COMPLIMENTARY COPY
FRIDAY APRIL 5, 2024 • VOL. 54, NO. 14
FRIDAY APRIL 5, 2024 • VOL. 54, NO. 14
Running now until June 9 at the Brandywine Museum of Art, “Jamie Wyeth: Unsettled” will trace a persistent vein of intriguing, often disconcerting imagery over the career of renowned artist Jamie Wyeth (b. 1946). This major exhibition, organized by the Brandywine and five years in the making, will feature more than 50 works drawn from museum and private collections across the country that focus on the artist’s arresting, visceral imagery, revealing fascinating insight into Wyeth and the art of visual storytelling. “Unsettled” will be on view at Brandywine in Chadds Ford, Pa., before traveling to four additional art museums around the United States.
experience that both engages and upsets visual and emotional equilibrium.”
A celebrated figure in contemporary art and fiercely independent in the face of prevailing art world trends, Jamie Wyeth stands apart in a shadowy and strange world of his own creation. While frequently countered and even hidden by the artist’s fuller body of work, particularly his well-known coastal views, farmscapes, and portraits, a consistent thread of darker, more troubling imagery has been a constant in the artist’s work over the past 60 years. His work has evolved from the ultra-realistic visions and virtuoso brushwork of his youth
“Jamie Wyeth is a renowned American painter who has created his own legacy and redefined what it means to be a Wyeth. This exhibition takes a fresh look at the artist’s oeuvre and with remarkable nuance plumbs a rich vein of the uncanny throughout Wyeth’s six-decade career,” said Thomas Padon, the James H. Duff Director of the Brandywine Museum of Art. “As the title suggests, ‘Unsettled’ focuses on a single through line in Wyeth’s work, one in which ominous stillness, postapocalyptic skies, frightening shifts in scale, and strange vantage points seem to highlight the vulnerability of the human condition. With his startling compositions and a masterful use of media, color and texture, Wyeth creates an immersive, synesthetic
into a mature expressionism in which intense color and dramatic paint handling electrify his canvases. As this exhibition will reveal, in each of these stages of his career Wyeth is at home with uneasy subjects and a master of the unsettled mood.
“Across the decades, Wyeth has honed his attention onto unnerving phenomena, zeroed in on uncanny experiences, and delved into a world of unsettling imagery,” said Amanda C. Burdan, Ph.D., senior curator at Brandywine and curator of the exhibition. “With consummate skill, marshaling a wide range of disconcerting elements, subjects, compositional approaches and techniques, within his works, Wyeth has developed skillful, cinematic evocations that can induce anxiety in the viewer.”
“Unsettled” begins with a presentation of eccentric portraits that illustrate Wyeth’s most powerful means of evoking disquieting moods, like the subjects in “Bean Boots” (1985), or the figures left partially hidden, such as in “Record Player” (1964) and “Other Voices, Study #1” (1995). The
exhibition continues by immersing viewers into natural and supernatural worlds, from works inspired by the artist’s time spent in Maine, which frequently acknowledge the power of the sea and its fearsome ability to render humans helpless, to forest-based works from Pennsylvania that delve
Continued on page 11
Online Sale Closes April 6
By Karl PassShirk’s Auction Gallery at 659 North State Route 934, Annville, Pa., is holding a 400-plus lot online sale of antique firearms, military rifles and militaria, Saturday, April 6. The sale will begin closing at noon. A preview is scheduled for Friday, April 5, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Shirk’s Gallery.
The auction house is FFL licensed and will process all registrations for local buyers onsite at the gallery. Among the standout lots are a U.S. Springfield Armory 1903 rifle, a U.S. M1 Guam Garand rifle, a Sturm, Ruger and Co. No. 1 rifle, a U.S. Smith Corona rifle 03-A3 unissued, and a U.S. M1 Navy Match rifle. There is a U.S. Springfield 1878 trapdoor, a U.S. Springfield Armory
Korean Blue And White Porcelain Jar Achieves $6,400
By Karl PassAsian antiques dominated Locati LLC’s monthly online sale in February, held from Feb. 4 to 18, ending with live session on Feb. 18. Locati is located in Pineville, Pa. The following are a few highlights. Prices include buyer’s premium. A large Korean blue and white jar from Joseon Dynasty realized $6,400, while a large Chinese silver, enamel, and cinnabar plaque went for $3,625. A group of Japanese
Among serious collectors, the popularity of the Fab Four shows no signs of waning as Heritage brought in $1.185 million for a Beatles memorabilia auction that took place on Feb. 24. The auction, titled The Beatles, ‘Coming to America’ 60th Anniversary Music Memorabilia Signature Auction was rich in music and memorabilia that spanned the band’s career and bookended a trajectory, starting with an encounter on their first flight to America in 1964 (en route to Ed Sullivan) all the way to 1975 and their last known sign-off on a record contract (the last time their signatures are in one place), as well as a copy of the White Album once owned by John Lennon and an original set of seven chromogenic color prints of the Beatles’ Abbey Road album cover photo session.
to celebrate this category’s kickoff auction for 2024, the 60th anniversary of the Beatles coming to America, with another in April, July, and November,” said Garry Shrum, Heritage’s director of Entertainment and Music Memorabilia. “We had lots of bidders involved from the beginning. All sold well, from rare vinyl to fabulous autographs to ‘60s memorabilia and original awards.”
unopened in original wrapping,” according to Shrum.
