Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: SS
Quick Words:
NYBotanical
Full Text:
New York Botanical Garden
BRONX, N.Y. -- The New York Botanical Garden flowered with more than plants on
April 23 when the preview party opened the annual Antique Garden Furniture
Show.
Staged under a spacious tent on the garden grounds, this event hosts 22
exhibitors and draws a large crowd over a three-day run. "We really put on
quite a show this year," Penny Jones, show manager, said. "A good gate and
many sales contributed to the success of this event."
Without question, it is really the place to go for items to dress up the
garden. Fountains, urns, sculpture, containers, old tools, and even colorful
prints to liven up the sun room or fancy potting shed are all there to tempt
the beginning gardener or the seasoned planter who happens to have acres under
cultivation.
Larry Williams, who is the right hand of Cecelia Williams of New Market, Md.,
mentioned that "these wall planters we have made up are really hot, and at our
last show in Pittsburgh we sold six of them." The ones on display this time
were made with grates from old bank teller windows. "They are the last ones we
have in stock and now we have to find more old material to make more," Larry
said.
"ROSES, 25 cents," was spelled out in large wooden and gilded letters across
the back of the booth of James and Judy Milne of New York City. "The letters
came from a florist in the city," Judy said, "and each measures about 30
inches high." This booth had one of several working fountains in the show, an
American cast iron example, three levels, which dates circa 1860. A pair of
flower carts, dating from the turn of the century, were once used on an estate
in Maine.
Webb and Brennan of Pittsford, N.Y., must have had a truck with heavy duty
springs to carry the inventory displayed at the show. In the center of the
booth was a statue, signed J.W. Fiske, that was once part of a large fountain
in Schenectady. Six sets of urns, both in stone and cast iron, were shown
along with a pair of large cast iron benches from either a New Orleans foundry
or Wood & Sons of Philadelphia. The pair came from the Jersey shore estate of
Major John Bowes.
A Village Standard sundial by James Scott, patent date 1849, was in the center
of the booth of Pam and Gene Martine of Greenwich, Conn. Four old wooden
trellises in old white paint were at the end of the booth, and a miniature
tole fountain, in working order, dated from the Nineteenth Century.
Another fountain was working in the booth of Joan Evans of Lambertville, N.J.,
again a cast iron one topped off with a painted crane. An interesting pair of
benches had wooden slats and cast iron ends with dog heads formed at the ends
of the arms.
Neptune and Venus, of good size, were at the front of the booth of
Withington-Wells, York, Maine, positioned near a pair of reclining greyhounds
in cast iron with good surface. For those in search of classical urns, there
was a set of four here with rams' heads on the sides.
Rosemary Schorr and Barry Dobinsky of Reading, Pa., had enough items to well
equip a couple of large patios. Planters and urns of metal and stone numbered
eight pairs, a Victorian table and chairs was all set to use, a couple of
sundials were offered, and two life-size statues were looking to decorate a
formal garden.
A large garden swing set, recently removed from an estate on Eastern Shore,
Md., circa 1940, filled the front of the booth of Aileen Minor of Princess
Anne, Md. An old pump in green paint was marked by the Rumsey Foundry, Seneca
Falls, N.Y., and a pair of small cast stone lions sported a good surface.
A large Fiske eagle with spread wings looked down from a tall pedestal in the
booth of The Garden Antiquary of New York City and Cortlandt Manor, N.Y. Below
was a large fountain, complete with grasses and fish, a pair of cast iron
deer, and a large clock face. Not shown was a millstone that weighed in at
close to one ton. "We were unable to get it off the truck as the promised
forklift never made it," the dealers said.
In addition to the show, a large silent auction of many beautiful and some
rare plants takes place in the tent entrance during the preview, and wonderful
food is served. This year special lighting was designed to give the effect of
sunlight filtered through trees on the ceiling of the large white tent.
Rain was the order of the day for the preview and was possibly an indication
of what was to follow for the first part of May. Now, with a break in the
weather, it is time to set those purchases out in the garden or, if that is
done already, a time to enjoy them.
