Shared from the 12/7/2018 Antiques and The Arts Weekly eEdition

55th Annual Edition—

Delaware Antiques Show: Ground Zero For Americana

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Frank Levy, Andrew Holter and John Nye, in the booth of Bernard & S. Dean Levy, New York City.

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Noah’s Arks are perennial favorites and this German example with RGL Antiques, Pittstown, N.J., was a stand out. With more than 280 figures, including pairs and individual animals, it was in great overall condition and was priced at $11,500.

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One of the highlights in the booth of RM Worth, Centreville, Del., was the sheep painting by Susan Waters shown here in the corner.

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Elliott & Grace Snyder, South Egremont, Mass. have returned to the show after a brief hiatus.

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One of the things Gigi Liverant of Nathan Liverant and Son, LLC, pointed out was this pair of Queen Anne figured maple vase-back side chairs with Spanish feet and rush seats, Massachusetts or Connecticut and dating to 1735–70. The Colchester, Conn., dealer said the pair was in untouched original condition and had priced them at $5,500.

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A rare Eighteenth Century Flemish brass lantern, circa 1740, with Whitman Antiques, Flourtown, Penn.

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One of the more unusual items in the show was with Colette Donovan, Merrimacport, Mass. The “wet-burnished” leather on carved wood foal received a lot of attention during the show and Donovan said it was probably a trade sign.

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J. Thomas Savage, director of museum affairs, Winterthur Museum, and Diana Bittel, show manager.

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Ita J. Howe, Bethlehem, Penn.

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Paul Vandekar, Earle D. Vandekar of Knightsbridge, Inc, Manhattan and White Plains, N.Y., showing off a John Geddes’ Glasgow and Verreville Glass and Pottery Company pitcher showing the “disposable” ship “Columbus.” When asked afterwards, Vandekar said he had a great show.

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Leatherwood Antiques, Sandwich, Mass.

WILMINGTON, DEL. — The 55th Annual Delaware Antiques Show took place in its usual home at the Chase Center November 9–11, with 62 dealers exhibiting a wide range of antiques and fine art to tempt every collector’s palette. The show, which benefits educational programming at Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library, began with a lavish preview party that was wellattended by not only Winterthur curators, staff and students, but also museum patrons, scholars, collectors, dealers and auction house professionals from the immediate area as well as farther afield. Winterthur is ground zero for the study of American decorative arts. It is not an exaggeration to say that the future of the field lies at Winterthur and the museum throws its full support behind the show. A series of events are scheduled to coincide with the run of the show, including the annual meetings of both the Collector’s Circle of top-tier museum patrons as well as the annual meeting of Winterthur’s alumni association, the Society of Winterthur Fellows. Not only does this achieve critical mass and attendance to the show but lent a spirit of homecoming to the show, which has become one of the last antiques shows to concentrate so heavily on American decorative arts and applicable crossover collecting categories. This year saw particularly strong turnout from Fellows, many of whom are thrilled with the recent appointment of Carol Cadou, who, as a former Winterthur Fellow is one of their own, as the new Charles F. Montgomery director and chief executive officer of Winterthur.

J. Thomas “Tom” Savage, Winterthur’s director of museum affairs, said, “We have incredibly dedicated dealers who know what collectors want and who bring us wonderful things. People have come to know the Delaware Antiques Show as the place for hardcore Americana enthusiasts, where they can also find great European and Asian objects that complement an Americana collection. We have stuck to the core collecting values of Henry Francis du Pont, and we like to think that if he were still alive, he would be first in line for Opening Night.”

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Brock Jobe with Stephen and Carol Huber.

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Jonathan Trace, Portsmouth, N.H.

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Taylor Thistlethwaite was pleased to sell this set of six early Chippendale chairs made circa 1765, most likely in Annapolis, Md. The Alexandria, Va., and Glasgow, Ky., dealer said the chairs had once been handled by Milly McGehee and Deanne Levison.

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Somerville Manning Gallery, Greenville, Del., had several works by contemporary sculptor, Margery Torrey, including a pair of whimsical “candelobstra,” one of which is shown here. The pair was priced at $6,900.

Winterthur pulls out all the stops with the preview party, which has a stellar reputation and did not disappoint. There was a line of patrons waiting to get into the show when it opened at 5 pm, but the floor really filled up after 6 pm. Those who bemoan the lack of “young blood” in the field of antiques would be well-advised to attend the preview party, when the current Winterthur Fellows — graduate students in Winterthur’s Program in American Material Culture — turned out en masse and brought not only a youthful spirit to the party but presented an optimistic image of the future of antiques scholarship with their keen interest in the material on the floor and willingness to talk to collectors and dealers alike.

