Date: Fri 10-Apr-1998
Date: Fri 10-Apr-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LAURAB
Quick Words:
Wilton
Full Text:
In and Out Like A Lion: The March Wilton Opens In A Shower of Snow And Sales
w/cuts
WILTON, CONN. -- At a recent planning meeting for the June 20-21 Wilton
Outdoor Antiques Marketplace, show manager Marilyn Gould told her sponsor,
"The only thing I promise is that it won't snow."
"Never promise anything," a member of Wilton Kiwanis shot back. While it is a
safe bet that temperatures won't drop below freezing for the June event, March
is another story altogether. It came in and out like a lion, depositing snow
and ice on the March 21-22 Wilton Historical Society Antiques Show.
Mind you, it was nothing compared to 1993, when a blizzard closed the show
entirely. Still, inclement weather was enough to delay customers and a few
exhibitors on their ways from western Connecticut and Massachusetts, and New
York City, where La Guardia Airport was shut for a time.
"It was a very strange pattern that affected some areas more radically than
others," Gould admitted. "But we were pretty lucky. We did remarkably well
considering."
She continued, "Early buying was down a little bit, probably in the range of
ten percent. The New Yorkers didn't get here in the quantities they normally
do."
"I think attendance is wholly unrelated to sales," said Jack Van Gelder said
when we caught up with him a week later at the Connecticut Antiques Show. "Get
the right people in the right place at the right time and things sell."
The Van Gelders, of Conway House in Conway, Mass., had their best show ever.
"God's honest truth," said Ray. "And we sold four pricey things afterwards."
She acknowledged, "About nine out of ten shows are good for us. We have enough
variety to satisfy collectors."
The Wilton Historical Society Antiques Show was a festival of superb paint.
The first booth visitors saw as they came in the door belonged to William and
Connie Hayes. The Belleville, Penn., dealers spotlighted a southeastern
Pennsylvania dower chest on ogee bracket feet with geometric sunburst
decoration in red on salmon ground, $12,500. A Columbia County, Penn., painted
pine single-piece corner cupboard in lipstick red with high cutout feet, circa
1820, was $18,000.
A beguiling miniature portrait of a house nestled in trees beside the water
decorated a maple dressmaker's measure, featured by Priscilla Hutchinson,
Wiscasset, Me., for $395. It attracted the notice of Connecticut needlework
authority Glee Krueger, who observed, "They didn't have yard sticks, so
lengths of fabric were irregular."
A stunning smoke-decorated Maine stand in putty and black with red and green
freehand decoration was $17,000 at Stephen-Douglas, Rockingham, Vt. Olde Hope
Antiques, New Hope, Penn., paired a circa 1830 Maine washstand with original
vinegar-grained surface, $5,400, with a charming set of six carved and painted
miniature buildings representing the village of Tecoma. "We think they're from
New York," Ed Hild said.
At Walters-Benisek, Northampton, Mass., a set of six Vermont chairs decorated
in gold, red, black and green was $3,850. A graphic hooked rug, $3,250, of
circa 1930 looked more like a Sonia Delaunay painting of about the same time.
It reflected the dealers' eye for artistic harmonies that cross media and
date.
There was high-powered furniture on the floor, including a Connecticut kas
from the Greenwich/Stamford area. Made by an English cabinetmaker who had
emigrated from Long Island, it was one of the most intriguing items at Wilton.
"A similar example, discovered by Peter Eaton, was featured in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art's kasten show," Richard Rasso said.
New Jersey collectors who made it up despite the weather bought the kas. "They
were taken with it right way. They spent a lot of time, looked at the Met's
catalogue, walked around the floor, and came back," said the East Chatham,
N.Y., dealer, who also parted with a Shaker counter.
Other casepieces included a Chippendale flame birch secretary of circa 1775,
$48,000 at Heller-Washam Antiques, Portland, Me. A Queen Anne tiger maple
highboy was $36,000 and a swirl-and-dot painted New England decorated dome top
box of circa 1820 was $2,300.
Wayne Pratt and Associates displayed a New Hampshire Queen Anne tall chest
from the Dunlap school. The circa 1780-1810 piece in rich red paint was
$68,000. Earlier, the Woodbury, Conn., dealers sold a Rhode Island flat-top
secretary bookcase in tiger maple with red and green painted decoration.
