: "Good, better, best, never let it rest" could be the motto of the
Philadelphia Antiques Show, which goes from strength to strength
each year.
The 56-exhibitor fair at Philadelphia's 33rd Street Armory got
underway for five days with a preview party on Friday evening,
April 8. Proceeds were earmarked for the Division of
Gastroenterology at the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania. The hospital has benefited from the show since the
event's founding in 1962.
Two hundred fifty volunteers worked under the direction of show
chairman Anne L. Rubin and manager Josh Wainwright of Keeling
Wainwright Associates.
"Opening night was extraordinary. We had record attendance and
many, many sales," said Mrs Rubin, who will be succeeded by Chris
Smith in 2006. "Three new exhibitors brought wonderful energy to
the floor and our new partnership with the Haverford Trust
Company, our presenting sponsor, was very successful.
"We have a commitment for the facility next year. Our dates are
April 7-11, 2006" confirmed Mrs Rubin, squelching talk that the
33rd Street Armory will soon close for renovations.
"This was the best Philadelphia Antiques Show in my 15 years,"
said Mr Wainwright, citing both the quality of the merchandise
and its presentation. He credited increased attendance to
expanded marketing and promotion, noting the effort that dealers
themselves made in getting the word out to customers.
"We had transit posters on Amtrak and SEPTA commuter rail lines,
as well as a billboard on the Schuylkill Expressway. People also
liked our mailing piece," said publicist Melanie Sole.
"Exhibitors' only complaints were not enough wastebaskets during
setup and the occasional cold hot dog," Wainwright said after the
dealers' meeting on Tuesday morning.Antiques and The Arts
Weeklyhas confirmed, through another source, that management
explicitly warned dealers against exhibiting presold merchandise
at the show.
Organized by Robert F. Trent and Harry Mack Truax II and
underwritten by Freeman's, the loan show, "Vaulting Ambition:
Gothic Revival in Philadelphia, 1830-1860," was one of the most
ambitious and scholarly ever mounted at the fair. Lenders to the
display included Trent, Truax, Walter Joseph Stewart, Stiles T.
Colwill, Judith Hollander, Richard Cote and Bruce Young, Robert
Curtis Chinnici and Jeffrey Adams, and Wyck Association in
Germantown.
A handful of exhibitors had Gothic goods for sale. George
Williams of Estate Antiques, Charleston, S.C., featured a pair of
ebonized Baltimore Gothic Revival side chairs, $3,900, alongside
a western Pennsylvania Federal veneered cherry and mahogany desk
and bookcase.
One of three new dealers in the show, Katonah, N.Y., garden
antiques specialist Barbara Israel dug further back into history,
producing a Venetian Gothic stone wellhead, carved with the
famous Lion of St Mark. The sculpture was Fourteenth or Fifteenth
Century, not Nineteenth. For her debut in Philadelphia, Ms Israel
commissioned a painted backdrop inspired by Boxley, one of the
city's loveliest private gardens.
Boston dealer Stephen Score was ready for spring with an
outstanding pair of cast iron garden settees whose distinguishing
traits included serpentine backs, dog's head terminals on its
arms and paw feet.
Martyn Gregory, a leading specialist in China Trade paintings,
was also new to Philadelphia. The London dealer presented a
78-inch-long oil on canvas panoramic view of the waterfront at
Canton, plus an Eighteenth Century Chinese Export hardwood desk,
$50,000, and six botanicals of Southeast Asian fruit, $35,000.
First-time exhibitors Joe Kindig III and his daughter, Jenifer,
lived up to expectation with their drop-dead display. Joe Kindig,
Jr's own copy of his Thoughts on The Kentucky Rifle in Its
Golden Agesat in mute tribute to the renowned Pennsylvania
dealer near a selection of his beloved firearms, the most
expensive of which, by Frederick Sell, was $95,000. Besides two
robustly articulated New York five-legged card tables, $395,000
and $385,000, the Kindigs offered a Philadelphia Chippendale desk
and bookcase, a Philadelphia piecrust tea table, and a pair of
circa 1770 Philadelphia side chairs. A Philadelphia armchair
attributed to Benjamin Randolph was $345,000; a Frederick Maus
tall case clock, $275,000.
"The Kindigs are a great addition to the show. Their booth was
beautiful," said New York dealer Leigh Keno, who own stand was
anchored by a Newport, R.I., Goddard-Townsend School Chippendale
bonnet-top high chest of drawers, $585,000, that descended in the
Ellery family. Leigh and Leslie Keno will speak on Sunday, June
19, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in conjunction with "John
Townsend: Newport Cabinetmaker," which opens at the New York
museum on May 6. Mr Keno's sales included a James Bard ship's
portrait of the paddle wheeler Sylvan Dell, $225,000, and
a Federal Salem doll's bed, $52,000, dressed in period fabrics by
Cora Ginsburg LLC.
