THE WINTER SHOW 2019
A Benefit for East Side House
65th Anniversary Sapphire Jubilee
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65 Celebrating 65 Years
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GREAT ART INSPIRES GOOD WORKS On its 65th anniversary, we salute The Winter Show and its support of East Side House Settlement.
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photograph by eric piasecki
GPSCHAFER.COM
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11 East 82nd Street Manhattan’s glorious Gilded Age is beautifully expressed in this 25’ wide, approximately 12,729 sq. ft. mansion with 9 bedrooms, 3 terraces, garden patio, and soaring 14’ ceilings on the drawing room floor, culminating in superbly scaled rooms and one of the most beautiful spaces in Manhattan.
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Micromosaic A RETURN TO THE GRAND TOUR
J E W E L S
FROM THE COLLECTION OF ELIZABETH LOCKE
View this extraordinary collection of exquisite, intricately crafted works of art—precious souvenirs designed for Grand Tour travelers of the mid-18th to late-19th centuries.
Visit the Exhibition.
Apr 27–S ep 5, 2019 Free Admission | w w w.VMFA .museum
IM A G E Parrot, Rome, 19th century, unidentified artist, micromosaic set in gold as a pendant, with four sets of 4-mm tsavorite and 2.7-mm demantoid garnets on bezel; 50 x 45 mm. Collection of Elizabeth Locke
OPEN 365 V I R G I N I A M U S E U M O F F I N E A R T S | Richmond
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THE WINTER SHOW A Benefit for East Side House
January 18-27, 2019 Park Avenue Armory Park Avenue at 67th Street New York City Daily 12 PM to 8 PM Sundays and Thursday 12 PM to 6 PM Tuesday 12 PM to 4:30 PM
East Side House Settlement Providing hope, help, and results in the South Bronx and surrounding communities.
337 Alexander Avenue, Bronx, New York 10454 Telephone: (718) 665-5250  Fax: (718) 585-1433 www.eastsidehouse.org
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Left: Menconi + Schoelkopf Right: Hirschl & Adler Galleries
The sixty-fifth annual edition of The Winter Show is a sale by distinguished dealers of fine and decorative arts. East Side House Settlement owns and produces the Show, and benefits from the fair’s ticket sales, catalogue revenues, and corporate sponsorships. No part of sales made by the exhibitors is received by East Side House.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE WINTER SHOW 65th Anniversary Sapphire Jubilee
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Letter from Fran O’Brien Opening Night Party Chair
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Welcome from Lucinda C. Ballard, Michael R. Lynch & Thomas H. Remien The Winter Show Committee Co-Chairs
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Letter from Helen Allen Executive Director, The Winter Show
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Sponsors & Acknowledgements
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The Winter Show Committee, Opening Night Party Patrons: Sapphire Sponsors & Community Leaders
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Opening Night Party Patrons: Literacy Supporters, Family Sustainers, Opportunity Champions
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Loan Exhibition Acknowledgements & Committee
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Museum Night
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Vetting Committee
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Welcome from Thomas H. Remien President, East Side House Settlement Board of Managers
Robert Young Antiques
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Design Co-Chairs: Frank de Biasi, Victoria Hagan & John B. Murray
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Young Collectors Night
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2018 Opening Night Party Photos
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2018 Young Collectors Night Party Photos
239
Special Thanks
240
Index of Advertisers
EXHIBITORS
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Exhibitor Listings
104
Exhibitor Advertisements
237
Floor Plan
FEATURES
54
Sapphire Memories
Compiled by the staff of The Magazine Antiques
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Connecting the World: 125 Years of Collecting on Nantucket
Nantucket Historical Association
EAST SIDE HOUSE
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Board of Managers & Programs
198
The Heritage Society
199
Foundations, Trusts & Corporations
200
Individual & Group Gifts
202
East Side House Settlement The Power of Opportunity
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MADISON AVENUE 57TH STREET SOHO SHORT HILLS 800.550.0005 chanel.com ©2018 CHANEL®, Inc.
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Opening Night Party Chair Fran O’Brien
On behalf of Chubb Personal Risk Services, I would like to welcome you to the 65th Anniversary Sapphire Jubilee of The Winter Show. Chubb is honored once again to be the Presenting Sponsor of this prestigious fair—an event that provides curators, collectors, dealers, design professionals, and first-time buyers with opportunities to discover and purchase exceptional works showcased by some of the world’s finest dealers. We are also pleased that our sponsorship helps support East Side House Settlement. Established in 1891, this nonprofit community-based organization provides quality education, job training, and assistance services in the Bronx and Northern Manhattan. Each year, the organization helps tangibly improve the lives of approximately 10,000 individuals. All net proceeds from The Winter Show support East Side House Settlement, which established the fair in 1954.
As The New York Times reported last January, the Show has embraced a broader definition of “antique” over the years, and now includes numerous museum-worthy pieces, important objects less than 100 years old, and a broader mix of fine art, in addition to the decorative arts for which the fair is known. Throughout its gradual evolution, The Winter Show has always maintained the highest standards of quality, and most importantly, its focus on the mission of supporting the work of East Side House. My colleagues and I hope that you enjoy your experience at this year’s Show. And, we thank you for supporting a fabulous event that also helps to improve the lives of so many others. Warm regards,
Fran O’Brien Division President North America Personal Risk Services
In addition to supporting such an incredible service institution, we are delighted that our sponsorship enables us to reinforce our commitment to the fine art, antiques, and collecting community. As the country’s leading provider of insurance for private collectors of art, antiques, jewelry, and other valuables, Chubb is dedicated to helping protect not only what is important to our clients but also to preserving the rich cultural heritage and artistic contributions of previous generations.
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We’re proud to support East Side House.
(855) 886-4824 Member FDIC
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The Winter Show Committee Co-Chairs Lucinda C. Ballard Michael R. Lynch
The Winter Show is proud to celebrate its Sapphire Jubilee, marking sixty-five years as America’s leading and longest-running fine and decorative arts fair. Ours is the only major art fair from which all net proceeds go directly to a charity, East Side House Settlement, providing essential funding for its exemplary educational programs in the Bronx and Northern Manhattan. Each year your contributions help thousands of young people break out of the cycle of poverty to achieve meaningful and productive lives. Thank you so much for your support! This has been a year of important and exciting change. We abbreviated our name to The Winter Show to more accurately reflect the breadth and depth of exhibited works, and we welcomed Helen Allen as our new Executive Director. Her skillful leadership and vision will build strength upon strength as we navigate the challenges of a rapidly changing art market. We also welcomed five new exhibitors who enrich the fair’s eclectic mix—the “best of the best” in their respective fields. Lastly, after twenty-five years of inspired leadership, our chairman extraordinaire, Arie Kopelman, transitioned to Chairman Emeritus. His are big shoes to fill, and we are so grateful for his continued friendship and guidance. This year’s loan exhibition, Collecting Nantucket / Connecting the World, celebrates 125 years of collecting by the Nantucket Historical Association.
The many threads that make up the island’s extraordinary history are reflected in the exhibition by spectacular examples of sailors’ scrimshaw, journals from captains’ wives, and art inspired by the whale hunt and sea journeys to the far side of the world. Special thanks to Jeff Daly for designing his eleventh loan exhibition pavilion and to First Republic for its second year of sponsorship. The Show’s success would not be possible without the dedication of The Winter Show Committee, our loyal exhibitors, the East Side House staff, our fundraising consultants at JFM, and the many talents of our Executive Director, Helen Allen, and Associate Executive Director, Michael Diaz-Griffith. Finally, on behalf of the board, staff, and clients of East Side House, as well as the entire Winter Show family, we extend our profound gratitude to our presenting sponsor, Chubb, for twenty-three years of steadfast support and loyalty. Because of you—loyal sponsors, engaged exhibitors, as well as dedicated committees, volunteers, consultants, and staff— the Show goes on, stronger than ever! With profound gratitude,
Lucinda C. Ballard
Michael R. Lynch
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Goldman Sachs is proud to support The East Side House Settlement
© 2019 Goldman Sachs. All rights reserved.