“We were very pleased
PUBLISHER: Jocelyn Engle
EDITOR: Karl Pass kpass@antiquesandauctionnews.net 717-278-1404
DISPLAY SALES: Tim Moore tmoore-ant@engleonline.com 717-492-2534
CLASSIFIEDS: 1-800-800-1833, ext 6022 antiquesnews@engleonline.com
SUBSCRIPTION & CIRCULATION: 717-492-2556
Antiques
Every Thursday at Noon Issues
Antiques & Auction News PO Box 500 Mount Joy, PA 17552
ANTIQUESANDAUCTIONNEWS.NET
Tied for that top-selling spot at $162,500 was a copy of the White Album (that other desert-island Beatles fave) once owned by John Lennon. Most of the low-numbered copies of the White Album were owned by people with personal connections to the band. Lennon owned this copy and gifted it to Les Anthony, who was at the time
Tied as the top seller in the event was a true rarity, “Abbey Road,” the album, is for many aficionados the true desert-island keeper amongst the Beatles’ albums, and for the album’s cover shoot the bandmates took a casual stroll across the road along what England calls a “zebra crossing.” The extraordinary portfolio of seven color photographs by Iain MacMillen came from that momentous photo shoot and brought $162,500. The photos, of course, show the Fab Four at the most storied location of the band’s history, Paul sans shoes, and were assembled as a very limited edition. “While the secondary market shows several single prints from the portfolio, sales of complete sets are virtually unknown, much less
of the album’s release Lennon’s personal chauffeur and bodyguard.
The third top-selling lot was a also a record-breaker, a graded copy of the ever-notorious 1966 “butcher cover” (A.K.A. “Yesterday” and “Today”) sold for $112,500, which is the highest price paid for a slabbed and graded
Continued on page 11
During
a new type of poster emerged in the United States, one that more closely resembled a work of art than an advertisement. These sleek, sophisticated posters publicized magazines, newspapers, books, and other forms of literature. On view at
of Art through June 11, “The Art of the Literary Poster: Works from the Leonard A. Lauder Collection” will present more than 50 highlights from the museum’s outstanding collection of some 500 works, developed over four decades through the vision and support of Leonard A. Lauder. The exhibition will mark the occasion of the
publication of “The Art of the Literary Poster: The Leonard A. Lauder Collection.” Featuring 135 full-page color plates, the book will offer new scholarship that approaches literary posters from the perspectives of visual culture, the professionalization of women artists, marketing psychology, and technique. Additionally, a related webpage will allow viewers to digitally browse The Met’s literary poster collection. The exhibit is at The Met Fifth Avenue, Robert Wood Johnson Jr. Gallery, Gallery 690.
“Nineteenth-century American literary posters stood at the vanguard of modern commercial art and
graphic design, as vibrantly captured through this important catalogue and installation,” said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer.
“Leonard A. Lauder, one of the great collectors and philanthropists of our time, has long championed this genre, appreciating the literary posters for their historical value and sheer beauty. We are grateful for the time, energy, and expertise that he has devoted to developing The Met’s collection of these works, ever since his first donation of posters to the museum in 1984.” “The Met’s superb collection of American literary posters would not exist without the vision, determination, and generosity of Leonard A. Lauder. Several decades ago, he astutely recognized that posters of this type belonged in a great public institution, and since then he has developed and shaped the collection into what it is today. We are pleased to offer the museum’s audience a lively publication and installation to experience these works, as well as a complementary website providing invaluable access to the entire literary poster collection,” said Allison Rudnick, associate curator in The Met’s Department of Drawings and Prints. “These posters represent a pivotal moment in American graphic design and visual culture. Their power, aesthetic sophistication, and wit continue to enthrall us, even in the image-saturated world we live in today,” stated Mr. Lauder. “Viewing them at The Met allows visitors to see the interplay of this powerful medium with art and design
from different eras and cultures.” Over the course of the 19th century, innovations in printing techniques enabled the production of multicolored posters that seamlessly integrated text with image. Before 1890, posters tended to be produced by large printing firms with little regard for aesthetic value. By contrast, literary posters were frequently printed by the issuing publishing houses, where art department staff could ensure a higher-quality product. They were also designed by the top illustrators of the day who drew on the latest stylistic trends such as Art Nouveau and the Arts and Crafts movement to create elegant,
Continued on page 7 online • antiquesandauctionnews.net
Most of us, at various points, are called upon to advise, often as an executor, for an estate. Even if it is not our own family, people in the antiques world often find themselves tagged for advice about what to do with family treasures. While there are a myriad of topics that can come up in regard to estates, the one that I always dread is when the family believes, because their deceased family member told them so, that a certain object or collection is worth a fortune.