The centerpiece of Peter Eaton's display was a Litchfield County, Conn., chest
on chest of circa 1790. The beautiful tiger maple casepiece was embellished
with shell carving and dentil molding and cost $65,000.
"I haven't sold that yet, but everything else has gone," George Spiecker of
Fine Americana, North Hampton, N.H., said of his Hackensack, N.J., corner
cupboard, $6,800. Missing from his stand was a tavern table and Queen Anne
wing chair sold earlier in the day.
A tiger maple candlestand perfectly balanced on spider legs took center stage
at J.B. Richardson. "It's exquisitely proportioned," said the dealer, who
offered the piece for $2,600. Two figured mahogany Hepplewhite card tables
with sophisticated Greek key inlays were $22,500 at Joel Einhorn, Woodbury,
Conn.
Even the sodium lights couldn't diminish the beautiful, worn patina of a late
Eighteenth Century Hudson Valley bench table, $8,850, at Buckley & Buckley,
Salisbury, Conn. The piece was seven feet long and retained some of its
original red paint.
A rare child's wing chair was $4,700 at Jeffrey Tillou, Litchfield, Conn. Jane
Carden Quinn of Floral Park, N.Y., had a folkier item: a child's Maine Windsor
painted potty chair, marked "Baby," $450.
Clock dealer Gordon Converse, of Strafford, Penn., displayed a rare
advertising wall clock by Seth Thomas for the Baird Company of Philadelphia,
$5,000. "Have You Read Your Times?" the clock asked.
"I think that a fair amount of more formal furniture sold, probably more than
country this time," Gould later said. New to the show was Charles and Rebekah
Clark. Recently of Tennessee, the Classical furniture specialists are now
ensconced at 35 Main Street South in Woodbury, Conn. At Wilton, they featured
ten Philadelphia Classical side chairs, $17,000.
The parade continued upstairs, where, sharing a booth, Mary Sams of Cornwall,
Conn., and Joanne Brownstein of Ithaca, N.Y., tendered a Pennsylvania
Chippendale tiger maple chest of 1770 and a superb Vermont penny rug, $4,900,
with a scattering of strawberries and a sprinkling of gilt thread.
A few days before his opening at the Giampietro Gallery, John Sideli, talented
sculpture and dealer, proffered an oversized tall bench from Pennsylvania,
mid-Nineteenth Century, $5,750. A paint decorated wooden Noah's Arc box from
New York state was $2,650.
Other folk art included a wonderful walnut relief carving of Lincoln,
encircled by a laurel wreath and hovering over a log cabin, $7,500 at Hill
Gallery, Birmingham, Mich. Dealer Tim Hill said the piece signed Carter came
from Illinois. The same display featured a Hessian whirligig of great size and
vivid color from the Barneholtz collection. It was $21,000.
A large, circa 1870, American-made rocking horse with original surface turned
heads at Garthoeffners, who had marked it $13,500. New Hampshire dealer Sandy
Jacobs covered her back wall with a large, colorful Masonic hooked rug, 5 by
8« feet, in perfect condition, $6,500. It bore the name Clifford L. Johnson
and the date 1939.
Nina Hellman displayed four ship's shadow boxes. A model of the pilot boat
"Hermann Oelrichs," depicted in New York harbor with the Sandy Hook lightship,
$4,300, had a contoured interior that artfully suggested the dynamic rhythm of
waves.
Looking as much like a Cy Twombly or Brice Marden canvas as a primitive
textile, an African-American North Carolina quilt on a dark ground with loose,
chalk-colored stitches was $3,250 at Tom and Nikki Deupree, Suffield, Conn.
The dealers paired it with a few pieces of Czech and German Modernist pottery.
Equally compelling as sculpture or lighting device, a 12-light birch-bark
chandelier with a six-foot diameter and mica shades occupied one wall of the
stand of Larch Lodge, Center Strafford, N.H. Exhibitor Bert Savage said the
$1,600 piece came from the Pilgrim Lodge, in Gardiner, Me.
Garden items included a set of Nineteenth Century cast iron Fiske rustic
hitching entwined with vines, $1,900 at Aileen Minor, Princess Anne, Md. At
Steven Rowe, Newton, N.H., a pair of three foot high zinc finials with great
patina were $2,450. The Newton, N.H., dealer also unveiled 29 confectionery
bottles in a variety of shapes and colors from a Chicago company, $2,600.
