Date: Fri 08-May-1998
Date: Fri 08-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LAURAB
Quick Words:
SouthportWestport
Full Text:
Southport Westport Antiques Show
WITH CUTS
WESTPORT, CONN. -- Rain is a traditional wedding blessing in many cultures.
Even though daunting amounts of it fell at the opening and closing of the 1998
Southport Westport Antiques Show, weather seems to have exercised its
primitive magic on the April 23-26 event at the Fairfield County Hunt Club.
By almost every measure, the Antiques Council's flagship fair was an
outstanding success: lushly beautiful, well-balanced and interesting, and
superbly managed by the Near & Far Aid Society, working in conjunction with
Antiques Council liaison Nancy Boyd, and dealers Stuart Horn and Don Auto.
Some exhibitors would like to see Southport Westport shortened by a day;
otherwise, complaints were nil.
"We had two bluebird days," said Boyd, a dealer from East Hampton, N.Y.
Brilliant weather on Friday and Saturday appears, ironically, to have dampened
attendance. After a record preview night, the gate on Friday was slow.
Saturday picked up a bit and Sunday, when it rained buckets, was brisk.
Commercially, Southport Westport remains as unpredictable as the weather.
"It's not what they buy but how they buy it," one dealer said when asked to
characterize sales. "Southport Westport shoppers have eclectic tastes, but
ample means. If they like it, they take it."
That said, English furniture is a steady seller at this fair catering to elite
homeowners from Fairfield and Westchester counties, and Manhattan. "I guess
that's because of the large, formal houses in the area," said Gary Young, a
Centreville, Md., dealer who had his best show ever in the southern
Connecticut venue.
"We sold six major pieces of furniture, including a George III bookcase, a
Regency sofa table, Georgian red-walnut dining table, a Pembroke table, and a
chair. We also sold a Regency scissor-action card table. Buckingham Palace has
a pair in its music room by the same maker," Young continued.
Also in his booth were five carved limestone garden dwarfs, bringing to mind
the hit film, The Full Monty , in which gnomes figure prominently. Whimsical
garden sculpture has been a fixture of the English garden for two hundred
years. In its May 17 sale in Portsmouth, N.H., Northeast Auction will include
an antique English pottery gnome. Older and rarer was Young's carved limestone
set, priced $19,000.
Among its 66 exhibitors, the Southport Westport Antiques Show includes a
number who have well-developed client bases in the area. One of them is George
Subkoff, a longtime dealer in English and Continental furnishings and
accessories whose shop is on the Post Road in Westport.
Subkoff made a major sale of six supremely elegant New York klismos side
chairs pictured in American Painted Furniture by Cynthia V.A. Schaffner and
Susan Klein. "They are going to an old client of mine, a woman who lives in
New York and Southport," explained the dealer, who still owns the dramatic
gold and black recamier from the suite.
Subkoff said that it had been an exceptional show for him. "I always seem to
do well there. I had a very eclectic booth. Some Continental, and some
wonderful painted Tibetan pieces -- trunks or blanket chests with vibrant
paint and early metal work."
Subkoff was not the only one to sell formal American furniture. North Salem,
N.Y., dealer Janice Strauss made a highly successful debut at Southport
Westport. "We were told that country doesn't sell here so we didn't bring
any," said Ted Strauss, rattling off their sales: a pair of Connecticut cherry
Pembroke tables, a Santo Domingan mahogany Pembroke table, a four-drawer
walnut Chippendale chest, iron and brass.
More high-country American furniture sold at Wayne Pratt & Company. The
Woodbury, Conn., and Nantucket, Mass., dealers parted with their centerpiece,
a sumptuous sideboard with dazzling oval inlays.
"The real success of the show is that the birds didn't get our upholstery,"
joked Charles Hollingsworth, who, like other exhibitors, must defend against
the wildlife that roosts in the rafters of the Hunt Club hall. The Washington,
D.C., dealers featured a Salem sideboard, a Portsmouth serpentine front chest
of drawers by Langley Boardman, a Salem secretary by Emery Moulton, a
three-part Massachusetts dining table, and two Newport card tables. Paintings
included a Severin Roesin still life, Thomas Sully portrait, and three Victor
DeGrailley views of the nation's capital.
Four Hartford chairs sold from the Kyser-Hollingsworth stand. A Portsmouth
sofa provided a photo opportunity with Lady Henrietta Spencer-Churchill, who
lectured on classic English style on Saturday. "We got to talking about
Bleinheim Palace, her family home. She was warm and lovely," Hollingsworth
said.
Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon also visited, by way of a photograph
propped up in a Charles II carved and caned walnut child's chair, on offer at
Jackson-Mitchell, Wilmington, Del., for $14,500. What with princess's eyeliner
and Jean Shrimpton-style coif, the photo of the royal couple inspecting the
chair at an antiques show appeared to date to the late sixties. More miniature
furniture was found at Chew & Formicola, where an outstanding Dutch Baroque
secretary with mirrored door, circa 1730, was featured for $18,500.
Sunday was a good day for Pat Guthman, who outfitted an entire fireplace on
the cold afternoon. "The show looked great," said the Southport dealer, an
exhibitor for two decades. "It's a very diversified show. Collectors know the
dealers. There's a lot of buyer confidence." Perfectly suited to the elegant,
horsy style of the show was the large Eighteenth Century famille rose punch
bowl offered by Philip Suval, Inc. Virginia dealer John Suval said the hunt
scenes decorating the perimeter of the bowl, modeled after paintings by James
Seymour, were the most colorful he had ever seen.
"We agonize over dealer selection. We try to put people into spots but because
they are going to round out a show, add diversity, attract a following,"
Antiques Council President Victor Weinblatt said following the fair. "Because
this is the Council's flagship fair, dealers make the effort to save things.
That doesn't happen much anymore because of the economics of holding
inventory. "
Weinblatt and colleagues added 14 new exhibitors this year. Showing for the
first time here were R.T. Facts of Kent, Conn., specializing in architectural
findings; Claverack, N.Y., dealer Michael Dunn, offering Chinese provincial
furniture; Washington, D.C., Kyser Hollingsworth; and Federal furniture
specialist Thomas Schwenke of Woodbury, Conn.
Also new were Americana dealers Curran & Curran from Wilton, Conn., R.M. Worth
of West Chester, Penn., and The Captain's House of Portland, Me.; New
Hampshire dealer Steven Rowe, who devoted his booth to architectural elements
and garden furniture; Shaker furniture specialist John Keith Russell of South
Salem, N.Y.; The Cooley Gallery of Old Lyme, Conn., with American
Impressionist paintings; and jewelry dealer Deborah Bassett.
Most unexpected of the recruits was Marilyn Garrow, a London dealer new to the
American show scene. Garrow, who regularly exhibits at Olympia, was mobbed
with interest in her beautifully embroidered linens, silk damasks, and
handprinted cottons.
Retirements and conflicts with the Philadelphia and Los Angeles Antiques Shows
explained the high exhibitor turnover, Weinblatt said.
Georgian Manor Antiques, Gary Young, Philip Suval, Inc, Peter Eaton, Diana
Bittel, and Nimmo and Hart were among those who packed out of Philadelphia
Wednesday night, only to open in Westport the next day. The quick change was a
particular ordeal for Nimmo and Hart.
The trucker the Middletown Springs, Vt., dealers shared with Jonathan Trace,
Jeffrey Tillou, and two other Philadelphia dealers was hours late.
But back-to-back shows delivered an unexpected bonus to Wynnewood, Penn.,
dealer Diana Bittel. "I got a call from Vermont this week congratulating me on
selling Pennsylvania furniture in Westport," laughed Bittel. Having gone
directly from Philadelphia to Westport, Bittel didn't have time to repack her
truck.
She had her best Westport show ever, selling a high chest, a linen press,
sailors' valentines, tea caddies and a woolie. "Everyone I sold to was a new
customer, New York and Connecticut types," she said.
Though not known as a "country" show, Southport Westport presents some
exceptional country material. One of its most vivid displays belonged to Kathy
Schoemer-DePasquale, who flanked a handsome glazed double-door cupboard with
two flags. With 45 stars, the flag to the right of a cupboard was actually a
quilt.
"It was unusual in that it was not in any way abstract or interpretative,"
said Schoemer-DePasquale, who sold all her stars and spangles as the show
opened. Another country dealer, Nancy Boyd, parted with her set of tiger maple
chairs and an ingrain carpet, which went out under the arm of Martha Stewart.
"We sold across the board -- country furniture, formal furniture, garden
things. It was just a terrific show," said New Hampshire dealer Cheryl Scott.
Across the aisle from Scott, South Hadley, Mass., dealer Victor Weinblatt was
having his best Southport Westport Show ever. "I sold a country store
cupboard, a dough box, an iron umbrella stand, a great pachisi and one other
game board, a lot of small pieces of iron, two hooked rugs, a number of
shutters, and some fragments of an iron fence, and several signs," continued
the dealer. Many visitors admired two turn-of-the-century Scottish fishing
rods with handcarved reels, one of which sold to New York decorator Albert
Hadley.
"There was a great feeling on the floor," concluded Weinblatt. "I think the
Antiques Council has finally come into its own. There are people who devoted
their lives to it and committed themselves even when it was controversial.
Their efforts are coming to fruition."