Now of course, there are some collections that do tend to be worth a lot.
“Antiques Roadshow” is filled with trash-to-treasure stories of family heirlooms that are wonderful. But what viewers don’t see are the vastly larger group of people who have family items that turn out to be worth very little. How come?
First is the belief that because things are old, they must be valuable. I call this family Bible syndrome. “I have a family Bible from back in the 1800s, and that must be worth a lot!” Well, so did everyone else, and that makes family Bibles not too high on the intrinsically valuable meter unless they are by a very rare printer or were hand illuminated.
Second is that the elderly owner was told by their friend/neighbor/college roommate that their treasure is valuable. I have seen this
happen over and over again. Sadly, the “local expert” is generally not there when it comes to putting money where their mouth is. When they say, “My neighbor said he would give me $500 for this item, so why can’t you,” I really want to tell them to run as fast as they can to find that neighbor and take their $500, because the item is not worth that much.
Third is that the owner who purchased a particular collectible based on marketing and media hype believed that it could only grow in value. Regular readers have heard me expound upon this kind of deceptive buying. The reality is that such speculative buying of collectibles and “future antiques” rarely if ever results in a profit. More often than not, it results in a loss.
While all of these are tough
conversations with anyone in the general public, you can effectively double the tension on this when you factor in a family’s grief at the loss of a loved one. Thus you are having to explain this to a tearful family member whose grandmother bought limited-edition collectibles which their neighbor said were worth a fortune and are now valueless. Or that the cracked Victorian era bowl, while old, is probably best only for feeding a cat.
Estates are tough on families. Death is tough enough, but the business after death is even harder. For those of us in the antiques trade, we need to remember that and learn to have the patience and kindness needed in dealing with bereavement. And for the family, it is a lesson to be learned about doing estate planning in advance and
perhaps not listening to the neighbors so intently.
“Born to collect” should be the motto of Peter Seibert’s family. Raised in Central Pennsylvania, Seibert has been collecting and writing about antiques for more than three decades. By day, he is a museum director and has worked in Pennsylvania, Wyoming, Virginia and New Mexico. In addition, he advises and consults with auction houses throughout the Mid-Atlantic region, particularly about American furniture and decorative arts. Seibert’s writings include books on photography, American fraternal societies and paintings. He and his family are restoring a 1905 arts and crafts house filled with years’ worth of antique treasures found in shops, co-ops and at auctions.
& nostalgia. Buying/selling antiques & collectibles.
07052 West Orange 973-323-1711
VALLEY VINTAGE, 168 South Valley Rd. Open Mon-Sat. 11-6, Sun. 12-5. 2100 sq. ft., 25+ dealers. Antiques, vintage, collectibles, furniture, decor, kitchenware, jewelry, books, LPs, ephemera.
07901 Summit 908-273-9373
08005 Barnegat 609-698-3020
BAY AVENUE ANTIQUES, 349 S. Main. Open Thurs.- Sun., 1-5 pm or by appt. Book seller, pottery, glass, furniture, holiday, decoys, antiques & uniquesplus chalkpaint & iron orchid design.
08016 Burlington 609-747-8333
HISTORIC BURLINGTON ANTIQUES & ART EMPORIUM, 424 High Street. Open 6 Days, Tues.-Sun.: T, W, F, Sat., Sun: 11A-5P; Th.&F.: 11A-7P; Closed on Monday. www.antiquesnj.com
08037 Hammonton 609-561-1110
BERNIE’S ANTIQUES & ARTIFACTS, 18 Central Ave. Tues.-Sat. 11-6 & Sun. 11-5. Trains, Pottery, Lenox, Breweriana, Fenton, Petroliana, Van Briggle, Albums + Neon Signs. Qty.Dlrs. Invited.
08062 Mullica Hill 856-478-9810
OLD MILL ANTIQUE MALL, 1 S. Main Street. Open Daily, 11-5; Sat. 10-5. Antiques, glassware, records, coins, stamps, military items, collectible toys, trains, linens, books & ephemera.
16801 State College 814-238-2980
APPLE HILL ANTIQUES, 2221 East College Ave. Distinctive antiques in a gallery setting. Over 40 dealers. Open daily 10 to 6. Wide variety.