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Executive Director Helen Allen
Thank you for celebrating The Winter Show’s 65th Anniversary Sapphire Jubilee with us! The Winter Show, America’s premier fine art, antiques and design fair has been a notto-miss event that has inspired generations of collectors and art enthusiasts.
Having grown up in New York City and attended virtually every edition of the fair since the age of five, The Winter Show has always held a special place in my heart. Each booth is thoughtfully designed to transport you into a unique dimension. As you explore over 5,000 years of art from antiquity through the present day presented by top dealers from around the globe, we hope you will feel inspired by the fair’s international scope and tradition of excellence. I am delighted to join the tremendously talented and dedicated team at East Side House Settlement. The work that they do truly transforms lives and serves as a daily source of inspiration. To The Winter Show’s Executive Committee (Lucinda, Michael, Tom, and Dan), and my wonderful colleague Michael Diaz-Griffith, THANK YOU . . . for your spirit of collaboration, openness, and support.
The past eight months have been a whirlwind and I am grateful to the fair’s exhibitors (both past and present) and to our incredible partners and vendors for their guidance, kindness, and creativity. A special thanks to the Dealers Committee and the Fair’s Vetting Committee Co-Chairs for the time and energy they invest in ensuring that America’s longest-running art and antiques fair remains the “best of the best,” with an unparalleled roster of exhibitors and thousands of top-quality, vetted works from around the world. We hope you will enjoy the Show’s 65th Anniversary Sapphire Jubilee!
Helen Allen Executive Director The Winter Show
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CHUBB Presenting Sponsor FIRST REPUBLIC Loan Exhibition Sponsor
BLOOMBERG PHILANTHROPIES Education Sponsor
THE WINTER SHOW Co-Chairs LUCINDA C. BALLARD MICHAEL R. LYNCH Chairman Emeritus ARIE L. KOPELMAN
Executive Director
Associate Executive Director
HELEN ALLEN
MICHAEL DIAZ-GRIFFITH
East Side House Settlement DANIEL DIAZ Executive Director LAURA DALEY Director of Development
MARK JACOBY Chair JONATHAN BOOS ANDREW CHAIT LORI COHEN DIDIER HASPESLAGH JAMES McCONNAUGHY JOAN MIRVISS Vetting Committee Co-Chairs JOAN BOENING ALICE LEVI DUNCAN ROBERT YOUNG
Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd
Dealers Committee
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THE WINTER SHOW 2019 COMMITTEE Vice Chairs COURTNEY BOOTH CHRISTENSEN WENDY HOLMES HELEN FRECH KIPPAX Committee LORRI AHL GENEVIEVE WHEELER BROWN SARAH BRAY JEFFREY CALDWELL RICHARD L. CHILTON JR. STEPHANIE B. CLARK SAM DANGREMOND DEBRA DEL VECCHIO MRS. THOMAS SHIRCLIFF GLOVER JASON HERRICK MRS. LESLIE KENO STEPHEN J. KETCHUM GEORGE G. KING LUCINDA MAY LINDSEY S. PRYOR RICHARD ZIEGELASCH
OPENING NIGHT PARTY Opening Night Party Chair FRAN O’BRIEN
Division President, Chubb North America Personal Risk Services Design Co-Chairs FRANK DE BIASI VICTORIA HAGAN JOHN B. MURRAY
SAPPHIRE SPONSORS
COMMUNITY LEADERS
MR. & MRS. ROBERT F.R. BALLARD
CHARLES BUTT
JEAN & JIM BARROW
CHARLES P. DURKIN JR.
DAYTON T. CARR
EY FSO MNY INSURANCE
MR. & MRS. RICHARD L. CHILTON
KARIN & JONATHAN FIELDING
DEBRA & CLAUDIO DEL VECCHIO
MARIAN GOODMAN
JOHN F. & ANNE ROGERS HALEY
MR. & MRS. ROBERT F. HOERLE
MR. & MRS. BARCLAY JONES
LEONARD & JUDY LAUDER
COCO & ARIE L. KOPELMAN
TAMARA MEADOW INTERIORS
MICHAEL LYNCH & SUSAN BAKER
LESLIE MILLER & RICHARD WORLEY
JOHN B. MURRAY ARCHITECT
LIZ & JEFF PEEK
THOMAS REMIEN & MARY ANNE HUNTING
MR. & MRS. CHARLES M. ROYCE
LILY SAFRA
MR. & MRS. HERBERT J. SIEGEL
SUSAN SCHNEIDER
LOIS & ARTHUR STAINMAN
MRS. CHARLES F. SMITHERS
MR. & MRS. PHILIP L. YANG JR.
GILLIAN & ROBERT STEEL
ROY J. ZUCKERBERG & TARA E. KELLEHER
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LITERACY SUPPORTERS
FAMILY SUSTAINERS
Ms. Lorri Ahl & Mr. Michael Edsall
Charles & Deanna Akre
Barbara & Robert Liberman
Bob & Becky Alexander
Lichten Architects
Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Booth Jr.
Mary Randolph Ballinger
Susan E. Lynch
Joyce B. Cowin
Richard B. Barthelmes
Stewart S. Manger
Bari & Troy David
CeCe Black
Linda & Ben McGrath
David Scott Interiors
Stephana Bottom & Duncan M. Webb
Toni B. & Martin McKerrow
Thompson & Caroline Dean Christopher Forbes
Geoffrey Bradfield
Hanno D. Mott & Grete Meilman
Pamela & David B. Ford
Kevin Brandmeyer
John E. Oden
Gwen & Austin Fragomen
Julia & John Curtis Jr.
Jessie & Robert Palmer
Marilyn & Lawrence Friedland
Mr. & Mrs. Peter deF. Millard
Sandra S. Pershing
Alan Gerry
Sarah Lund Donnem
Marnie S. Pillsbury
Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey Gund
Madame Barbara de Portago
Ms. Teresa F. Heinz
Alexandra Doan Drucker & David Drucker
Stephen J. Ketchum
Jeff & Beverley Evans
John & Helen Kippax
Timothy E. Feige
Steven Klinsky
Michael I. & Joan Murtagh Frankel
Richard & Debra Kolman Mr. Michael Kovner & Mr. Jean Doyen de Montaillou
Robert L. Froelich Fay Gambee Barbara & Peter Georgescu
Melissa & Chappy Morris
Jackie Powers Virginia R. Richard Christine Ritok Lois Robbins Johanna & Lief D. Rosenblatt Janet C. Ross Margaret Ross & Vince Silverio Robert Salsbury
Jeffrey & Julie Loria
Nancy & Charles Geschke
Ursula & Paul Lowerre Mr. Michael Massey
Dennis Gonzรกlez & Paul Baron von Urban
Karen Thornwell May
Joe Gromacki
Gil Schafer
Ellen & Robert Meyer
Elizabeth Stillinger Guthman
Kelly & Randy Schrimsher
Richard & Elizabeth Miller
Kathleen Guzman & Nick Danes
Mr. & Mrs. George L. Selden
Timothy & Virginia Millhiser
George A. Hambrecht
Ruth H. Smithers
Dara Mitchell
David R. Hermenze
William W. Stahl Jr.
New England Historic Genealogical Society
Alice & Jim Hicks
Joan & Michael Steinberg
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Hoopes Jr.