Nathan Liverant and Son drew visitors on the hour to witness the
chiming of a remarkable Chippendale mahogany tall case clock
whose automaton mechanism above its dial featured a farmer
clapping a cow on the head with an ax. The clock sold to a
well-known collector of American decorative arts.
"We owned the clock 14 years ago and just got it back,"
Colchester, Conn., dealer Arthur Liverant said of the timepiece
attributed to Deacon Willet Stillman of Westerly, R.I., circa
1795. Its beautiful case was distinguished by flame finials,
whale's tail fretwork and carved shells on the base and door. For
the ninth year running, the Liverants mounted a special show on
their outside walls. This year's theme was candlestands, 12 of
which ranged from an affordable $3,500 and $18,000 each.
It was a banner year for Litchfield, Conn., dealers Jeffrey and
Peter Tillou, whose trophy pieces included a New York Chippendale
block front kneehole desk, $350,000, and a Lancaster County
figured walnut arched pediment, shell carved desk and bookcase,
$125,000.
Jeffrey Tillou Antiques - Peter H. Tillou Fine Arts,
Litchfield, Conn.
"We sold a very good desk-on-frame, possibly from Long
Island, a wonderful, large Federal eagle that will be featured in
an upcoming edition of The Robb Report, a New York
Hepplewhite serpentine front sideboard, three pairs of andirons,
paintings and carvings" said Jeffrey Tillou.
Regional furniture included a paint decorated Hudson Valley kas,
circa 1760, $95,000 at Elliott and Grace Snyder. Cape Cod dealers
Courcier & Wilkins featured a rare Canterbury, N.H, Shaker
pine cupboard with chest, $125,000, photographed by William
Winter and pictured in The Illustrated Guide to Shaker
Furniture.
Southern furniture was on offer at Greg Kramer, whose painted
architectural corner cupboard, possibly from the eastern Maryland
shore, was $95,000; at Sumpter Priddy, who showed a Norfolk, Va.,
fall front desk, circa 1770, $78,000, and a Norfolk or James
River, Va., dressing table, $88,000; and at J.M. Flanigan, where
a Baltimore serpentine front sideboard of 1808 was $37,500 and a
Bankson & Lawson of Baltimore secretaire abattant, one of
four known, was $82,500.
American Classical furniture specialist Carswell Rush Berlin
showed the epitome of the form, an American secretaire abattant
of kingwood with rosewood crossbanding and gilt mounts, $500,000.
Two others are known. One is in the Warner Collection; the other
is in a New York private collection.
Philadelphia dealer John Alexander brought the fair up to date
with a pair of bookcases designed by Frank Furness for the Social
Arts Club, later the Rittenhouse Club, circa 1878, $16,000; and a
pair of Rosetti chairs by Morris & Co., $2,900, circa 1863.
English furniture dealers Alfred Bullard, Inc., of Philadelphia,
Gary E. Young Antiques of Centreville, Del., and Georgian Manor
Antiques of Fairhaven, Mass., provided a well-received
alternative to all the Americana on the floor.
"I sold nine pieces of furniture - chairs, a library table, a
center table, a writing table, a music stand, an étagère - plus
accessories and wall things. The show was surprisingly good,"
said Enrique Goytizolo of Georgian Manor.
Pennsylvania furniture was abundant. West Chester, Penn., dealer
Skip Chalfant brought two highboys, two blanket chests and two
corner cupboards, among them a Philadelphia Chippendale
bonnet-top high chest of drawers, $130,000, attributed to David
Evans.
Dover, Del., dealer James Kilvington sold a late Georgian doorway
surround from coastal New Hampshire, $5,500. On hold at preview
was a Philadelphia early Rococo side chair of circa 1755, part of
a small group of tassel backed "Penn" chairs. It had been
deaccessioned by the Welcome Society of Pennsylvania and is
illustrated in Horner'sBlue Book.
Philip Bradley of Downingtown, Penn., and C.L. Prickett Antiques
of Yardley, Penn., featured Pennsylvania tall case clocks.
Bradley's timepieces ranged from a Philadelphia eight-day clock
by Owen Biddle, circa 1760, to a Peter Stretch of Pennsylvania
30-hour tall clock, circa 1710-25, and a Joseph Wills eight-day
walnut case clock.
Tall case clocks, two in paint decorated cases, were pillars in
the stand of James and Nancy Glazer, who arrayed mechanisms by
Riley Whiting and Silas Hoadley and a Chester County, Penn., tall
clock, $42,000, signed Ellis and Isaac Chandlee, Nottingham.
Philadelphia silver enticed shoppers at Jonathan Trace Antiques.
The Rifton, N.Y., dealer featured a Joseph Lownes teapot, circa
1815, along with rich assortment of American, English and Chinese
silver. Argentum-The Leopard's Head of San Francisco offered a
1795-1800 five-piece Federal Philadelphia tea service with
bright-cut engraving, , by John McMullin.
As in the past, folk art sold by the truck load.