17062 Millerstown 717-589-7810
STITCH IN TIME ANTIQUE & GIFT
MALL, 43 N. Market St. Antiques, Collectibles, Furniture, Quality Handmade Crafts & Gifts. Open 7 days 10-7, F til 8. Millerstown exit off RT 322.
17350 New Oxford 717-624-3800
ZELMA’S EMPORIUM 11 N. Water Street. Antiques, Primitives, Americana, European, Asian, Art, Home Decor. Hours: Tues.-Sat.10-5; Sun. 12-5 or by appt. Closed Mon. ZELMASANTIQUES.COM
18944 Perkasie 215-257-3564
SUMMIT ANTIQUES CENTER, 511 Morris Ave. 2 floors, 50+ dealers. Antiques, collectibles. Smalls to furniture. Open 7 days 11-5. Free Parking. www.thesummitantiquescenter.com
TREASURE TROVE, 6 S. 7th Street. Estate jewelry, furniture, linens, vintage clothing, glass, china, books, toys, kitchenware, advertising, postcards. Primitives to Deco. Dealers Welcome. Mon.-Sat. 10-5. In business 42 years.
08081 Sicklerville 856-545-3187
18962 Silverdale 215-453-1414
CARNIVAL OF COLLECTABLES, 368 Cross Keys Rd. Open Tue.-Sat. 10am6pm, Sun. 10am-5pm. 12,000 sq. ft. Antique & Art Mall, over 130 dealers. www.carnivalofcollectables.com
THE FACTORY ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES, 130 West Main Street, Rt. 113, Bucks County. Featuring 45 Dealers. Open Wednesday thru Saturday 10-5, Sundays 11-4.
08525 Hopewell 609-466-9833
TOMATO FACTORY ANTIQUE & DESIGN CENTER, 2 Somerset St. We Have It All! Open Mon. thru Sat. 10-5, Sun. 11-5. We have 38 Dealers. www.tomatofactoryantiques.com
19543 Morgantown 610-913-1953
MORGANTOWN MARKET, 2940 Main St. Hours 10-5 daily. Berks Co. Largest Antique Boutique. Antiques, Collectibles, Vintage Home & Garden Decor. Now we have miniatures & dollhouses!
The Pewter Collectors Club of America (PCCA) will hold its annual national meeting on Friday and Saturday, May 10 and 11, at the Courtyard by
Marriot in Collegeville, Pa. Ms. Lisa Minardi, executive director of Historic Trappe, will be the keynote speaker on Friday evening.
The program will include talks about pewter by several members and a visit to Historic Trappe. The group plans to visit the Augustus
Lutheran Church, the first Lutheran church in the U.S., built in 1743. The group will also visit several colonial homes in Trappe to
include the Muhlenberg house and others, as well as the museum at the historic Dewees Tavern.
There will be a presentation titled “Introduction to Pewter,” which will be held at 3 p.m. on Friday at the hotel in the Martin Murphy Room and is open to the public. For further information, contact Eric Lanka at yankeewoodworks1@gmail.com.
Attendance at the annual
meeting is limited to members of the club. Membership dues are $60. For details, contact Robert and Arlene Diercks at ardiercks@ hotmail.com.
The PCCA is a nonprofit organization established to encourage, develop, and foster the study, discussion, and collecting of pewter. To learn more, visit www.pewtercollectors club.org.
2024-04-18, Union, Thu - Sun Automobilia, gas pumps, vintage, games., Donley Auctions
2024-04-28, Sunday, 10AM
License plate auction featuring the Legendary St. Louis 1911 plate., Donley Auctions
INDIANA
2024-05-03, Lebanon, Friday 9AM - 5PM, Saturday 9AM -3PM Indoor & outdoor vendors selling collectible antique advertising & more!, Morphy Auctions
2024-04-12, Shipshewana, Friday 9:30 AM, Saturday
9 AM Many salesman’s samples, milk bottles (many rare), farm & livestock advertising, 25+ brass steam whistles, rare wooden wagon signs & more!, Chupp Auctions
MASSACHUSETTS
2024-04-13, Pittsfield, Saturday 11 AM American & European Timepieces including Seth Thomas rare violin clock, JJ & W Beals Steeple clock and many more!, Fontaine’s Auction
MARYLAND
2024-04-13, Frederick, Sat 9AM , Howard B Parzow
2024-04-13, Mt Wolf, Saturday
9AM Large train collection, most train items look new & have original boxes. Train accessories, old matchbox cars with boxes, toys & more!, Rentzel’s Auction Service, Inc.