George & Sheila Stephenson
David & Jennifer Pearson
Ay-Whang Hsia
Anthony Terranova
Peter Pennoyer & Katie Ridder
John Hunting
Astrid Tvetenstrand
Katharine Rayner Richard & Sheila Riggs
Dayssi Olarte de Kanavos & Paul Kanavos
John D. Ward & Alessandra Merrill
Daniel & Joanna S. Rose
Linda H. Kaufman
Tanya Sridaromont Wells
Juliet Lea H. Simonds
Karen Keane & Stephen Fletcher
Nancy & Burton Staniar Mrs. Adrienne Thompson Laurie M. Tisch Lizzie & Jonathan Tisch Robin & Philip Wachtler
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Saul
Erik Thompsen
Joseph Peter Spang
William & Julie Sargent
Karen A. Kelleher Nell & Robert Kleinschmidt Warren Koontz Stephanie Krieger Jerry Lauren
Sue Ann Weinberg Kinne & Michael Yon 18
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OPPORTUNITY CHAMPIONS
Simon E. Abrahms
Justena Kavanagh
Jewelle W. Bickford
Stephen S. Lash
Leslie Greene Bowman
Jonathan Levinson
Walter S. Braznell
Luis Morais
Mark Cunningham
Daniel O’Day
Benjamin Fisher, Sotheby’s
Susan R. Palm
Robert B. Goodfellow
Eric Roberts
John Stuart Gordon
Petra Slinkard
Penny Grant, MD
Susan Stein
Erik Gronning, Sotheby’s
Annette Weinstein
William T. Hobbs II Patricia Kane
December 17, 2018
VIP LUNCHEON COMMITTEE
DESIGN LUNCHEON
Co-Chairs
Co-Chairs
Sarah Lund Donnem
Genevieve Wheeler Brown
Helen Frech Kippax
Stephanie B. Clark Karen Kemp Glover
Vice Chairs Justena Kavanagh Ellen Washburn Martin Mrs. Michael Nash Ambler Mrs. John D. Gilliam Mrs. Lorin Hodges Mrs. Eric L. Hoyle Mrs. J. Michael Loening Mrs. George L. Selden Pier Witek
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LOAN EXHIBITION
Collecting Nantucket / Connecting the World: Nantucket Historical Association Sponsored by First Republic GOSNELL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR James Russell EXHIBITION CURATOR Michael R. Harrison Obed Macy Director of Research and Collections EXHIBITION DESIGNER Jeff Daly Design LIGHTING DESIGNER Anita Jorgensen Lighting Design LOAN EXHIBITION FABRICATOR G T Custom Inc.
Advisory Committee KELLY WILLIAMS Chair PATRICIA ANATHAN LUCINDA C. BALLARD ANNABELLE FOWLKES ARIE L. KOPELMAN SHARON LORENZO JEAN DOYEN DE MONTAILLOU FRANCI NEELY JASON TILROE PHOEBE TUDOR
Left: Chart of the Gulf Stream, detail, 1782 Timothy Folger, Benjamin Franklin, George Le Rouge Ink on paper; 18 1/2 x 24 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of the Friends of the Nantucket Historical Association (MS1000-2-2-10) Right: Italian settee with canvaswork upholstery, detail, ca. 1943 Gertrude Monaghan (1887–1962), designer Anna Monaghan (1856–1943) and Hanna Monaghan (1889–1972), makers Wood, canvas, cotton; 36 x 70 x 29 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, bequest of Hanna D. Monaghan, 1972 (1997.101.1)
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The Nantucket Historical Association gratefully acknowledges The Winter Show for its support of the 2019 loan exhibition.
Chair’s Circle
Laura & Bill Buck
Nancy & Douglas Abbey
Christine & Todd Fisher
Ritchie Battle
Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Riggs Jr.
Maureen Fennessy Bousa &
Bonnie J. Sacerdote
Edward P. Bousa
Kim Roy & Chris Tofalli
Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Butler
Suzanne Tucker
Bobbi McPeak
Bunny Williams
Burwell & Chip Schorr Kim & Finn Wentworth
Kate & Kell Damsgaard
Kelly Williams & Andrew Forsyth
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas de Neufville
Patricia S. & Thomas J. Anathan
& Mr. Daniel Korengold
Susan Blount & Richard Bard
Colleen & Philip Hempleman
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas K. Bratton
Pam & Doug Hendrickson
Anne DeLaney & Chip Carver
Catherine & Richard Herbst
Jean Doyen de Montaillou &
Sharon & Frank Lorenzo
Michael Kovner
Mr. & Mrs. Peter deF. Millard
Annabelle & Gregory Fowlkes
Susan & Scott Nelson
Karyn McLaughlin Frist
Miss Charlotte C. Riggs
Kaaren & Charles Hale
Ellen & Ken Roman
Coco & Arie L. Kopelman
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Saul
Ms. Martha Dippell
Carolyn & Ian MacKenzie Karen & Malcolm MacNab
Contributions
Miriam Mandell
Cynthia & Anthony Lamport
Victoria McManus &
Susan R. & L. Dennis Shapiro
John McDermott Franci Neely
Mary & Don Shockey Robert Young
Ella Prichard Margaret & John Ruttenberg Janet & Rick Sherlund Merrielou & Ned Symes Jason Tilroe Phoebe & Bobby Tudor Roselee & James Wayman
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MUSEUM NIGHT Friday, January 18, 2019 5–8 pm
Honorary Chair LUKE SYSON Director and Marlay Curator The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
Co-Chairs LORI COHEN Arader Galleries ARLIE SULKA Lillian Nassau LLC
Exhibitor Hosts A LA VIEILLE RUSSIE ARADER GALLERIES JONATHAN BOOS GEMINI ANTIQUES LTD. HYDE PARK ANTIQUES, LTD. BARBARA ISRAEL GARDEN ANTIQUES NATHAN LIVERANT AND SON, LLC LOBEL MODERN MACKLOWE GALLERY, LTD JOAN B MIRVISS LTD LILLIAN NASSAU LLC GERALD PETERS GALLERY S.J. SHRUBSOLE SPENCER MARKS Bowman Sculpture
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VETTING COMMITTEE Vetting Co-Chairs JOAN BOENING ALICE LEVI DUNCAN ROBERT YOUNG Armin B. Allen
Linda Eaton
Barbara Israel
Peter L. Schaffer
Lynne Allen
James Elkind
Mark Jacoby
Paul Schaffer
Alan Andersen
Ken Farmer
Margot Johnson
David A. Schorsch
Mark Andersen
Jackie Fay
Daile Kaplan
Larry Shar
Harry Apter
Elizabeth Feld
Bernie Karr
Robert Shaw
Robert D. Aronson
Stuart P. Feld
Brian Kathenes
Cameron M. Shay
Crag Basmajian
Daniel Finamore
Brian Kish
Elle Shushan
Eric W. Baumgartner
Mimi Findlay
Deborah E. Kraak
Rand Silver
Michele Beiny Harkins
Peter Finer
Simeon Lagodich
Robert Simon
Carlo Bella
Jim Francis
Martin P. Levy
Jonathan Snellenburg
Nancy Bialler
Ronald Fuchs
Michele Majer
Grace Snyder
Graham Boettcher
Jennifer Garland Ross
DeWitt Mallary
Elliott Snyder
Giovanni Bucchi
Jasper Gaunt
Richard C. Malley
Douglas B. Stock
Jason Busch
Judith Glass
Katherine Martin
Alan N. Stone
Russell Buskirk
Tara Gleason Chicirda
Tim Martin
Mark M. Topalian
Steven J. Chait
Dessa Goddard
Lark Mason
James W. Tottis
Sarah Coffin
Joseph Goddu
Mary Cheek Mills
Jonathan Trace
Michael Cohen
James B. Godfrey
Joan B. Mirviss
Ted Trotta
Paul E. Cohen
Nicholas Grindley
John Molloy
Olaf Unsoeld
Thomas Colville
Titi Halle
Edward Munves
Anthony Victoria
Wendy A. Cooper
Gregory Hedberg
Kirk J. Nelson
Roberta Waddell
Wes Cowan
Ariel Herrmann
Robert K. Newman
Meredith Ward
Leiko Coyle
Edwin Hild
Heather O’Donnell
Michael Ward
Leon K. Dalva
Sandra Hindman
Lindsy R. Parrott
Leon Wender
Allan L. Daniel
Erica Hirshler
Simon Phillips
Gerard Widdershoven
Barbara R. Deisroth
Stacey C. Hollander
Barbara Pollack
Roger Wieck
Lauren Della Monica
Robert Hunter
Ann-Marie Richard
Dennis R. Dodds
Douglas Hyland
Letitia Roberts
Consuelo W. Dutschke
Robert Israel
Miguel Saco
December 18, 2018
All the members of the Vetting Committee are authorities within their respective fields, and their impartial expertise affords the public the highest level of confidence in the fine and decorative arts offered at The Winter Show 2019. Each Vetting Committee member represents himself or herself and does not represent or act as an agent of any institution or business. The process of vetting assures the purchaser that every item offered at The Winter Show has been authenticated through careful professional scrutiny, satisfies all vetting guidelines, and is accurately described on its label. As in years past, each exhibitor personally backs each item sold at The Winter Show with a certificate of guarantee and bill of sale, which includes full particulars of the item as found on the descriptive label. The discerning public may make this purchase with complete confidence. East Side House Settlement and The Winter Show Committee wish to thank the individuals listed above as well as all who have given their time and expertise in these procedures.
