Date: Fri 27-Mar-1998
Date: Fri 27-Mar-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: SHIRLE
Quick Words:
PalmBeach
Full Text:
Palm Beach International Art & Antiques Fair
w/cuts
By Fran Kramer
Photos By Liz Baker
PALM BEACH, FLA. -- When The New York Times, USA Today, Womens Wear Daily, and
the Financial Times of London write about an antiques show, you know it must
be something special.
The second annual Palm Beach International Art and Antique Fair January 30 to
February 8 was a show of shows, featuring the finest and the most expensive
objets d'art.
More than $50 million dollars was spent on objects from the show, according to
organizers David and Lee Ann Lester (David, a former lawyer, art gallery owner
and now in the exhibition business).
A $4-million dollar Renoir here; a $100,000 Russian Classical table there.
Books, jewelry, paintings and some furniture, brought by 65 dealers from
Europe, the United States, and South America, were offered to a total gate of
more than 31,000 people, an increase of 40 percent from last year's attendance
of 22,000.
In the city of the rich and famous, the red carpets were rolled out up to a
custom-designed tent on Flagler Drive in the heart of an area where a
sophisticated, moneyed group of collectors stay. Although there were smaller
antiques shows in the area, until last year not one was of the scale and
stature of what Lester has in mind.
Next year, more dealers, perhaps up to 75, will participate in a bigger and
more permanent facility, which will have more room for that imperative in Palm
Beach: valet parking. The dealers will be drawn from a waiting list of top
names in the business, according to Lester.
As one local paper said, "The mansion builders have returned," referring to
those who demand creations beyond mere mortals. Their homes are estates of
20,000 to 64,000 square feet; at least 20 in this price range exist around
Palm Beach. Costing from $5 to $20 million each, they need to be filled with
the finest money can buy.
Interior designer Mario Buatta, ex-Winter Antiques Show chairperson, brought
in his talent as co-chairperson of the show, along with actress Dina Merrill.
No one saw Merrill; she had other things to do, but lending her name was
enough. The event opened with a gala to benefit the Norton Museum of Art. The
Palm Beach landmark also enjoyed the increased interest in the fair: some
$99,000 was raised, up from $41,000 the previous year. Another attraction was
a lecture series featuring eight speakers who addressed topics ranging from
diamonds to rare manuscripts.
And the 200-page hardcover show catalogue was like a museum publication,
featuring color pictures of outstanding artifacts with detailed descriptions.
Despite touch-and-go weather, the ten-day event went off without a hitch,
according to the Lesters, who also reported that 80 percent of the dealers
sold at a profit.
"This fair went beyond our most optimistic expectations," said David Lester.
"The majority of dealers made significant profits and have signed on for
1999."
Lester also noted that 50 percent of the sales were made by people who flew to
the fair specifically for the purpose of buying. "It just wasn't the local
residents who purchased," he emphasized. Some of the "locals" who were
spotted, however, were Stephanie Seymour and Peter Brant, David and Julia
Koch, Barbara Taylor Bradford, Mr and Mrs Dixon Boardman, Jan Cowles, Molly
Wilmot, and Mr and Mrs A. Alfred Taubman.
Among the those exhibitors who reported significant sales were Parisian
dealers Phillip Cazeau and Jacques de la Beraudiere, who sold an outstanding
Renoir painting, priced at $4 million, as well as paintings by Pissarro,
Sisley, Miro, and Rouault. A set of nine Sixteenth Century Italian terra-cotta
portrait medallions of Roman emperors was sold by Ariane Dandois, Paris.
London arms-and-armor dealer Peter Finer sold a set of Sixteenth Century Pisan
armor for a man and horse.
Simon Finch sold the full set of first-edition presentation copies of Winnie
the Pooh by A.A. Milne (given to the author's nanny, Olive Rand); Sam Fogg
sold a French Fourteenth Century polychrome wood carving of the Virgin and
Child with St Anne; and New York dealer William Beadleston sold a rare set of
Picasso ceramic plates.
Among this year's noted American dealers were Hirschl and Adler, Artemis Fine
Arts, Florian Papp, and Calderwood Gallery.
Other dealers who reported brisk business were Antique Japanese Screens,
Imperial Oriental Arts, and Imperial Fine Books, all from New York City; the
Richard Green Gallery and Cohen and Cohen, both from London, England; Bernard
Steinitz, Herve Odermatt, and Galerie Segoura, all from Paris, France; and
manuscript dealer Bruce P. Ferrini from Ohio.
Jewelry was a major attraction at the fair. Selling was brisk at the stands of
David Morris, Garrard & Co, and Hancock of London, Fred Leighton of New York
City, and Richters of Palm Beach.
A Russian table brought by dealer Ariane Dandois also sold at the show and was
one of Buatta's choices when asked by a newspaper to select his top ten. The
objects he chose, ranging from a George III silver tray at $600,000 to a
five-inch wooden horse from Japan at $16,000, totalled $5 million themselves!
Can they top this?
Well, Lester thinks so next year, calling the show the dealers' answer to the
auction houses. In the meantime, he'll be out in Beverly Hills for that
International Art and Antiques Fair October 29 to November 3.
Anyone know Robin Leach's phone number?