2024-04-06, Lots begin closing at 12PM. 67 guns, ammo & scopes., Roy D. Shirk Auctioneer
2024-03-27, Now through April 9, 6 PM close. Antique Stove Auction. Lifetime collections of 2 cast iron stove collectors. Many parts & accessories., Hess Auction
2024-04-06, Orwigsburg, Sat
10 AM Firearms, jewelry, coins, toys, military, video games, antique/vintage, furniture, collectibles, sports & more!, Auction Time Bid Board
Continued from page 4
modern designs that had a lasting impact on illustration, graphic design, and marketing in the United States.
With a focus on innovations in style and technique, “The Art of the Literary Poster” will feature works by the leading American poster artists of the day, including Will H. Bradley, Joseph Christian Leyendecker, Edward Penfield, and Ethel Reed. The display will also spotlight exceptional works that The Met has acquired since 1987, when
2024-07-10, Wed Ending starts at 5 PM Antique & modern furniture, glassware, sterling silver, primitives, tools & more!, A & M Auctioneers & Appraisers
2024-04-06, York, Sat 10 AM Estate sale to include personal property & real estate. Includes 1 vehicle, 3 motorcycles, utility trailer, lawn tractors, furniture, gun safes, hunting & archery gear & more!, Keystone Auctions, LLC
2024-04-18, Carlisle, Thur & Fri 12PM Over 400 collector cars & custom classics., Carlisle Spring Collector Car Auction
2024-04-11, Kunkletown, Thur & Fri 9 AM Antiques, tools, advertising items, table saw, vehicle, motorcycle, Wattwear, early Americana & more!, Dean Arner Auctioneer, LLC
2024-04-16, Gen Rock, Tue 9 AM Foust collector items, stoneware, late 19th century Post Office, butter churns, 1863 Civil War letter, 1850s friendship quilt & more!, Wehrly’s Auction Service, Inc.
2024-04-07, Now through April 7 3 PM 750+ lots of curated antique & vintage toys including pressed steel, cast iron, tin litho, Hubley & more!, Gehman Auctions
2024-04-18, Now through Thur 3 PM 1100+ lots of vintage & modern toys including Funko, Pop!, TMNT, Star Wars & more!, Gehman Auctions
2024-04-08, Now through Mon 3 PM Vintage & modern toys. Pokemon, video games & more!, Gehman Auctions
2024-04-13, Andreas, Saturday, 9 AM Antiques, crocks, vintage Christmas & other decorations, parlor stove & more!, Dean R. Arner Auctioneer, LLC
2024-04-13, Hellam, Saturday 9AM Vintage gas pumps, Coca Cola items, jukebox, antique toys, many vintage items & much more!, Gilbert & Gilbert Auctioneers
the museum last organized an exhibition on the Lauder poster collection. The exhibition marked Lauder’s gift of posters to The Met in 1984. Since then, the collection has more than doubled in size and now includes over 500 works.
The publication, “The Art of the Literary Poster: The Leonard A. Lauder Collection,” is available for purchase from The Met Store. It was published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and distributed by Yale University Press. This publication has been made possible by a generous grant from Leonard A. Lauder.
2024-04-12, Chambersburg, Friday 1:30 outside, 3:30
inside Early tall case clock, 11’ mahogany 3 pedestal dining table w/10 claw foot chairs, blanket chests, RR lanterns, brass bike lantern, 1826 Carlisle, PA German bible, & many more items!, Kenny’s Auction
2024-04-13, Arendtsville, Saturday 9 AM Milk/Dairy Collection with great clean bottles. ALso including calendars, store displays, signs, butter crocks, sales catalogs, coins & more!, Larry Swartz Auctioneer
2024-05-07, Tues 5 PM Coins & currency, A & M Auctioneers & Appraisers
2024-04-24, Wed 5 PM 2 original late 19th century Native American canoes, Native American artifacts, many guns, hunting & shooting accessories & more!, A & M Auctioneers & Appraisals
2024-05-01, Wed Ending starts @ 5PM Antique & modern furniture, artwork, tools, baskets & more!, A & M Auctioneers & Appraisers
2024-04-20, Ephrata, Saturday 9 AM Over 570 lots of antique tools. Embossed trade axes, metal planes, cooper’s tools, drilling tools, antique tool parts, user tools, repair projects & more!, Horst Auctioneers
2024-04-13, Ephrata, Saturday 9 AM Antiques & collectibles, cast iron, Christmas & seasonal decorations, redware, vintage costume jewelry, household goods, tools & more!, Horst Auction Center
2024-04-07, Andreas, Sunday 10 AM Coin & Currency Auction. 1902 $5 Red Seal Mauch Chunk bank note, silver certificates, educational notes, fractional currency, Morgan dollars & much more!, Dean Arner Auctions
2024-04-18, New Holland, Thursday 3 PM Antiques, collectibles, toys, books & more!, Tim Weaver Auction Service
04/27/24, New Castle, Saturday 9AM - 2PM Delaware Train Show, Rt 13/198 South Dupont Highway, Nur Shrine Center
04/28/24, New Castle, Sunday 10AM - 4PM April Fool’s Toy Show, Rt 13/198 South Dupont Highway, Nur Shrine Center
GEORGIA
05/09-12/24, Atlanta, Thurs.Sun. Antique Market, 3650 Jonesboro Rd. SE, Atlanta Expo Center, North Bldg.