“The Delaware Show is extraordinary; truly, a not-to-be-missed annual event for exhibitors and patrons.” —Bev Norwood, Norwoods’ Spirit of America

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Marcia Feinstein, principal of Vintage Interiors II, Alexandria, Va., with Chris and Carol Cadou, the recently appointed Charles F. Montgomery director and chief executive officer of Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library.

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Josh Reeder of Greg K. Kramer & Co., pointed out this dynamically painted tall chest. According to the Robesonia, Penn., dealer, it had once been in the Donald Shelley collection.

Winterthur Museum provides the material for the annual show exhibition, “In Fine Form: The Striking Silhouette,” which drew on holdings in Winterthur library to demonstrate design and ornamentation source featured throughout the show. On Friday morning, the show’s honorary chair, designer Charlotte Moss, gave a keynote lecture titled “The Pursuit of Beauty: Thirty Years in Design.” After her lecture, Moss was reported to have made purchases from the show floor.

The Decorative Arts Trust sponsored two student lectures presented on Saturday afternoon, the first by Elizabeth Humphrey, who spoke on George Wyon, composition ornament and design books at Winterthur in “The Very Quintessence of Fashion.” Humphrey was followed by “Truths of the Trade: Collecting, Researching, and Exhibiting on Eighteenth Century Atlantic World Cabinet,” presented by R.J. Lara and Alexandra Rosenberg. All three speakers are second-year fellows in the University of Delaware’s Winterthur Program in American Material Culture.

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Christopher T. Rebollo Antiques, Lahaska, Penn. The painted settee against the back wall of the booth was made in the McFarland-McDowell shop in Mount Vernon, Ohio, about 1840. Andrew Richmond facilitated the sale of the settee to Ohio clients of his.

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Schoonover Studios Ltd, Wilmington, Del., specializes in illustration art. The painting on the right side of the back wall was “Mad Anthony Wayne” by Stanley Arthurs and was one of seven illustration sales made during the show.

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Polly Latham Asian Art, Boston, Mass.

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Benjamin Fisher and Erik Gronning, head of Sotheby’s Americana department, in the booth of James & Nancy Glazer American Antiques. They are shown flanking a late Nineteenth Century robustly carved barber pole that had been in the collection of Muriel Greenberg of Los Angeles.

Diana Bittel, Bryn Mawr, Penn., manages the show with handy aplomb, and after the show she said, “It’s a great show and I’m lucky to be involved in it.” Noting that the gate seemed to be as strong as ever, she further commented that the show was gorgeous, and the dealers did a fabulous job. Bittel also praised the staff at Winterthur that help pull the show together, saying the museum bends over backwards to keep everyone happy and it makes a difference. “Winterthur is all in, and it comes across.”

Two dealers did not return this year: the Philadelphia Print Shop and Gemini Antiques. The vacancies they left were filled with Elliott & Grace Snyder, South Egremont, Mass., who had done the show in previous years but were returning after taking a few years off, and Taylor Thistlethwaite, Alexandria, Va., and Glasgow, Ky., who was doing the show for the first time. Dealers at the show were nearly universal in their post-show praise of show. Bev Norwood of Norwoods’ Spirit of America, Timonium, Md., said, “The Delaware Show is extraordinary; truly, a not-to-be-missed annual event for exhibitors and patrons.”

Several dealers reported good sales of furniture, providing perhaps a glimmer of hope for a market that has seen stronger days. James M. Kilvington Inc, Greenville, Del., said that he had sold seven pieces of “brown furniture” and had interest in two additional pieces, while Frank Levy of Bernard & S. Dean Levy, Inc, New York City, said he had sold a Baltimore sideboard table and the pair of chairs in addition to several smalls.

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Spencer Marks, Ltd, Southampton, Mass.

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The Delaware Antiques Show does not have a Young Collector Night but at age 6¾, Charlotte Eagles of Syndmoor, Penn., shown in the booth of Jeffrey Tillou Antiques, would almost certainly qualify as the “Youngest Collector.” She was there with her parents and her older sister, and liked looking at the animals in the show, particularly a horse pull toy with Tillou.

Taylor Thistlethwaite, who also had luck selling furniture, sold a set of six Maryland Chippendale chairs that had once been handled by Milly McGehee and Deanne Levison. In addition to the set of chairs, the dealer said he sold a Campeche chair, a Max Weyl landscape, a pair of patriotic sconces, a tole tray, a signal cannon and an image of George Washington in his military uniform.