Hooked rugs are steady sellers in the booth of Judith and James Milne. The New
York dealers tacked a playful "Dancing Bunnies," $985, to the wall, while an
elegant 27 by 2 foot runner in delicate rose and olive was $1,850.
At Plummer and Philbrick, Yarmouth, Me., a rare dometop box covered with silk
embroidered linen was $4,600. Setting it off was a vivid red whole-cloth
quilt. The early Nineteenth Century New England example was $3,800. At Stephen
and Carol Huber, Hepzibah Harrington's striking mourning embroidery stitched
extensively in black and white was $25,000.
There were some flamboyant European pieces on the floor, all offered by
dealers well known for their American specialties. "It's a natural way to go.
It's easy to find good European," said Lahaska, Penn. dealer Jim Hirsheimer,
who displayed a Flemish carving. Across the way at Greg Kramer, Robesonia,
Penn., an exuberantly carved, painted, and gilded Italian bed and valance was
$38,000.
"I got into a large mansion in Providence, R.I.," explained Boston dealer
Stephen Score, who featured a pair of elegantly painted and decorated Italian
Baroque side chairs and a painted fireboard. A vigorously painted cupboard
from Germany, dated 1845, monopolized attention at Samuel Herrup's. The
Sheffield, Mass., dealer had purchased the salmon and sponge decorated
casepiece out of a home in Haddam, Conn., from a family who had owned it since
the 1880s.
"I don't mind having an element of more decorative European things in the
show. It adds interest. We have a substantial New York following. The dealers
realize that and are bringing things to appeal to the New York aesthetic,"
Gould said.
The walls of Pam and Gene Martine's perennially understated display were
looking a bit bare as the dealers sold and removed a large 1850 French clock
face from their stand. An architect's model, $3,200, for the garden pavilion
at the Hershey Hotel, Hershey, Penn., was still a good buy. Six French leather
side chairs of circa 1930 were $2,500.
Landscape art was well represented by the Cooley Gallery of Old Lyme and
Frederic Thaler of Cornwall Bridge, Conn. Cooley's show-stopper was the 60 by
91 inch oil "Abandoned," $175,000, a view of French dwellings in a field
painted by American Charles Harold Davis. Exhibited in Paris, Munich, Boston,
New York and Chicago between 1890-94, it was recently deaccesioned by an Omaha
institution. Thaler created tonal vibrations by placing a John Francis Murphy
1921 autumnal view, $14,000, next to Leon Dabo's later seascape.
Pam and Martha Boynton were well on their way to having a good show before the
first customers hit the floor, having sold a painted and decorated New England
stepback dressing table from the show section. On the floor, they parted with
a set of six thumbback chairs in original yellow paint, a tiger maple
slant-front desk, and a log caliber.
Penny Dionne's guardian mermaid was a slinky looking siren dating to the early
Twentieth Century. Carved and painted black, the folky piece traded to
Cornwall, Conn., dealer Mary Sams, who in turn sold it to David Schorsch at
the Connecticut Spring Antiques Show. "We've sold a ton of smalls," Jean
Sander was overheard to say. Woodbury, Conn., dealer Harold Cole said
follow-up sales of furniture had been good for him.
Gould's enhancements to the show included an electrical upgrade and
wall-to-wall carpeting in plush, silvery gray. Not all exhibitors were happy
with the added expense, though most said they thought it made the show more
attractive and elegant. "When you have 30 or 40 exhibitors renting carpet
anyway, this is a good buy," the manager said. "Carpet's more comfortable to
walk on, it enhances appearance, and I even think it improved lighting
conditions." She added, "This is the only show that we have the opportunity to
carpet. It takes a half day extra time."
Two drawings each day for $100 gift certificates reveal an interesting fact
and prompted some sales. "On Sunday, the first name drawn was from Rochester,
N.Y; the second from Santa Barbara, Calif.; and the third was from Wilton. We
had a total cross-country range," the manager said happily.
Of note, one gift certificate was used toward the purchase of the rare kas
from Richard and Betty Ann Rasso; a second was applied to the price of a
painting from Frederic Thaler; a third was used in the booth of Marlborough,
N.H., dealer Thomas Longacre.
As for next year's Wilton Historical Society Antiques Show, Gould says, "I'm
expecting it to be the exact same weekend next year. Hopefully we'll again
have four days to set up, but hopefully no snow."