04/11-14/24, Atlanta, Thurs.Sun. Antique Market, 3650 Jonesboro Rd. SE, Atlanta Expo Center, North Bldg.
05/09-12/24, Atlanta, Thurs - Sun Antique Show, 3650 Jonesboro Road SE, Atlanta Expo Center
INDIANA
05/03-04/24, Lebanon, Friday
9 AM - 5 PM & Saturday 9 AM - 3 PM Indy Antique Advertising Show, 1955 Indianapolis Avenue, Boone County 4H Fairgrounds
MARYLAND
04/06/24, North East, Saturday 8Am - 2PM Barn Sale, 211 Brick Meeting Road, East Nottingham Antique Barn
04/06/24, Elkton, Saturday 10AM - 3PM From the Farmhouse Spring Show, 4640 Telegraph Road, Edward Walls Building, Cecil County Fairgrounds
NEW JERSEY
05/19/24, Hammonton, Sunday 9AM - 3 PM Spring Antique & Bottle Show, Historic Batsto VIllage, Historic Batsto Village
NEW YORK
04/20-21/24, Binghamton, Sat 10 -5, Sun 10 - 4 Antique, 907 Upper Front Street, SUNY Broom Ice Center
05/31/24 to 06/02/24, Bouckville, Friday - Sunday 8 AM5 PM Antiques & Collectibles Show, 6890 State Route 20 , Madison-Bouckville OHIO
04/27/24, Berlin, Saturday
9 AM - 3 PM Early Country Antiques & Primitives Goods Show, 3558 US Route 62, Heritage Community Center PENNSYLVANIA
12/16/23 to 01/05/25, Berwyn, Every Sat. & Sun, 9-4 Indoor/ Outdoor Vintage Flea MarketNow Open Year Round!, 270 W. Swedesford Rd, Berwyn, PA 01/07/24 to 12/29/24, Lewisburg, Every Sun. 8-4 (except Easter) Rt. 15 Flea & Farmers Market, 150 Silvermoon Ln., Lewisburg, PA
04/28/24, Lancaster, Sun. from 9-2 Lancaster Doll, Toy & Teddy Bear Show & Sale, 1383 Arcadia Rd., Lancaster Farm & Home Center
04/06/24, Marysville, Sat. 9-3 Indian Artifact Show, 102 Park Dr., Marysville Lions Club
04/27/24, Lancaster, Sat. from 9-1 64th Lancaster Hunting & Fishing Show & Sale, 1383 Arcadia Rd., Lancaster Farm & Home Center
04/24-28/24, Adamstown, Wed.-Sun. April Antiques Extravaganza, 7 miles along Route 272, Adamstown, PA
02/03/24 to 12/21/24, Kutztown, Saturdays 8-4 (7:30am-flea) Antique & Farmer’s Market, 740 Noble St., Renningers Kutztown
02/04/24 to 12/22/24, Denver, Sundays 7:30-4 Antique Market, 2500 N. Reading Rd., Renningers Adamstown 04/06/24, Lancaster, Saturday 9 AM - 3 PM Spring Coin Show, 1383 Arcadia Road, Lancaster Farm & Home Center 04/27-28/24, Allentown, Sat 9AM - 5PM, Sun 9AM - 3PM Allentown Paper Show, 1929 Chew St., Agricultural Hall, Allentown Fairgrounds,
05/04/24, Campbelltown, Sat
10AM - 3PM 60th Annual Hershey Coin Show, 2818 Horseshoe Pike, Campbelltown Volunteer Fire Company
05/11/24, Fairfield, Saturday
9 AM - 3 PM Country & Primitives Antique Event, 1042 Bullfrog Road, “The Farm” in Gettysburg
04/17-21/24, Carlisle, Wednesday - Sunday, 7AM Spring Carlisle Collector Car, Flea Market,Corral & Auction, 1000 Bryn Mawr Road, Carlisle Fairgrounds
04/25-28/24, Denver, Thurs - Sun Antiques April Extravganza, 2500 N Reading Road, Renninger’s Antiques/ Collectibles Market
04/20-27/24, Philadelphia, Saturday only Antique & Vintage Markets in Philadelphia, 3400 Lancaster Avenue (University City), Drexel University
05/04/24, Philadelphia, Saturday Antique & Vintage Flea Markets in Philadelphia, 2201 Fairmount Avenue (Fairmount), Eastern State Penetentary
05/18/24, Philadelphia, Saturday Antique & Vintage Flea Markets in Philadelphia, 500 S 2nd Street (Society Hill), Headhouse Square
06/01/24, Philadelphia, Saturday Antique & Vintage Flea Markets in Philadelphia, 2161 E York Street (Fishtown), Hackett Elementary
06/15/24, Philadelphia, Saturday Antique & Vintage Markets in Philadelphia, 1400 W Passyunk Avenue ( Broad & Passyunk), South Philly Blues Festival
04/13/24, Quakertown, Sat 12PM - 2PM Antique “Roadshow” & Appraisal Fair, 201 Station Road, Event Room 201, Quakertown Farmer’s Market
Continued from page 1
porcelain sold for $5,125, and a large Chinese porcelain vase, $2,875.