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SAVE THE DATE THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 2019 JACOB K. JAVITS CONVENTION CENTER NEW YORK CITY
GALA PREVIEW OF THE
NEW YORK INTERNATIONAL AUTO SHOW A BENEFIT FOR EAST SIDE HOUSE SETTLEMENT
SPONSORED BY:
GNYADA.COM
2019 NYIAS Public Show Dates April 19 – April 28 AUTOSHOWNY.COM
East Side House Settlement Education, Innovation, Results EASTSIDEHOUSE.ORG
For more information, please contact Derek Kronkowski at The JFM Group LLC at 212.921.9070 ext. 21 or email EastSideHouse@thejfmgroup.com
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Proud to support the East Side House Settlement EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC151.indd 1 61109_PG_1.103.indd 26
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President of the Board of Managers East Side House Settlement Thomas H. Remien
On behalf of East Side House Settlement’s Board of Managers, I am honored to welcome you to The Winter Show’s Sapphire Jubilee. We are delighted that for the twenty-third year Chubb is our lead sponsor. We are also grateful to our other returning sponsors—First Republic Bank and Brooks Brothers—as well as our media sponsors for their on-going commitment.
The Winter Show is the only art, antiques, and design fair from which all net proceeds directly benefit a not-for-profit organization. East Side House depends on this revenue as a primary means of support.
This year’s loan exhibition, Collecting Nantucket, Connecting the World is brought to us by the Nantucket Historical Association, and we are delighted to welcome its patrons who are here at the show.
Of course, this would not be possible without the dedication, creativity, and enthusiasm of the many players involved. We are deeply appreciative of the countless hours The Winter Show Committee has put into this year’s show along with its new Executive Director, Helen Allen, whom we are excited to introduce to you, and our Associate Executive Director, Michael Diaz-Griffith.
For more than 125 years, East Side House Settlement has continued its tradition of service. Currently, more than 10,000 people primarily in the South Bronx of New York City participate in our programs located at twenty-nine different sites.
The pro bono contributions of Elizabeth D. Sigety, Esq. and Fox Rothschild LLP have also been vital to our well-being. And finally, we thank the extraordinary staff of East Side House Settlement, especially Daniel Diaz, our Executive Director.
Our programs strive to provide our constituents with the critical tools needed to break out of cycles of poverty or despair and to help them establish economic and social opportunities for themselves and their families.
Please be reassured that by supporting The Winter Show you are changing lives in Northern Manhattan and the Bronx. We hope you enjoy this year’s Show and thank you for your participation. Yours sincerely,
We know our work is making a pronounced difference. Last year, for example, more than one thousand students in our high school programs graduated, tripling the rate from just a few years back. Given that educational achievement in the neighborhoods we serve historically has been among the lowest in New York City, we are especially proud of our accomplishment.
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Thomas H. Remien
Design Co-Chairs
East Side House Settlement and The Winter Show are delighted to welcome Frank de Biasi, Victoria Hagan, and John B. Murray as this year’s Design Co-Chairs.
Frank de Biasi Inspired by the intrinsic value of design and what it brings to a space, Frank de Biasi’s career began at Christie’s New York in 1987 where he forged a love for contemporary art and the history of design appraising fine art and antiques. He later became Director of Interiors for world-renowned architect Peter Marino—a position he held for twelve years before opening his eponymous firm in 2006. With more than twenty years of experience, Frank’s portfolio encompasses a wide range of classical to modern design aesthetics, reflecting his talent for translating his client’s style into a unique, customized home suited to their location and lifestyle. His team of talented designers spans the globe offering his clients an unparalleled network of the world’s finest artisans and craftspeople. His work has been featured in major domestic and international publications including World of Interiors, House Beautiful, Home & Design, Interiors, New York Spaces, Architectural Digest Italy, Elle Décor China, Maison Française, Vogue, and New York magazine. Current projects include private residences and commercial projects in New York City; Greenwich, Connecticut; Los Angeles; Miami; London; and Morocco.
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Victoria Hagan
John B. Murray
Victoria Hagan is an award-winning designer whose iconic sensibility is so uniquely American that Architectural Digest has dubbed her “the environmental equivalent of Katherine Hepburn.”
John B. Murray is the principal architect and founder of John B. Murray Architect, a New York firm specializing in city and country residences within a classical framework. Educated at Carnegie Mellon University, Murray joined the firm Parish-Hadley, where he worked with the legendary designer Albert Hadley before founding a partnership in 1987, leading to opening his own independent practice in 1997. Murray serves on the board of the Professional Children’s School and on Thomas Jefferson Foundation’s Monticello Cabinet. John B. Murray Architect has received multiple Stanford White and Palladio awards, and the firm’s work is published regularly in Veranda, Architectural Digest, Luxe, Elle Décor, Galerie, and House Beautiful.
Since founding her eponymous firm 25 years ago, Hagan has been celebrated for an intelligent integration of architecture and interior design. Based in New York City, the 26-person firm works on residences throughout the country, providing a complete range of interior design services that reflect her signature style. Hagan has been awarded many of the country’s top design honors, including Architectural Digest’s AD 100. She has also been inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame. A graduate of the Parsons School of Design, she serves on the school’s Board of Governors and has endowed a scholarship in its MFA program in Interior Design. Hagan, along with co-author David Colman, recently published a much-anticipated book, Dream Spaces. Her furniture and fabric lines, VH COLLECTIONS, are available through designer showrooms nationally. A resident of Connecticut, Victoria and her husband are the proud parents of twin sons.
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YOUNG COLLECTORS NIGHT Thursday, January 24, 2019 7–9 pm
Official Sponsors
Honorary Chair
Chair, Interior Design Committee
ZAC POSEN Creative Director Brooks Brothers Women’s Collection
WENDY GOODMAN Design Editor New York Magazine
Co-Chairs SARAH BRAY JEFFREY CALDWELL SAM DANGREMOND LUCINDA MAY Lillian Nassau LLC
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Highbrow. Lowbrow. Despicable. Brilliant.
nymag.com/subscribe
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YOUNG COLLECTORS NIGHT
VICE CHAIRS BENEFIT COMMITTEE
VICE CHAIRS INTERIOR DESIGN COMMITTEE
Alessandra Branca
Charlotte Barnes
Emily B. Collins
Jamie Bush
William Cullum
Constance Cocroft
Lorre Erlick
Thomas Jayne
Paris Forino
Suzanne Kasler
Casey Fremont
Cullman & Kravis Associates
Wendy Goodman
Philip Mitchell Design
Kate V. Hemphill
Ariel Okin, Ariel Okin Interiors
Margaret L. Howell
Russell Piccione
Anne Huntington
Laura Santos
Fernando Wong
Perry Sayles
Robert H. Levy, MD
Phillip Thomas
Elizabeth O. Lowrey
Roric Tobin
Justine Lynch
Waldo’s Designs
Lansing D. Moore Jr. Nicky Hilton Rothschild William Edward Rutledge Lacary Sharpe Marlies Verhoeven Julia Ott & Richard Vermillion Coco Van der Wolk