"We sold our whale weathervane, a carved wooden dog, a pair of
portraits by Jacob Mantel and an incredible toleware box," said
Olde Hope Antiques' Ed Hild, who was busy mailing out photos on
the final day of the show. Attributed to Samuel Robb, a
tobacconist's figure in the Pennsylvania dealer's booth was
$115,000; four family portraits attributed to the "Puffy Sleeve"
artist were $32,000.
"The folk art collectors are terrific. They know what they are
looking for and make quick decisions," said Allan Katz. The
Woodbridge, Conn., Americana dealer sold weathervanes, including
a J. Howard codfish, $65,000, trade signs, chairs, carved and
painted gangplanks attributed to Bellamy, a ceramic bust of a
mariner and a painting. To a private collector went Mr Katz's
best piece, a 27-inch cobalt-decorated stoneware presentation
cooler, $125,000, made by John Park Alexander of Akron, Ohio, in
1876 for the Bicentennial in Philadelphia. Mr Katz first saw the
cooler in Minneapolis-St Paul at an Antiques Road Show
filming.
Marietta, Penn., dealer Harry B. Hartman's striking frieze
consisted of two pairs of cast iron standing Labradors, $58,000 a
pair, and weathervanes. A Fiske fish and a Fiske banner vane were
$32,000 each. A signed Harris running horse weathervane was
$18,500.
The fair's lone specialist in Native American art, Marcy Burns,
offered a Navajo Second Phase Chief's blanket of about 1865 for
$150,000.
Baltimore album quilts hung at Courcier & Wilkins and Stella
Rubin. The latter's quilt, $36,000, from the Hargest family, was
signed and dated 1845.
"It was our best Philadelphia show ever," said Old Saybrook,
Conn., needlework specialist Carol Huber, who sold a 1750 Boston
Fishing Lady canvaswork picture, $90,000, by Abigail Russell; a
1720 Sandwich, Mass., canvaswork picture, $85,000, that descended
in the Wing Family; many samplers and a few silk embroideries.
"It was an especially good year," said Philadelphia dealer Amy
Finkel, who sold two of her most important pieces: a 1789
sampler, $95,000, by Hannah Pearley of Haverhill, Mass., that is
illustrated in Girlhood Embroideryby Betty Ring; and an
1804 sampler by Mary Entrikin, $36,000, that is from a Chester
County, Penn., school not yet identified.
Historical painting and portraiture was another strong suit.
"We focused on Nineteenth Century American paintings," said Liz
Hendey of Debra Force Fine Art, New York. Charles Bird King's
"Juvenile Ambition" of 1852 pictured a child with his
grandfather's spectacles, hat and cane reading the Union
newspaper upside down. "We thought it would be of interest to
this crowd. The artist is making a political comment. This is a
later working of a piece that King did in the 1820s that is now
at Winterthur Museum." Force also featured an Ernest Lawson
painting of Morningside Heights and Titian Peale's "Three Elks on
The North Platte River," from one of the Philadelphia artist's
early expeditions to the West.
"The Ramsey Polk Family at Carpenter's Point, Maryland," price on
request, 491/8 by 393/8 inches, oil on canvas by James Peale,
1793, joined Thomas Sully's portrait, $195,000, of George
Frederick Cooke at Hirschl & Adler Galleries.
Schwarz Gallery of Philadelphia drew attention to Thomas Sully's
1832 portrait of "Abby Ann King Turner Van Pelt," second wife of
Reverend Peter Van Pelt. A companion portrait of the Reverend by
an anonymous artist hung nearby.

Joe Kindig Antiques, York, Pa.
Sheffield, Mass., dealer Samuel Herrup and Peter Eaton/Joan
Brownstein of Newbury, Mass., mixed New England furniture and early
portraiture. Herrup hung likenesses by Charles Willson Peale, John
Brewster and Joseph Whiting Stock. "The Davis Children," a double
portrait by Edward Savage of Boston, 1795, was $170,000 at
Brownstein/Eaton.
A pair of dated 1830 Sheldon Peck portraits of A. and J. Miner in
untouched condition was $185,000 at David Wheatcroft Antiques.
The Massachusetts dealer also offered the only known complete set
of three oil paintings by John Hilling (1822-1894), a decorative
painter from Maine who commemorated the burning of Bath's Old
South Church by the Know-Nothings, an anti-immigrant activist
group. A single depiction of the "Burning of Old South Church,
Bath, Maine," circa 1854, is in the National Gallery of Art, a
gift of Edgar William and Bernice Chrysler Garbisch in 1958.
"I pretty much sold out of everything American," said Elle
Shushan, the Philadelphia specialist in portrait miniatures. Her
favorite piece was a wax likeness of a free man of color,
rendered about 1810 by George M. Miller, a sculptor who lived in
Philadelphia and was a member of the Pennsylvania Academy.
A day after closing, organizers were already at work on next
year's fair. Special events are being planned around the 2006
loan show, which will focus on the Fairmount Park Houses and
Mount Pleasant in Philadelphia.