A pair of Ib Kofod-Larsen Danish Modern sled lounge chairs sold for $2,541, and a portrait miniature of Dr. Charles H Rohr, ca. 1820, achieved $3,993. A Renaissance Revival figured walnut mantel with mirror brought $1,250.
For further information, visit www.locatillc.com or call 215-619-2873.
1:30 P.M. OUTSIDE - 3:30 P.M. INSIDE
To be held at 4401 Philadelphia Ave., Chambersburg, PA 17202
4 miles North of Chambersburg, along Rte. 11
FURNITURE 8:00 PM: Early tall case clock; gray painted pine 2 door tall cupboard; dry sink; plank settee; pewter shelf; jelly cupboard; German & N.E. Blanket chests; pine bench; music cabinet; lg 2 pc walnut raised panel breakfront; gilt stand; 8’ gilded lamp post; 11’ mahogany 3 pedistal dining table w/10 claw foot chairs; mahogany clawfoot china closet; tilt stand; bike table.
MISC. 3:30 PM: Dbl glass student lamp; walnut spice box; signed blue crocks & jugs – Cowden, John Bell; redware; early tin candle lantern; brass scales; RR lanterns; copper pcs; pantry boxes; red splint basket; iron match holder; 1825 Mary A Wakefield, Chambersburg sampler; James Buchanan signed 1855 military land grant; Alladin lamp; brass bike lantern; tin Model Shooting Gallery; 2,4,5 ES&B jugs; Folk train watercolor; decorated stool/bird cage; 1826 Carlisle, PA German Bible; Overland Circus Wagon; G. Musser miniature strawfork; pr miniature portraits signed Harris; flesh forks and ladles; Wyandotte airplane; tin chicken cart; wood sap bucket; Pine Grove & Burkholder milk bottles; old tins; candle molds; scales made by Henry Troemner; lead bullet molds; candlestick phone; 3 Presidents tin mirror; yelloware; Bennington pottery; brass & irons; late carved Eagle L. Cadet; tin sand pails; glassware; Small antiques & collectibles.
items.
Carl E. Ocker - Auctioneer AU2425-L
Kenny’s Auction 717-264-6578 Auction Zip ID # 1421
VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.kennysauction.com
See pictures on website PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, APRIL 12 , 2024
R105563
Saturday, April 13 • 9:00
Another opportunity to purchase from the Stout collection:
Auction will be a live & webcast. Prebidding will open April 3 at www.LarrySwartzauctioneer.hibid.com
Preview: Friday, April 12, 2:00-5:00 PM
auction. See website for coin list.
50 plus stoves including, Salem parlor stove, Keeley Stoves, Gem stoves, Pine stove, Reading Pa. stoves, Clearfield stoves, Ruby Garland stove, Midget Atlanta Stove Works, Florin stoves, Pearl Oak stove, Seneca Oak, Detroit Stove Works, Meteor stove, Acme Wildwood.
Preview: Monday, April 8th 12:PM-3PM Pick up: April 11th 9:AM-3:PM
This auction will feature the lifetime collections of 2 cast iron stove collectors. Many parts and accessories will be sold.
Online Now Thru April 9 • 6pm Closing 1667 Cider Press Rd. Manheim, PA 17545 717-664-5238
Potter & Potter Auctions held a 448-lot sale on Feb. 24 grossing $863,000. The sale had a 99-percent sellthrough rate and beat its high estimate by over $300,000. Prices noted include the company’s 20-percent buyer’s premium. The featured portion of the sale consisted of the collection of Edwin A. Dawes (British, 1925-2023), who was a singular figure in the world of magic and magicians, and the most prolific chronicler of conjuring history in the 20th century.
A promotional poster, “Adelaide Herrmann and
Company. The Flight of the Favorite,” realized an amazing $57,600. The bright, one-sheet stone lithographed poster published around 1905 in New York advertised a signature transposition effect of Adelaide Herrmann (British/American 1853-1932) as part of her Vaudeville magic show. According to Potter & Potter’s experts, this was the only known example of this poster extant. Another poster, “Chung Ling Soo. Chinese Conjurer,” sold for $40,800. It was printed in Ashton-Under-Lyne by Horrocks & Co. around 1910.
