By Laura Beach
By Laura Beach
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Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York City
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Marcy Burns, center, and Richard Schillay, right, of Schillay Fine Art, Inc, New York City, catch up with a collector. Upper left is the Jean Dufy watercolor âWorkers on The Seineâ of circa 1935.
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Galerie Fabien Boulakia, Paris
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Agnewâs, London
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Jack Kilgore & Co., New York City
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David Findlay Jr Fine Art, New York City
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Hollis Taggart Galleries, New York City
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Greenwich, Conn., dealer Abby Taylor included Gutzon Borglumâs 1903 bronze of the English artist and theorist John Ruskin.
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New York dealer Vincent Vallarino sold three works by Jane Peterson on opening night.
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Hill-Stone Inc, New York City
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Portland, Maine, dealer Tom Veilleux with âVermont Symphony Orchestra Angel,â an oil on board of circa 1935 by Rockwell Kent.
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Collectors Marilyn and Michael Gould admired this abstract work on paper by Norwegian artist Thorvald Hellesen in the booth of Martin du Louvre. The Gouldsâ collection of American Modern art will be on view at the New Britain Museum of American Art in New Britain, Conn., from July 13 to October 28.
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Martin Du Louvre, Paris
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Joseph Panarelli and Laura Guarisco, Guarisco Gallery, Washington, D.C., with a painting by Frenchman Henri Lebasque (1865â1937), one of their favorite artists.
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Ben Elwes, London, offered âLa Cascade,â a 1783 landscape by Claude Joseph Vernet.
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Moretti, Florence, London, and New York City
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Adam Williams Fine Art, Ltd, New York City
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Galerie Cazeau-Béraudière, Paris
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Babcock Galleries, New York City
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Sladmore Gallery of London featured Rembrandt Bugattiâs âMes Antilopes,â a life-size sculpture of 1908. At rear right is Galerie Tamenaga, Paris and Tokyo.
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Connaught Brown, London
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Lawrence Steigrad Fine Arts, New York City
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New York and New Haven dealer Thomas Colville featured works by L.C. Tiffany, Henry Ossawa Tanner, John Frederick Peto, and other American and European artists. To his left is âThe Upset Peach Basketâ by Joseph Decker. Above right is âBethesda Fountain, Central Park, New Yorkâ by Andrew Melrose.
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New York dealer Debra Force had fresh inventory for the show. One recent acquisition was this depiction of Kashmiri travelers by Edwin Lord Weeks.
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SLUG: INTERNATIONAL FINE ART FAIR/WITH CUTS
By Laura Beach
 NEW YORK CITY â While some contemporary art expos thrive on the heat generated by throngs of jostling collectors, the International Fine Art Fair, at the Seventh Regiment Armory May 10â16, takes the opposite approach. Quiet where other shows are noisy, it is intimate, refined, understated and luxurious.
With the aura of a private club, the show is well matched to the personality of its charity sponsor, the Frick Collection, the world-class assemblage of Old Master pictures that is housed in a Beaux Arts mansion on East 70th Street.
Organized by London promoters Brian and Anna Haughton, the International Fine Art Fair recently celebrated its 14th year. Founded in 1994, it originally emphasized European art of an early date and quality rarely seen in American shows. The fair has evolved over time, reflecting shifts in the marketâs center of gravity and fluctuations in the global calendar of shows and sales.
The International Fine Art Fair â which this year showcased 60 exhibitors from the United States, Europe and Japan â is solidly grounded in Impressionist and Modern works of art. Over the past several years, its emphasis on Nineteenth and early Twentieth Century American art has grown.
The Thursday evening preview benefiting the Frick Collection drew more than 600 visitors and raised $265,000 for the institution. Through the course of the week, the fair drew members of the American Association of Museum Curators, representatives from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum of Art, Cooper-Hewitt, Dallas Museum of Art, National Gallery of Art, Pierpont Morgan Library and the J. Paul Getty Museum, along with celebrities Oprah Winfrey and Steve Martin.
Buyers in town for the big Impressionist and Modern art sales at Christieâs and Sothebyâs found much to admire in the plush stands, most of which replicate traditional interiors and salons.
Richard Greenâs ample stand housed a representative assortment of the London dealerâs inventory, which ranges from sporting art to French Impressionism to modern British painting. Jonathan Green said the firm sold well across the board, parting with a circa 1922 Pierre Bonnard portrait of the painterâs muse and companion, Marthe de Meligny, and a Camille Pissarro gouache on silk for a low seven-figure sum.
British art was well represented in several other stands. The Fine Art Society of London sold a portrait of Eric Verrico, an Italian prisoner of war and poet, by John Minton.
Flanking either side of Mallettâs display, two dozen watercolor on paper botanicals by Emily Stackhouse were also reported sold.