Michael Altman Fine Art
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BENEFIT COMMITTEE
Polina Proshkina
West Chin & Kristen Furman
Patti Ruiz-Healy
S. R. Gambrel, Inc.
John Barman
Storey Schifter
Josh Greene Design
Holly Bawden
Catherine Smith
Jennifer Gresinger
Rebecca Birdwell
Cator Sparks
Lindsey Coral Harper
Hillary Burchfield
Samantha Ware Stathis
Marianne Howatson
Astrid & Thomas Burns
Amy Stone
Young Huh
Alyson Cafiero
Marcus Teo
Celerie Kemble
Andrew Califano
Ann Thurmond
Alexandra Chemla
Montana Timchula
Aamir Khandwala Interior Design
Billy Cooling
Taylor Toth
Elkus Manfredi Architects
Byron O. Cordero
Courtney M. Walls
Pamela Meech
Jennifer A. Cuminale
Samuel Wathen
Nick Olsen
John Dalsheim
White Webb
Lindsay Pennington
Krissie Darr
David Wu
Scott Sanders Meg Sharpe
Delphine de Causans
Andrew Suvalsky Designs
Caroline Irvin Davis Louisa Ryan Delia Folk Miller Gaffney Robert B. Goodfellow Akbar Hamid Alecta Rose Hill Todd Klein Alix M. Lerman Jessica Lichtenstein Michael Lorber Ashley B. T. Ma Brendan Malachy Maher Kyle Marshall Paul J. Mateyunas David McEachin Michael McGraw
INTERIOR DESIGN COMMITTEE
Lydia M Tower
CeCe Barfield Inc.
Benjamin Noriega-Ortiz & Steven Wine
BarlisWedlick Architects
Jenny Wolf
Sara Bengur Interiors
Megan Yager Design
Kristen Wilson Blood DeliaKenza Brennen William Clukies MR Architecture + Decor Kendell Cronstrom Michael Davis Architects + Interiors Arthur Dunnam for Jed Johnson Studio
Annabelle Moehlmann Alexandra Pethtel
FERRER
Sybil Bunn Pool
Jason Fischer
Andi Potamkin
Alexandra Barker & Reid Freeman
Devin Powell
December 18, 2018
Bachman Brown Design
Alice Engel, Director of Interior Design, Peter Pennoyer Architects
Pappas Miron Design, LLC
Kristen Wilson Blood
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2018 Opening Night Party 1. Roric Tobin, Justin Concannon 2. Denzel Saunders, Arie L. Kopelman, Daniel Diaz 3. Martha Stewart 4. Jamie Drake, Diana Taylor, Caleb Anderson, Michael Bloomberg 5. Wendy Holmes, Michael Lynch, Lucinda Ballard, Lauren Shortt 6. Nicky Hilton Rothschild, James Rothschild 7. Frederica Lauder, Leigh Lauder 8. Gil Schafer 9. Peter Pennoyer, Katie Ridder 10. Polina Proshkina 11. Chris Lasousa, Jen Lasousa 12. The Honorable Eugene Oliver Jr. 39
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2018 Opening Night Party 1. Diana Taylor, Jamie Drake 2. Martha Stewart, Thom Browne 3. Carol Prisant 4. Eula Johnson 5. Ellen Washburn Martin, Luisa Martin 6. Karen May, Lucinda May 7. Miller Gaffney, Jerry Lauren 8. Caroline Neurohr, Carolyn Forman 9. Ann Spillman, Jane Spillman, Betsy Stephenson 10. Adrienne Vittadini, John Luigi Vittadini, Liz Peek 11. Stuart Manger 12. Dale Krupowicz, Celia Santana 13. Andrew Churchill, Scott Currie 14. John Kippax, Helen Kippax 40
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2018 Opening Night Party 1. Wendy Goodman, Barbara Georgescu 2. Bob Alexander, Becky Alexander 3. Dayton Carr, Lilya Souria 4. East Side House Students 5. Phyllis Washington, Mary McFadden 6. Debbie Kolman, Richard Kolman 7. Duane Hampton, Jeff Daly 8. Alison Levasseur, Jeffrey Caldwell 9. Wilbur Ross, Hilary Geary Ross 10. Dodie Gumaer, Lauren Shortt, Kelly Abreu, Karen Creel, Genevieve Brown, Wendy Holmes 11. Alex Nyerges, Kathryn Gray 12. Barbara Cirvka 13. Louisa Benton 14. Barbara Tober 41
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ATLANTA ~ NEW YORK
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Sonia Delaunay, Ses Peintures, Ses Objets, Ses Tissues Simultanés, Ses Modes, with 20 pochoir plates, Paris, 1925. Estimate $6,000 to $9,000. At auction January 29.
WINTER/SPRING 2019 AUCTION SCHEDULE JAN 29
Fine Illustrated Books & Graphics
APR 18
Photographs & Photobooks
FEB 7
Vintage Posters
MAY 2
Old Master Through Modern Prints
FEB 21
Photographs: Art & Visual Culture
MAY 14
19th & 20th Century Literature
MAR 5
19th & 20th Century Prints & Drawings
MAY 16
Contemporary Art
MAR 7
Early Printed, Medical, Scientific & Travel Books
MAY 23
Graphic Design
MAR 21
Autographs
JUN 4
Illustration Art
MAR 28
Printed & Manuscript African Americana
JUN 6
Maps & Atlases, Natural History & Color Plate Books
APR 4
African-American Fine Art
JUN 13
American Art
APR 16
Printed & Manuscript Americana
JUN 20
The Pride Sale
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The Winter Show 2018 Young Collectors Night 1. Sarah Bray, Julia Amory 2. Terrell Seruphin 3. Byron Cordero, Mallery Pound 4. Kate Pickens, Megan Kierson 5. Zac Posen, Wendy Goodman, Michael Diaz-Griffith 6. Sam Dangremond, Catherine Smith 7. MJ Smith, Darin Leach 8. Jamie Drake 9. Adam Charlap Hyman, Alice Hines, Alexander Charlap Hyman 10. Jaithan Kochar, Eddie Ross 11. Yuan Fang 12. Elizabeth Lowrey, Zach Edelson 13. Christopher Mason 44
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The Winter Show 2018 Young Collectors Night 1. William Cullum, Jefferey Rhodes 2. Lucinda May, Lucinda Ballard 3. Debra Del Vecchio, Zac Posen 4. Claire Grieve, Gus Dangremond 5. Cady Faus, Alexa Marie Crivelli, Justine Lynch, Samantha Stathis, Marie Claire Meuchner 6. Sam Dangremond, Lucinda May, Sarah Bray, Wendy Goodman, Jeffrey Caldwell 7. Alecta Hill, Devon McCutcheon 8. Nik Lashley, Keita Turner 9. Jessica Hon, Olivia Cheung 10. Rick Ellis, Thomas Jayne 11. Rio Hamilton, Kate Rumson 12. Kelly Behun 13. Brendan Fallis 14. Zach Weiss 45
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Hearst is proud to support The Winter Show and the East Side House Settlement.
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PETER PENNOYER ARCHITECTS ARCHITECTURE & INTERIORS
Photography: Eric Piasecki
P PA P C . C O M
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CULLMAN & KRAVIS ASSOCIATES
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Photo: Werner Straube
MURALIST anneharrisstudio.com
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Sapphire Memories Patrons and participants of all stripes—from collectors and curators to designers and dealers—share their thoughts and reminiscences about The Winter Show as it reaches its 65th year. Compiled by the staff of The Magazine Antiques
I’ve always used The Winter Show as a laboratory for my students. There are so many things to see. You can handle them. People are happy to talk to you about them. The dealers are highly knowledgeable; some I would even call scholars. The Winter Show is a wonderful place to learn. — Susan Weber, art historian and director of the Bard Graduate Center
I have “a thing” for early objects, and being responsible for ceramics and glass at Winterthur, I am always searching for juicy examples to add to our collection. At the 2016 Winter Show opening, I wandered into the booth of Aronson Antiquairs, and the angels sang! There, in front of me, was a boldly patterned Dutch blue-dash charger from around 1630. Now, many people think that Winterthur only acquires American artworks, but we also collect objects of types that were imported and used here. Happily for me, archaeological evidence proves that Aronson’s wonderful checkered dish matches types that were used in seventeenth-century America. So the dish now has a new home, at Winterthur, where it helps us tell the story of how such objects were used on earlyAmerican dinner tables.