This three-sheet, blue, white, and black lithographed poster featured a central full-length portrait of Soo (William E. Robinson, 1861‚Äì1918), flanked by Chinese characters and text at the top and bottom in English. This was one of only a handful of three-sheet Soo posters extant, of any design, and was the first of its kind seen or handled by Potter & Potter. Chung Ling Soo’s address book, a different lot in the sale, made $31,200. This personal rolodex was owned by the “Marvelous Chinese Conjurer” and was filled with entries in ink in his own hand, including many
key contacts important to his career as an entertainer.
A tome printed in London by G. Dawson in 1663, noted as the sixth edition, “with many additions,” featured 32 unnumbered leaves, a woodcut frontispiece, and woodcuts in the text, and sold for $36,000. The “Hocus Pocus Junior. The Anatomy of Legerdemain. Or, The Art of Juggling set forth in proper Colours” was one of two known examples of this exact edition and purchased by Dawes at Sotheby’s in 1979.
“Ionia. Goddess of Mystery” conjurered up
Continued on page 10
wagons, wagon gears & more!
• All kinds of RARE wooden wagon signs!
• All kinds of farm primitives! • RARE hay forks!
• Yoder 1-horse corn mulcher from Shipshewana, IN! Many more items too numerous to mention!
Continued from page 1
1896 Krag Cavalry Carbine, a U.S. Springfield 1871 rifle, a U.S. Springfield Armory 1899 Krag Constabulary, and a U.S. Springfield 1870 trapdoor rifle.
Various militaria will include antique bayonets,
scopes, swords, holsters, ammo cans, carbine stock parts, cannon ball, pocket knives, large artillery shells, old military uniforms, and much more.
For photos and descriptions, visit www.shirks auctions.hibid.com.
For other information, call 717-269-0654.
Continued from page 1
into the supernatural side of nature. The animal kingdom also offers opportunities for Wyeth to stretch his dark imagination, with portraits of frenzied birds and mesmerizing sheep in vivid paintings. The exhibition concludes with an exploration of haunted spaces, from eerie exteriors like “Pom Pom’s Cadillac” (ca. 1965) to works such as “Gull and Windsor” (1993) that breach thresholds to explore uncertain interiors.
Continued from page 2
“Jamie Wyeth: Unsettled” is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue co-published by Rizzoli Electa and Brandywine. This major publication features a lead essay by Burdan, as well as contributions from other authors who explore the creation of similarly unsettling moods in different media, including essays by John Rusk on filmmaking, Rena Butler on choreography, Michael Kiley on sound artistry, and Jennifer Margaret Barker on classical composition.
Following its presentation in Chadds Ford, Pa., at the Brandywine, the exhibition will travel to the Farnsworth Art Museum (Rockland, Maine), Greenville County Museum of Art (Greenville, S.C.), Dayton Art Institute (Dayton, Ohio), and the Frye Art Museum (Seattle, Wa.). This exhibition is made possible with support from Mac and Frances Weymouth, Linda L. Bean, Diana Bean, Chase, D.D. Matz, Helen C. Alexander, Cina Alexander Forgason, Morris and Boo Stroud, and an anonymous donor.
The Brandywine Museum of Art features an outstanding collection of American art housed in a 19thcentury mill building with a dramatic steel and glass addition overlooking the banks of the Brandywine River. The museum is located on Route 1 in Chadds Ford, Pa. Current admission rates and hours of operation can be found at www.brandywine.org/hours. For more information, call 610-388-2700.
The fourth highest-priced seller in the auction, a menu heavy with signatures along with some personal photos,
came in at a cool $100,000 and was the event’s charmer with a good backstory. In 1964, American teenager Carol Hollenshead’s father made regular business trips to England and had already brought home word of an up-and-coming act named the Beatles, as well as a copy of the LP “Meet the Beatles.” Carol was variation of the album. This sealed Mono “First State” was slabbed and graded 9.0 and came with a copy of the recall letter from Ron Tepper.
immediately smitten with the music (“It was just. better!”), and on a subsequent flight, the Feb. 7 Pan Am flight 101 from London to New York, her dad found himself in first class with the lads. They were en route to their stateside debut; in two days they would go on Ed Sullivan’s TV show in New York, and two days after that play the
oversold Washington Coliseum in D.C. During the flight, Carol’s dad snapped photos of the Beatles along
with fellow fliers Phil Spector, Brian Epstein and Cynthia Lennon. The band and its small entourage signed the in-flight menu for him. For complete results on all lots in the sale visit, www. HA.com/7321.