Lahaska, Penn., dealer Christopher Rebollo had what Andrew Richmond took to Facebook to proclaim, “probably the best painted Ohio settee extant.” The settee Richmond was referring to was made in Mount Vernon, Ohio, in the chairmaking shop of Daniel McFarland and decorated by McFarland’s nephew Daniel McDowell. McDowell had apprenticed under his uncle and then went into business for himself as a chairmaker and ornamental painter. Richmond helped facilitate the sale of the settee to clients of his in Ohio, so the settee will be returning to its home state.

John Chaski was another dealer to wax enthusiastic about the show, saying, “The Americana market is lucky to have an event as well-oiled as the Delaware Antiques Show… it just keeps getting better.” While it did not sell, the handsdown showstopper of the Camden, Del., dealer’s booth was a painted “one-horse open sleigh” that he said would feature in his family’s Christmas card. Chaski was happy to report that folk art was selling, with sales of a gameboard, a weathervane, a large hooked rug and a bunch of smalls.

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James and Nancy Glazer American Antiques, Bailey Island, Maine. James Glazer is shown on the phone speaking with clients.

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After the show, Maria & Peter Warren Antiques, Monroe, Conn., reported sales of furniture, ceramics and artwork.

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James L. Price Antiques, Carlisle, Penn.

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A striking work in the booth of Stephen Corrigan and Douglas Jackman, Stephen-Douglas Antiques, Rockingham, Vt., was this late Nineteenth Century Scottish whaling scene bearing the name J.T. Duncan lower left.

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Hilary & Paulette Nolan, Falmouth, Maine.

There was a good amount of Pennsylvania German folk art on offer throughout the show. Lisa Minardi, Philip Bradley Antiques, Downingtown, Penn., had a group of six fraktur that had been made by three different artists for the Bartholomew family of Bucks County over a span of approximately 40 years. Minardi said it had taken about two years to reunite the group and she hoped the group could stay together. After the show, Bradley said he had “sold a number of items, including a Philadelphia chair, an eagle inlaid stand among others” and was following up on other interest generated by the show. Peter Eaton and Joan Brownstein, Wiscasset, Maine, made several sales throughout the show, including a William and Mary ball-footed chest of drawers, an inlaid Queen Anne candle stand made by Heman Ellis of Nantucket, a large repousse copper wall decoration, a small early cased courting mirror, a circa 1820–40 collection of 12 miniature blown glass objects, jewelry, candlesticks, and “black” glass bottles.

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Front and center in the booth of Joe Kindig Antiques, Lancaster, Penn., was this easy chair that had been illustrated in Patricia Kane’s recent book, Art & Industry in Early America: Rhode Island Furniture, 1650-1830 (fig. 72), and an original chair cover, for which Jennifer Kindig had made a special frame to display it.

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One of Arlie Sulka’s favorite pieces was this Peacock table lamp from Tiffany Studios, circa 1904. It was not the first time the firm had handled the lamp, and Sulka was delighted to have the opportunity to sell it again. Lillian Nassau, LLC, New York City

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One of the eye-catching works at the show was this appliqued mat in the booth of Newsom & Berdan Antiques & Folk Art. The Thomasville, Penn., dealers said it had been deaccessioned from a military museum and discovered in New Hampshire. In untouched as-found condition, it depicted a colorful New England town celebration.

Delaware Antiques Show

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Sumpter Priddy III, Inc, Alexandria, Va.

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The upcoming holidays are often considered a prime time for selling jewelry. With a booth near where food and beverages were being served on opening night, Johanna Antiques, Kingsville, Md., would be the venue for a lot of browsing.

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Marcy Burns was particularly pleased to have this large pictorial polychrome jar, circa 1890–1900, that had been illustrated in Kenneth Chapman’s landmark book on Santo Domingo Pottery. The New York City dealer of American Indian Arts speculated that it may have been in Chapman’s personal collection.

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Anchoring the booth of Jewett-Berdan Antiques was this pair of jumping carousel horses in original paint. The Newcastle, Maine, dealer said they originated in Scranton, Penn., and had priced the pair at $16,500.

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One of the showstoppers in the booth of Stephen and Carol Huber was this silk and watercolor on silk needlework picture depicting the Marquis de Lafayette’s 1824 visit to Mount Vernon to visit George Washington’s tomb. The Old Saybrook, Conn., dealers had priced it “on request.” Photo courtesy Stephen & Carol Huber

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Centered in the middle of the booth of Barbara Israel Garden Antiques, Katonah, N.Y., was a reproduction of the famous Charioteer of Delphi.

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Christopher H. Jones Early American Antiques, Folk and Fine Art, Alexandria, Va.