My first Winter Show—how could I forget? I had just finished graduate school and joined the Chipstone Foundation in Milwaukee as its curator. I was still in my twenties. While I’d been lucky enough to experience many 18th-century artifacts first-hand, mostly in museum collections, the idea of acquiring one from the marketplace still seemed an exotic affair. It felt like a tremendous privilege to be let into the decision-making process. Chipstone’s collection, largely devoted to early-American furniture and British ceramics, is extraordinarily high in quality. So the decisions in question were big ones. I remember the hurried phone calls and hushed corner conversations, the finely detailed evaluations of authenticity and importance, and the consideration paid to an artifact’s educational value—how it might help us tell certain stories. Most of all, I remember the first time my eye alighted on a pot, and I suggested to the Foundation’s team we might buy it. As I recall we didn’t end up acquiring that object; but there would be others. And to me it didn’t much matter because I already felt like I’d arrived somewhere special. — Glenn Adamson, columnist for The Magazine Antiques and senior scholar at the Yale Center for British Art
— Leslie Grigsby, senior curator of ceramics and glass, Winterthur Museum, Garden, and Library
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When Mario Buatta was chairing The Winter Show he dragooned me into performing some cheeky political songs at the piano on opening night in 1989. We had a blast. Walking through the aisles with Mario was hilarious. He was like the madcap ringmaster of a nine-ring circus, wisecracking with dealers, dispensing oneliners to the press, and cajoling society swans and their newly-minted billionaire hubbies into paying top dollar for treasures. He set the stage for Arie Kopelman, who did a brilliant job as his successor. — Christopher Mason, television host, journalist, and satirical songster
Colonial Williamsburg is one of only two institutions asked to return as a loan exhibitor to The Winter Show. After presenting pieces from our collections in 2001, we were excited to be given the invaluable opportunity yet again in 2017 to share our unique story with the public during historic Americana Week. We were particularly honored to be represented among such a fine cast of vendors while doing our part in fostering an awareness and appreciation for American folk material. The visibility of the Show, its presence in the art community, and its dedication to furthering the mission of East Side House Settlement made participation in the event a meaningful pursuit and one that Colonial Williamsburg will continue to regard as a lasting and memorable experience. — Laura Pass Barry, Juli Grainger Curator of Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
My memories go way back, starting when I was just a kid—to the years my father exhibited at The Winter Show, from 1959 to 1970. There was lots more Americana then than now and seemingly hordes of dealers, some wonderfully eccentric, like the Andrews sisters from Rhode Island—two tiny women whose long mink coats virtually swept the floor. Every year it seemed like there was a catastrophe of some sort: blizzards, strikes— a taxi strike one year, a newspaper strike another, and, worst of all, a garbage strike a third, with literally mountains of trash piled all over the city, complete with rats and a mind-altering stench. On one trip down to New York, the transmission on Dad’s loaded truck totally gave out. But he loved going: sales were almost always good, and gassing and mingling with so many colleagues was an invigorating joy to him. Nearly four decades passed between my father’s last showing at the Armory and my first, in 2008. For years, I’d been happily participating at The American Antiques Show, held downtown in Chelsea, more-or-less concurrently with The Winter Show. But Arie Kopelman kept asking me to come uptown, to Park Avenue. Eventually, I said I’d give it a try— on the condition that I could have my Dad’s original booth location. We’ve been there ever since. — Arthur Liverant, Nathan Liverant and Son Antiques
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Sapphire Memories
Sapphire Memories Nineteen years of collaborating with Ralph Harvard on the design of my Winter Show booth. Yikes! Collaborating might be the wrong word. I am permitted to pick the theme and occasionally the colors. Then Ralph stops speaking to me. Not rudely. He once explained his silence—“the less you know, the less you’ll whine.” There have been lots of favorite versions of my booth—the one inspired by Gallier House in New Orleans after Katrina; another modeled on the library in Virginia’s grandest early eighteenth-century home, Westover, among them. One year I suggested Queen Caroline’s rustic hut in Kew Gardens, where she kept company with life-sized wax figures. Ralph brought huge bowers from the flower market to completely fill my tiny space, with my miniatures hanging from the branches. As a final touch he dressed his 12-year-old daughter as a wax figure. She stood without blinking the entire evening. Ralph’s thank you was the front page of the New York Times Style Section! — Elle Shushan
For their opening night, the organizers of The Winter Show create a sense of drama and anticipation that accords well with the surprises brought by its exhibitors—possibly because those surprises carry a certain mystique coming as they often do from that far away country we call the past. Past meets present during my favorite moment of this glittering January night, and that is the possibility, just as you are to render your ticket to the show, of encountering a group of East Side House Settlement Student Ambassadors. Their palpable excitement at being there reflects their understanding that proceeds from the event support the educational and job-training programs of which they are the beneficiaries. — Elizabeth Pochoda, former editor of The Magazine Antiques and contributor to The Nation magazine
My favorite Winter Show memory involves this chair. During opening night of the 2007 fair, my colleague, Patricia Kane, and I wandered into the Historical Design booth and were stopped in our tracks by an amazing chair with a looping frame of tubular chrome and brownon-brown zebra print upholstery. Within seconds we were on our hands and knees— mind you, we were dressed to the nines— poring over every inch of the chair. We tried to play it cool, but still a little crowd gathered to watch. I recall it was a snowy January, and the next morning we skidded our way back to New Haven, making a bee-line to our research files and then to our director’s office. There are so many stories of “the one that got away.” I like to remember the far more unusual story of “the one that stayed.” — John Stuart Gordon, curator, Yale University Art Gallery
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John James Audubon:
bsession O ntamed U
March 30-November 3, 2019 An exhibition at Rosecliff
T h e 2 7 Th A n n u A l n e w p o r T S y m p o S i u m
Travels across america:
Art, Nature, and the Pursuit of Beauty April 11–13, 2019
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Newport, Rhode Island | NewportMansions.org
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Sapphire Memories
Sapphire Memories
In the early 1990s, I found one of the few Colonial-era “holy grails” of my silver collecting for the Newark Museum at The Winter Show. It was an inverted-pearshaped rococo teapot by Elias Pelletreau, the Long Island silversmith who was trained by Huguenot silversmith Simeon Soumain in New York. Newark then had no colonial silver teapots (nothing earlier than Federal), and this piece had a unique story: made for Pelletreau’s own use, it was left to his oldest child, a daughter, and thence descended through the female line until sold by descendants in Pennsylvania. — Ulysses Dietz, former chief curator and curator of decorative arts at the Newark Museum
I always learn something from the loan exhibitions. I remember the 2010 show, which brought in pieces from Historic New England. For me, the “piece” that stood out was the amethyst glass window from Beauport. Presented just as Henry Davis Sleeper intended, the arrangement mimicked their display in that famous house within a backlit window, to illuminate the glass. It illustrated the idea that simple objects, which might not make much of an impression as singles, can make a strong, even magical, impression when presented as a group. That was Sleeper’s genius. Seeing that made me make a point to re-visit that wonderful house the next time I was in the Boston area. You really do learn something new every time. — Shax Riegler, executive editor of Architectural Digest
One of my earliest memories is as a young girl, age twelve or so, walking down Park Avenue with my father, Edward Munves, to join him in his booth when school was closed because of a snowstorm. I loved the hubbub of the dealers sharing information and stories about objects, that was such a great experience. My son James practically grew up at The Winter Show. I can remember finding a quiet place at the back of the Armory to nurse him when he was a baby. There’s a wonderful photo of James at age four or five in Peter Finer’s booth trying on an armored helmet. He’s become a very serious collector of arms and armor. — Joan Boening, James Robinson, Inc.