A recently rediscovered and unfinished portrait, $150,000, by Joshua Reynolds, possibly of the artistâs niece, Mary Johnson, was a highlight at Ben Elwes. The London dealer also featured a large, elegant landscape with figures, $800,000, âLas Cascadeâ of 1783 by Claude Joseph Vernet.
Dramatically spotlit paintings glowed in Galerie Cazeau-Béraudièreâs darkened stand, where oils on canvas and paper by Kees van Dongen and Francis Picabia were early sellers.
E. & R. Cyzer of London parted with a large Marc Chagall painting, âScene Biblique,â 1970, which went to a New York collector, and Amedeo Modiglianiâs pen, brush and ink drawing âCariatide.â
Works by Camille Pissarro and Jules Pascin were quick to sell at Schillay Fine Art. New York dealer Richard Schillay combined French and American paintings. âHarbor Sketch,â a mixed media piece of 1947 by Milton Avery, joined âKiku,â a 1983 silkscreen on paper of chrysanthemums by Andy Warhol.
Best known as a New Hope school painter, Edward Redfield also did views of Maine. âOff Ocean Point, Boothbay Harbor,â a vibrant seascape of circa 1935â45, was $415,000 at Guarisco Gallery. The Washington, D.C., gallery maintains an extensive inventory of Nineteenth and early Twentieth Century European and American art.
Owner Laura Guarisco said her firm is especially interested in French painters who worked at the turn of the Twentieth Century, including Henri Le Sidaner, Henri Baptiste Lebasque and Gustave Loiseau.
The Toulouse-born painter Henri Martin was also well-represented in the International Fine Art Fair. Examples of his work were present at Schillay Fine Art, Waterhouse & Dodd and Abby M. Taylor, where âFemme Cousannt sous un Marronnier,â a sun-drenched portrait of a woman under a tree, stitching, was a highlight.
As inventory grows scarce, art dealers are looking to undervalued media. Abby Taylor has recently taken a specialty stake in academic and early modern European and American sculpture, a longtime interest of the Greenwich, Conn., dealer. A bronze of English artist and philosopher John Ruskin by American sculptor Gutzon Borglum was a bargain at $28,000.
The International Fine Art Fair has developed a compelling nucleus of top dealers in American art. One of them, Thomas Colville, made two sales as the show was opening.
âItâs not a high traffic fair, but the people who come to this show are serious. Iâve seen customers from New York, Maryland, Ohio and California so far,â said Colville. The New Haven, Conn., dealer mingled John Frederick Petoâs âStill Life of Umbrella, Carpetbag and Hat,â Henry Ossawa Tannerâs âThe Seine â Eveningâ and a small L.C. Tiffany painting, âHillside Village, â $38,000, with Jamie Wyethâs âPortrait of Andy Warhol with Archie,â circa 1976. One of many New York views in the fair, Andrew Melroseâs âBethesda Fountain, Central Park, New York,â circa 1880, was $65,000.
âFigurative Averys are always desirable. This one is especially unusual,â Stacy Epstein of Hollis Taggart Gallery said of âFigures on The Beach (Coney Island),â 1935, which hints at the painterâs mature abstractions. The oil on canvas was $750,000.
Babcock Galleries sold Jasper Cropseyâs âNiagara Falls With View of Clifton Houseâ of 1852 to a New York collector. John Singleton Copleyâs portrait of Mrs John Scollay, nee Mercy Greenleaf, was $850,000.
Painted a few years later, âMrs Samuel Wattsâ by Copley, $600,000, stood out at Debra Force Fine Art.
âThis is a nice opportunity for us to show American art to an international audience,â said the New York dealer, who also included a newly acquired India subject painting, $600,000, by English painter Edwin Lord Weeks, an Orientalist master of light and color.
Maine dealer Tom Veilleux sold Arthur B. Davies âOrchard Idyllâ of 1896.
New York dealer Vincent Vallarino was off to a brisk start, having parted with two Jane Peterson canvases, including one Venice view, and a Laura Coombs Hills work. A third Peterson, âLuxembourg Gardens,â was $185,000.
Seven centuries of patronage and collecting were represented in the show. Old Masters dealer Jack Kilgore sold an oval painting on copper by Jan Linsen. The Florentine dealer Moretti parted with a small panel by the Master of Bardolino. At the other end of spectrum, Modern and Contemporary specialist Nathan A. Bernstein wrote up a pastel by the German Expressionist Max Beckmann.
Next up for Haughton International Fairs is the International Ceramics Fair and Seminar, June 14â17 in London. The Haughtons return to New York October 19â25 for the International Fine Art and Antique Dealers Show.
For information, 212-642-8572 or www.Haughton.com.