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Lisa Minardi, Philip Bradley Antiques, Downingtown, Penn., seen here showing off six fraktur made by three different artists for the Bartholomew family of Bucks County.

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The Norwoods’ Spirit of America, Timonium, Md.

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M. Finkel & Daughter, Philadelphia. In addition to several sampler sales reported, Finkel said she had sold the chair table in the center of her booth.

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In the booth of Bernard & S. Dean Levy, Inc, New York City, was, from top to bottom, an English Queen Anne walnut looking glass, a pair of mid-Eighteenth Century English brass candlesticks, a New York Queen Anne walnut card table with provenance to Mrs J. Insley Blair and Natica Lorillard, which was priced at $48,500, and a circa 1800 spatterware pitcher and wash basin priced at $750.

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H.L. Chalfant, West Chester, Penn.

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James Wm. Lowery Fine Antiques, Baldwinsville, N.Y., were one of the few dealers in the show to offer quilts. The dealer’s quilt inventory was easily visible in the corner of the booth.

Needlework continues to be a draw, with both needlework specialist dealers the Hubers, Old Saybrook, Conn., and Amy Finkel, Philadelphia, reporting good interest throughout the show. The most important piece in the Hubers’ booth was a silk and needlework pictorial picture showing Lafayette at Washington’s Tomb at Mount Vernon. Carol Huber said it had received considerable interest during the show, including some institutional interest. Another of the Hubers’ pieces that generated interest was Admiral William Penn’s purse, which was part of a suit of finery he ordered in May of 1660 in preparation for King Charles II’s return to England. The king would later name Pennsylvania in honor of Admiral Penn before he granted it to Penn’s Quaker son, William Penn. Philadelphia collectors Charles Keates and Jay Stiefel were spotted admiring it over the weekend.

Amy Finkel reported the sales of a sampler worked by Betsey Gill at the Sarah Stivours School in Salem, Mass., which had been in the Betty Ring collection and which Finkel featured as her advertisement in the show catalog. Finkel also sold a Rhode Island sampler, a large Ohio sampler, a Lehigh County, Pennsylvania sampler as well as another worked in Pennsylvania by Catherine Earnest.

Many dealers reported stronger sales of smalls than furniture. Sales for Merrimacport, Mass., dealer Colette Donovan included textiles, rare lighting, fireplace equipment and a red sled, among other things, while Norwoods’ Spirit of America, Timonium, Md., said its sales included a “sister pair” of early Nineteenth Century oil on cotton velvet theorems; an early, poignant tree-of-life New England family record; an 1816 scherenschnitte; two New England schoolgirl needleworks; and a pair of cast iron George Washington andirons.

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Ralph and Karen Disaia’s Oriental Rugs Ltd, Niantic, Conn.

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William R. & Teresa F. Kurau, Lampeter, Penn.

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Diana H. Bittel, Bryn Mawr, Penn.

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Of particular interest with Kelly Kinzle, New Oxford, Penn., was this circa 1880 painted cupboard from Catawba, Lincoln, Cleveland or Burke Counties, North Carolina. It hailed from a Cleveland County estate and relates to a group of similar cupboards made along State Route 10, which travels from Cleveland County, through Lincoln County and ends in Catawba County.

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A favorite of Andrew Chait, Ralph M. Chait Galleries, Inc, New York City, was this pair of Langyao copper red baluster vases, dating to the early 1700s in a rare “ashes of roses” glaze. The pair was still available after the show.

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Dixon-Hall Fine Art, Phoenixville, Penn.

Elliott and Grace Snyder returned to the show after taking a few years off. When reached for comment afterwards, Grace Snyder said that it ended up being a very good show for them, plus they also had some very serious postshow interest. The South Egremont, Mass., dealers sold, among other things, a lot of early candlesticks and iron, and a really good inlaid candle stand from Long Island. “It’s a beautiful show, and we are very happy to be back in Delaware. The show has improved in the five years we’ve been away. The quality and seriousness of the material is great, and the clientele are incredibly knowledgeable. It’s just a wonderful experience.”

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Bette & Melvyn Wolf, Inc, Flint, Mich.

Jim and Nancy Glazer said that their most exciting sale was a redware Sgraffito plate with an image of George Washington standing next to a cannon, which they said was a rare image that has not come to market in many years. The Bailey Island, Maine, dealers reported sales of many folk art items and smalls like pen wipes, a paint-decorated child’s dresser as well as a large double arm brass oil lamp.

A patron of George Washington’s Mount Vernon purchased from Barbara Israel, Katonah, N.Y., a cast iron stove figure of George Washington that was once at the Metropolitan Museum for Mount Vernon. Israel also sold a number of stone animals, a large birdbath, a marble bench, a pair of stone dwarves, a jockey figure and some architectural pieces.