I’ve been attending The Winter Show since birth. My father was a collector and collecting is in my blood. The first piece I ever bought was a fragment of a scenic wallpaper from 1820, which I bought in 1971, when I was eleven. At the time, I thought I was getting a steal for a limited-edition print. It would be the first of many such acquisitions I would make over the coming years, but it wasn’t until I was fifteen or sixteen that someone let me know that everything I was collecting was wallpaper, not prints. — Michael B. Levinson, interior designer
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Photo: Lisa Romerein
TELEPHONE: 212-941-8088
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Sapphire Memories
Sapphire Memories
Pictured right, an excerpt from the New York Times, January 19, 1995. 7:10 pm. “Guests at the preview party of the Winter Antiques Show at the Seventh Regiment Armory on Park Avenue gather around a Duncan Phyfe 1816 settee priced at $750,000 at the booth of Anthony Stuempfig Antiques, a Philadelphia dealer. The evening was a benefit for East Side House Settlement in the Bronx. At the center was Richard H. Jenrette, the show’s honorary chairman.”
The Winter Show historically gave great exposure to dealers of all types and for our foundation it specifically was important that dealers of early-American furniture were there. The dealers have been extremely important to a field that relies upon professionals being available to explain to collectors what they have, why they have it, and what’s important about that. Dealers of each segment of decorative arts have seen the value in the show’s venue giving them visibility to the collecting community not only for what they own but for who they are. This is extremely important for the field and in American period furniture an imperative if new collectors are going to get interested and exposed to the art. Walking the Show is both entertaining and provides new insights each year as to what is catching people’s eyes and will always represent that guidance. — Peter Wunsch, Wunsch Americana Foundation
The first year I was asked to join the committee of Young Collectors Night at The Winter Show, I felt it would be important to go up to the South Bronx and see the different programs that the ticket sales support at East Side House Settlement. I met with Daniel Diaz, Executive Director of ESHS, and he kindly spent the morning with me taking me to different locations where this amazing nonprofit serves the most vulnerable children of our city.
Two early memories come to mind about The Winter Show: One is being photographed by Bill Cunningham with Dick Jenrette and others while we were looking at a Duncan Phyfe settee. It must have been my first show, and it all felt so glamourous. Some years ago, we bought a mirrored plateau at The Winter Show from Georgian Manor Antiques. Still in my possession, it is a beautiful remembrance of all The Winter Shows I have attended. Last year when I was a Design Co-Chair, I really appreciated touring the show with the student ambassadors from East Side House Settlement and the rap singer, Young Paris. That was a big highlight. I felt so hip. — Thomas Jayne, interior decorator
The experience forever made me feel that there is not enough we can do, never enough tickets we can sell, to support the generous, wonderful people who make such a difference in the lives of these young citizens. That visit with Mr. Diaz makes me work harder every year to increase ticket sales and do whatever I can to help. — Wendy Goodman, design editor of New York magazine
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Sapphire Memories
Sapphire Memories During preview night in 2004, Oprah Winfrey attended the Show. She entered my booth and started looking at pieces while her bodyguard kept other preview attendees in the aisle. She was quite pleasant, very matter-of-fact, and purchased several pieces: a dog weathervane and two stoneware crocks with cobalt figural decoration. When we turned around, I realized that we were the only two persons in the booth, and the aisle was full of people watching like an audience at the theatre. — Pat Bell, Olde Hope
The Winter Show has been an eagerly anticipated event since the beginning of my career in New York museums. The extraordinary display of cultural and artistic riches at The Winter Show brings a rich medley of associations to mind; from an “Aladdin’s Cave” to a “Wunderkammer!” The excitement lies in the amazing quality and sheer diversity, tempting a curator or collector in one discipline to consider the treasures of another during this cordial annual reunion of colleagues, collectors, and dealers. The historic Park Avenue Armory built for New York’s Seventh Regiment holds its own architectural thrills. I’m also proud to acknowledge a personal debt to the settlement houses of this great city. My own grandfather, born in Brooklyn to an immigrant family, left school to go to work, but continued his education at one of them—the Henry Street Settlement.
The organizers of The Winter Show have made a point of including people who work at East Side House Settlement. The kids who benefit are at the opening and get to see the great event that supports ESHS programming. The dealers are informed about the charity so they know they are supporting a good cause. All of this contributes to a more dynamic environment for everyone involved knowing that they are doing something that benefits those less fortunate. The Winter Show’s selection of high-quality, guaranteed goods is a significant factor in keeping the Show going through thick and thin and helps people to recognize the value of the works. That, along with the elegant presentation and additional education in the form of lectures and programs, goes into creating more interest in antiques and helping the field overall.
— Sarah D. Coffin, decorative arts consultant and former curator of the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum
No matter how many years go by, a thrill of anticipation sweeps over me every time I set foot in The Winter Show. Finding rare treasures, meeting colleagues, and making new friends are all part of The Winter Show experience–and that’s what keeps me coming back. — Jeannine Falino, independent curator
— Linda S. Ferber, Ph.D., Senior Art Historian and Museum Director Emerita of the New-York Historical Society
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Sapphire Memories
Sapphire Memories I first visited The Winter Show in the early 1990s, when I was living in New York before I went to graduate school. My parents had been coming to “The Show” for years, and so my mother came up, and we went together. I was determined to buy something with my meager earnings to add to the collection of porcelain I had started in my small Manhattan apartment. I bought two things: the first was a book—Susan Detweiler’s George Washington’s Chinaware. And the second was a Chinese Export plate from Wayne Pratt. I still have them both. I’m always amused at myself for how proud I was of the acquisition of the plate—so proud that I kept the price tag on it! The Winter Show is where Americana meets ancient art; where finely wrought silver and voluptuously carved baroque furniture breathes next to medieval armaments, French wallpaper, and the finest in contemporary design; where classical art stands alongside the neoclassical it inspired, and Gothic sculpture beside the Gothic revival. It is a feast for the eyes—and a highlight of every curator’s year. — Alexandra Kirtley, The MontgomeryGarvan Curator of American Decorative Arts, Philadelphia Museum of Art
I’ve been exhibiting at The Winter Show since 1994, and that first January was a cold one. My gallery displays its heavy garden ornaments outdoors at our space in Westchester, and when it came time to ship the pieces to the Armory we discovered that they were frozen solid. We had to run around with hair dryers, thawing everything out, and even had to dig some pieces out of the ground. — Barbara Israel, Barbara Israel Garden Antiques
My first year as President and CEO at NewYork Historical coincided with our institution’s 200th birthday. What a thrill to count as part of our bicentennial celebrations opening night of the 2005 Winter Show, at which New-York Historical was the featured cultural institution! Stephen Saitas designed a spectacular installation that included the Tiffany lamps and other extraordinary objects from our museum collection. Bill Cunningham was on hand to record the event for the New York Times. Not only was it a wonderful celebratory evening, it was inspirational for me as well. Indeed, I trace my ambition, now realized, to create a fitting showplace for our prized Tiffany lamp collection to the dazzling display of our lamps, which stood alongside various other Tiffany objects on offer throughout the Show. I hope you have seen our new Tiffany lamp gallery. If so, you will know how important The Winter Show has been to the trajectory of New-York Historical. — Louise Mirrer, Ph.D., President and CEO of the New-York Historical Society
Every year I have high expectations for The Winter Show and every year I am surprised and delighted by the variety of true masterpieces. The dealers are deeply knowledgeable and always share great insights. Even when I don’t buy an object, I come away with new ideas that enrich our design studio. — Peter Pennoyer, architect
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Sapphire Memories
