:For the last couple of years the weather has not been very kind
to the Litchfield County Antiques Show. Last year blistering heat
was the order of the day, and this year, June 24-25, the heat was
coupled with lots of rain, including several downpours during the
Friday evening preview. "We packed out Sunday in a downpour,"
Karen DiSaia, Antiques Council liaison said. Usually the dealers
are on their way by about 7 pm, but this year it was 10 pm before
the place cleared out completely.
"I have the usual report, some of the dealers did well, some not
so good," Karen said the next week, "but that is to be expected."
The gate ran about the same as last year, but most of the dealers
felt that those who came were there to buy if a piece caught
their interest. Fourteen new dealers were in the show this year
and so far, "None of the exhibitors have indicated they would not
be back next summer," Karen said.
This is the first year that an air-conditioning system has been
in place, but it was not put to the real test. "The temperature
did not go over 78 degrees and it was overcast a good part of the
time," Karen said. She did indicate that the system would be
stepped up a bit for next year to make it more comfortable for
both the dealers setting up and the visitors.
Dana E. Tillou, Fine Arts, Buffalo, N.Y.
Staged in the hockey rink facility at the Kent School, this
Antiques Council event hosts 39 exhibitors offering a wide interest
of collecting. Furniture, ceramics and pottery, paintings and
prints, country objects and garden antiques filled the rink, making
for one of the best-looking summer shows. Preview night drew a good
crowd, with lots of attention given to the raw bar, and the show
was a benefit for the Greenwoods Counseling Services, Inc.
A "press bed," all original with a beautiful headboard, late
Eighteenth Century, with full size overrails and found in
Kensington, N.H., was an attention getter in the booth of Colette
Donovan of Merrimacport, Mass. Standing next to it was a demilune
dressing table with three mortised legs, medial stretcher, in
pine. Of New England origin, late Eighteenth or early Nineteenth
Century, this table had an untouched attic surface.
Two card tables flanked a slant front desk in the booth of Gary
and Martha Ludlow of Lyndhurst, Ohio. The table on the left was
Hepplewhite, mahogany, with veneered and inlaid skirt, probably
from Rhode Island, circa 1790-1800. On the right was the other
Hepplewhite piece, ovolo corners, inlaid top and edges, tapered
legs with crossbanded cuffs. It dated circa 1800 and was from
either Massachusetts of New Hampshire. The Chippendale slant
front desk had an interior of small drawers and pigeon holes,
with shell-carved center door, ovolo corners and ogee bracket
feet. It is from either Rhode Island or Eastern Connecticut,
circa 1760-1780.

Colette Donovan, Merrimacport, Mass.
Yarmouthport, Mass., dealer Stephen Garner offered a pair of
Rhode Island country Chippendale side chairs in maple, circa 1800,
original finish with slip seats, and a two-part campaign chest in
camphorwood, circa 1850, old surface, China Trade.
The Cooley Gallery of Old Lyme, Conn., had a booth perfectly
suited for the display of paintings as it was at the end in the
center of the show, with accessibility from the aisles on each
side. Jeff Cooley offered many country scenes, including
"Homestead, Litchfield, Conn.," an oil on canvas by A.T. Van Laer
(1857-1920). It was signed lower right and measured 20 by 27
inches. "View from the Orchard" by Newtown, Conn., artist Henry
Ernest Schnackenberg (1872-1970) was a 24-by-30-inch oil on
canvas, signed lower right, depicting his home on Taunton Hill
Road. A Hudson River View was by George L(afayette) Clough
(1829-1901), an oil on canvas measuring 13 by 24 inches and
signed lower left.
A rare mid Eighteenth century open dresser or pewter cupboard,
originally built into a house in Essex, Mass., original red
interior and measuring 85 inches high, 62 inches wide, took up
the major portion of the side wall in the booth of Peter Eaton
and Joan R. Borwnstein, Newbury, Mass. Decorating the walls were
a number of portraits including a pair of folk paintings, Prior
Hamblin School, probably from the Orrington, Maine, area. Captain
Elihu Hoxie was shown holding a copy of Coast Pilot with
his ship Tamoree flying an American flag in the
background. His wife, with white hankie in her left hand, sat in
a chair in front of a window with an ocean view. An interesting
and local family record was from Armenia Academy, Armenia, N.Y.,
showing a large yellow house with red roof and fenced in yard at
the bottom. It was signed by the maker, Serepta Masill who was
born in Torrington, Conn., 1803.

Peter H. Eaton Antiques, Inc, Newbury, Mass.
SAJE Americana of Short Hills, N.J., showed a classical Salem
sideboard with a basket of fruit and foliate carving on the
backsplash, circa 1815, attributed to Samuel Field McIntire. It
measures 691/2 inches wide, 501/2 inches high, and the provenance
lists Abijah Gilbert, the founder of Gilbertville, N.Y. A sheet
metal weathervane, in the form of an eagle, dated circa 1880 and
was found in Vermont.
Brian Cullity of Sagamore, Mass., offered a paint decorated, dome
top Vermont trunk, circa 1830, in black and mustard, and a drake
and hen pintail heads, carved, painted and mounted on plaques,
circa 1930, were signed by Elmer Crowell.
A rare neoclassical desk in mahogany, circa 1830, was labeled by
the maker, Stephen Smith, 151 Cornhill, Boston, in the booth of
Artemis Gallery, North Salem, N.Y. It measured 72 inches long,
381/2 inches wide and 301/2 inches high. An assembled set of ten
mahogany dining chairs was shown at the front of the booth, saber
legs, circa 1815, and of Philadelphia origin. There were eight
side chairs, two arms, and priced separately or as a group.
A sculpture of a child with raised arms by Francois Loun Viriene,
French, was in the booth of Autumn Pond, Woodbury, Conn. This
piece won honorable mention in 1905 at Salon eles Artiotes
Francais and is signed on the base. In contrast was a handwrought
iron trade sign in the form of a ram, circa 1900, from northern
New York State.