Asian art dealer Steven Chait, Ralph M. Chait Galleries, said that from their perspective, the show was very well attended, with engaged and interested patrons. Boston dealer Polly Latham brings Chinese export porcelain made for the American market because she says it always does well at the Delaware show and this year was no exception. Ita Howe, Bethlehem, Penn., sells Chinese porcelains, made in the Sixteenth and early Seventeenth Centuries before export porcelain was made, and said she has a group of customers who come every year and buy, so she also claimed to have a good show. Howe said that Kangxi porcelain is what most of her collectors seek.

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Colorful painted things were the order of business in the booth of John Chaski, Inc, Camden, Del., who brought a dynamic painted bed and what the dealer described as a “One Horse Open Sleigh” from Lancaster County on the right. If you follow Chaski on Facebook, you’ll know it was a hit with children, who loved to sit in it.

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The joint booth for Joan R. Brownstein American Folk Paintings and Peter H. Eaton Antiques. One of the sales the Wiscasset, Maine, dealers made was the inlaid square-top candlestand made by Heman Ellis of Nantucket, shown along the back wall in the center of this photo.

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Shown in the left corner of the dealer’s booth was George Beck’s watercolor view of the Schuylkill below the Falls, which was later made into a printed view. Schwarz Gallery, Philadelphia.

Illustration art has enjoyed popularity and market favor for a few years, so it is fitting that the first booth inside the show is that of Schoonover Studios, Ltd, Wilmington, Del. John Schoonover said he had a good show, with a lot of visitors from as far away as Atlanta. By the show’s end, Schoonover had sold seven illustrations by American illustrators, including Howard Pyle, Frank Schoonover, Stanley Arthurs and Clifford Ashley, including a work by Arthurs that Schoonover had featured as the advertisement in the show catalog. He also was pleased to say that he had an unexpected, but very pleasant visit by Clifford Ashley’s niece, Eleanor Ashley Medford.

Schwarz Gallery, Philadelphia, specializes in Nineteenth and early Twentieth Century paintings and several impressive works. These included a pair of Thomas Doughty oil on canvas views of the Fairmount Waterworks that were hung on the left wall of the booth, adjacent to George Beck’s watercolor view of the Schuylkill below the falls, which is shown here in the left corner of the booth. All three of these works were later made into printed views.

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Mellin’s Antiques, Redding, Conn.

Those looking for a little shine had several options to look at among the dealers who brought silver or pewter to the show. One of the show-stopping works with Spencer Marks Ltd, Southampton, Mass., was a Gorham Japanese seven-piece tea service. Dated circa 1906, it was priced at $39,000. In a nod to collectors of local wares, Bette and Melvyn Wolf, Inc, Flint, Mich., advertised an Eighteenth Century 8¾-inch-tall chalice by Johan Heyne of Lancaster, Penn., in the show catalog. When it came to brass, Whitman Antiques, brings the largest inventory, of which the Flourtown, Penn., dealer was keen to point out a rare Eighteenth Century Flemish brass lantern measuring 19 inches with the handle up and priced at $6,500.

Ben Miller from S.J. Shrubsole Antique Silver and Jewelry, New York City, said that interest in American silver, from the Eighteenth to early Twentieth Century, including Art Nouveau and mixed metal pieces, as well as wearable jewelry, is always strong at the Delaware show.

The 2019 Delaware Antiques Show will be November 8–10, with a preview party the evening of November 7. For information, 800-448-3883 or www.winterthur.org/exhibitions-events/events/delaware-antiques-show/.

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This Eighteenth Century giltwood gondola chair was one of the more unexpected things in the booth of Samuel Herrup Antiques, Sheffield, Mass. Herrup said it had once been at Belcourt Mansion in Newport, as had a carved daybed he also had in his booth.

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Many booths were doing a brisk business selling smalls, and Steven F. Still Antiques, Manheim, Penn., had brought a great assortment to tempt collectors across a variety of collecting categories.

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Elle Shushan, Philadelphia, pointed out this group of four miniatures of children by Charles Foot Taylor (1798–1853), inscribed and signed, circa 1827.

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Jeffrey Tillou Antiques, Litchfield, Conn.

This carved chair with James M. Kilvington, Inc, Greenville, Del., was one of the furniture sales made opening night.

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The hallway outside the main show floor was ringed with booths and was the best place to go sit down to eat, drink and be merry with other show attendees.

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The Federalist Antiques, Kenilworth, Ill.

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