Exhibitor Barrett Menson
stated, "I was happy with the show. A lot of educated people were showing
interest. It was a wonderful facility, and the promoters and museum did a
wonderful job."
The show was promoted by Bob Lutz and Ellen Katona of Lincolnville Beach,
Maine. While living in New Jersey in 1981, this couple began promoting
Pennsylvania and New Jersey antique shows. After moving to Maine in 1985, they
continued with those Mid-Atlantic shows. The Wenham Museum show is the only
antique show that the couple promotes in New England.
Wenham Museum executive director Emily Stearns was very pleased with the
artistic and financial success of the show. She enthused, "I think the show is
wonderful. Everybody loves it! It's really beautiful. We had an ambitious goal
of raising $25,000 with our inaugural show, and between the preview party
tickets and raffle I'm sure we have surpassed that goal."
She continued, "This is a wonderful match for our audience, and our community.
We're glad to have gotten over the first-year hump and this is a lovely new
way to accomplish the museum's educational mission."
In addition to the immediate financial success of the inaugural show, this
show also created an identity as a high quality show. History indicates that
quality shows can develop momentum quickly. The show has the potential to
become one of the most select shows in Eastern Massachusetts.