Stephen H. Garner, Yarmouthport, Mass.
A Federal tilt-top breakfast table, oval top above a turned
urn-form column on reeded saber legs with acanthus carving and paw
casters, mahogany, Philadelphia, circa 1800-1815, was in the booth
of Jeffrey Tillou of Litchfield, Conn. Other furniture included a
Chippendale inlaid slant -front desk, Connecticut River Valley,
circa 1770-1785, in cherrywood with maple inlays. It had carved
claw and ball feet, old refinished surface, and measured 443/4
inches high, 393/4 inches wide and 251/4 inches deep.
From Colchester, Conn., Nathan Liverant and Son offered an oil on
canvas landscape of Wolfboro, N.H., mid Nineteenth Century,
depicting a lake with homes in the background, a horse-drawn
coach, and a couple in the foreground. A Chippendale tall chest
in maple, circa 1780-1800, was from either eastern Connecticut or
Rhode Island, and a Chippendale drop leaf table in walnut with
ball and claw feet dated 1765-1785. It was in fine condition,
Philadelphia School.
Jeff R. Bridgman American Antiques, Dillsburg, Penn., showed a
pair of architectural elements from a Chicago theater, circa
1920, terra cotta, with wonderful surface and condition. A podium
eagle, circa 1840-80, was of large size, bold form, with gold
painted surface, and a codfish weathervane was by Washburne, 18
inches long, circa 1880-1910. "It is the smallest full-bodied
copper vane I have ever had," Jeff said.
Dawn Hill Antiques from nearby New Preston, Conn., had a very
striking booth with many pieces of white painted furniture
including a set of six Gustavian period side chairs from Sweden,
circa 1790, attributed to Erik Ohrmark. They were of white wood
with upholstered seats and backs. A Swedish neoclassical settee,
dry-scraped to the original surface with some gilt still showing,
78 inches wide, dated circa 1800-1810.

The Cooley Gallery, Old Lyme, Conn.
Elliott and Grace Snyder of South Egremont, Mass., offered a
Queen Anne drop leaf table in maple and pine, New England, circa
1760, 28 inches high with a 42-by-43-inch top, and an American
architectural birdcage in the original red paint, circa 1830,
possibly from Vermont. "There are house in Vermont with exactly the
same architectural features, including the finials," Elliott said.
A set of six transitional Queen Anne/Chippendale side chairs,
splats boldly pierced with heart cutouts, Nineteenth Century,
grain-painted over the original red, was from the North Shore.
Terry and Angela Brinton of Racine, Wis., showed two workbenches,
the smaller one a gentleman's or student's bench in maple with a
Chicago label, circa 1920, the larger a cabinetmaker's bench in
maple with a base of mixed woods. The base had four short drawers
over one long drawer for tool storage.
Thomas Schwenke of Woodbury, Conn., had a Sheraton carved and
inlaid maple and mahogany elliptical swell front chest from
Portsmouth, circa 1810-15, that measured 431/2 inches wide, 37
inches high and 191/2 inches deep. A Hepplewhite sideboard of
inlaid figured mahogany, swell front, string and triple line
inlaid top, was of English origin and dated circa 1785-1800. It
was 56 inches long and had square tapering legs ending in spade
feet.
Fletcher/Copenhaver Fine Art, Fredericksburg, Va., hung a large
collection of works of art including "The Young Horseman," an oil
on canvas of a rider entering a stream with a man fishing in the
background, by Emile Meyer. It was signed lower right, dated '87,
and measured 20 by 30 inches sight.
A very large Meiji period bronze lotus form urn (planter), Japan,
1868-1912, was at the front of the booth of Cunha-St John, Essex,
Mass., and of interest was a Hepplewhite semicircular drink table
on square tapered legs, mahogany, with removable cooler covers
and rear drop leaves. It was of English origin, circa 1790.

Thomas Schwenke, Inc, Woodbury, Conn.
"We have brought some very rare items to this show, including
a circa 1800 flagon, dovetailed, probably American, with tapered
handle and finial and raised lid one piece of copper," Michael
Whitman said. The Fort Washington, Penn., dealer also had a pair of
English brass chimney sconces, circa 1880; a Dutch copper teapot
with faceted spout and handle, dovetailed and signed, circa 1840;
and a German decorated copper wine flagon, circa 1800, dovetailed
construction.
"These pond boats are really different, especially since they
have the original paper sails," Dana Tillou of Buffalo, N.Y.,
said of the pair displayed on a shelf at the left of the booth.
The boats were guff rigged, circa 1890, original surface, and one
had a single mast while the other had two. A New England tall
case clock in cherrywood, swan neck pediment, eight-day brass
works, dated circa 1800-1819, with inlaid square columns and
inlaid pinwheel decoration.
White and White, Skaneateles, N.Y., brought a mix of things
ranging from a rattan coffee table, couch and chair with ottoman,
to a child's Salem-type rocker, circa 1820, from New England with
the original yellow paint and grape pattern decoration. The
rocker had wagon striping and grain painted seat and "it came
right out of an attic in my town," Steve White said.
The liaison from the Antiques Council usually runs a show for
four year before a replacement comes along. "I have been running
this show for seven years now," Karen DeSaia said, "and it is
time for a change." Next year the show will be in the hands of
Marty Shapiro and Kay Gregg, The Finnegan Gallery, who are moving
from Chicago to Rhinebeck, N.Y.
The Antiques Council manages three show per year, the next one in
Nantucket on August 4-6, and the Washington, D.C., show in
January.