I had lived in New York for less than four months having moved from my beloved Charleston, South Carolina to direct Sotheby’s Institute of Art. Elated to have my new employer buy my ticket to opening night and punch-drunk with a signing bonus (spent many times over), I turned a corner, spied George II, and it was love at first sight. I knew the full-size portrait at Audley End and here was the mini-me version by Robert Edge Pine perfectly transistorized for apartment living. And it was the featured piece in the booth of my new friend Elle Shushan, who was doing the Show for the very first time and partnering on the portrait with the late Robert Schwarz. It ticked all my boxes: an Anglo-American painter, a British monarch who loved Handel, plus a provenance with David and Evangeline Bruce and photographed in their John Fowlerdesigned set at Albany. Margaret Pritchard later gave me the mezzotint for which my painting served as model. George’s new home is perhaps less grand, but he hears Handel every day. — Tom Savage, Director of External Affairs, Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library
So many memories stand out: contending with snow, sleet, or slush outside the Armory; solving the mystery of the coat check line; shaking hands with those remarkable young men and women East Side House Settlement produces each year; and, once inside the great hall, casting an eye at the elegant loan exhibition before seeking out the wonders that dealers had saved for this, the grandest display of Americana of the year. Yet the edition of the Show I remember most vividly was the 48th, in January 2002. The devastation of 9/11 meant the Armory was still occupied by National Guard troops, dictating a change in venue, to the Hilton on Sixth Avenue. It was a sobering time, but the stunning objects in the booths, as well as the masterpieces from Winterthur in the loan exhibit, reminded me of the enduring beauty that we as a people are capable of creating. — Brock Jobe, Professor of American Decorative Arts Emeritus, Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library
My first visit to The Winter Show was many years ago, and I learned a valuable lesson. I saw a beautiful China trade tureen and undertray that I coveted in one of the first booths that I visited but thought that I should look around the show first before I committed to it. Of course, when I returned to make the purchase, it had been sold. My husband John’s mother had a rule that if you see something that you love and have the money, purchase it right then, as you may never see it again. I have lived by this rule ever since then. — Marjorie McGraw, art collector and philanthropist
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. . . once inside the great hall, casting an eye at the elegant loan exhibition before seeking out the wonders that dealers had saved for this, the grandest display of Americana of the year. The American Wing was the loan exhibition for the Show’s 50th anniversary in 2004. I had the good fortune of co-curating it with my colleague, Barbara Weinberg. We worked with the incomparable Steven Saitas on the design and our Tiffany & Co. Foundation Intern Leslie Sykes O’Neill, who administrated myriad details. Condensing the American Wing’s collections from 18,000 works to 38 in a space barely more than 400 square feet was decidedly a challenge, but we pulled out all the stops: St. Gaudens’s Diana, Sargent’s Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Phelps Stokes, a great Lannuier pier table, Myer Myers’s iconic silver basket, Herter Brothers’ Gould secretary desk, glowing Tiffany Favrile glass. Over the years I have met many illustrious dealers, scholars, and collectors at the Show— Elinor Gordon (who exhibited from the very first year), Bill Guthman, Elinor Merrill, and Betty Ring, to name a few who are no longer with us. But for me, Allison Ledes, the late editor of The Magazine Antiques, will always be the one I think of first. After her untimely death in 2008, it was both fitting and poignant that her memorial was held at the Armory during the run of the Show that year, the crowd uncountable.
Allison had her finger on the pulse of the world of art and antiques, nurtured by the numerous friendships she forged with curators, dealers, and collectors. She helped broaden our vision and was always receptive to new ideas, while at the same time upholding serious scholarship. She brought a sense of integrity to the field, with solid old-fashioned values, common sense, discipline, and an unwavering sense of what was right—all accompanied by her quick wit—and wicked sense of humor. — Alice Cooney Frelinghuysen, Anthony W. and Lulu C. Wang Curator of American Decorative Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art
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THE COLLECTION OF
Mrs. John Gutfreund MURRAY HOUSE, VILLANOVA, PA
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LOAN EXHIBITION
Needlework picture of a lady fishing, 1765 Susan Colesworthy (1752–1811) Silk, wool, linen; 21 1/4 x 17 1/2 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, bequest of Susan E. Brock (1937.33.1)
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Connecting the World: 125 Years of Collecting on Nantucket Michael R. Harrison, Obed Macy Director of Research and Collections Nantucket Historical Association
T
he loan exhibition at The Winter Show 2019, Collecting Nantucket, Connecting the World, celebrates 125 years of collecting by the Nantucket Historical Association (NHA) and presents the best the Association has to offer in paintings, craft, and folk arts. The island of Nantucket, 25 miles off the coast of Cape Cod, is well known for its whaling heritage and New England seaport atmosphere, and for more than 150 years it has been famous as a summer holiday destination as well. The many threads that make up the island’s extraordinary history meet in the Association’s collections, which are reflected in the exhibit by spectacular examples of sailors’ scrimshaw, journals from captain’s wives, and art inspired by the whale hunt and sea journeys to the far side of the world. The island’s diverse people, from Native Wampanoag sailors and English settlers to African-American businessmen and colorful sea captains, find pride of place in a selection of portraits by such artists as Gilbert Stuart, Eastman Johnson, Elizabeth R. Coffin, Spoilum, and William Swain. The Association is also pleased, during the 200th birthday year of Herman Melville, to be displaying the only surviving relics from the 1820 tragedy of the whaleship Essex, whose destruction by an angry whale inspired key aspects of Moby-Dick.
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LOAN EXHIBITION
View of the Town of Nantucket, ca. 1811 Thomas Birch (1779–1851) Oil on canvas; 17 1/4 x 27 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of Robert M. Waggaman in memory of his parents, Floyd Pierpont and Jean Mackenzie Waggaman (1974.21.1) Mary Gardner Coffin, ca. 1720 Attributed to the Pollard Limner (active ca. 1690–1730) Oil on canvas; 29 3/4 x 25 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of Eunice Coffin Gardner Brooks (1924.3.1)
The name “Nantucket” or “faraway place,” comes from the island’s first inhabitants—the Wampanoags, one of the Algonquian peoples of southern New England. From the time Nantucket was formed by glacial melting 5,000 years ago, the island was home to thousands of Wampanoag people, who cultivated the island’s natural resources by fishing, hunting, and farming. The first English settlers arrived on the island in 1659. They adopted the native Wampanoag’s fish and shellfish foodways, expanded corn growing, and introduced sheep-herding and cattle-grazing to the island in hopes of developing trade. As their community grew, the English took control of ever greater portions of the island from the native inhabitants, negotiating purchases and gifts, and securing the right to graze their animals across the entire island. One early deed in the NHA collection was signed in 1665 by Wanackmamack and Nickanoose, sachems of the two largest Wampanoag settlements on the island, and it gave the land on the north side of Nantucket harbor to Edward Starbuck, who soon after transferred it to the company of English purchasers of the island. One of the witnesses on the deed is “Asasummoo or John Gibbs,” a native man who became the island’s first native Christian minister. The English settlers came to Nantucket to make a living. Remote from other settlements but linked to the world by the sea, Nantucket’s founding families intermarried of necessity, creating an island of cousins strengthened by common economic goals. During their first fifty years on island, the English population of Nantucket grew through natural increase to 700, while the 3,000-person native community dwindled to 800 due to poverty, disease, and alcoholism caused by the English presence. Agriculture and shepherding produced poor results on Nantucket, and the islanders sought other avenues for economic gain. The English turned to whaling, which, in the span of a few decades, revolutionized the economy of the island. 74
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Captain Absalom F. Boston, ca. 1835 Unknown Prior-Hamblin School artist Oil on board; 14 1/2 x 10 5/8 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of Sampson D. Pompey (1906.56.1) Ship Spermo Trying With Boats Among Whales On California, 1821, ca. 1823 J. Fisher (life dates uncertain) Oil on canvas; 18 3/4 x 24 3/4 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of the Friends of the Nantucket Historical Association (2008.31.1)
Nantucket whaling developed in stages. The English settlers, hiring predominantly Wampanoag crews, started shore whaling in small boats around 1690. Longer trips “over the horizon” began around 1715, growing to two- and three-month cruises as far as Newfoundland waters around 1730 and to four- and five-month cruises to the Azores and West Indies in the 1760s. By 1770, whale products were colonial New England’s second most valuable export, after codfish, and Nantucket provided over half of the region’s production. On the eve of the American Revolution, Nantucket ships were making voyages of up to a year to the Guinean and Brazilian coasts, and in 1791 a Nantucket whaler crossed into the Pacific Ocean for the first time. For about a century and a half, whale hunting drove Nantucket’s economy, bringing the island prosperity from the sale of refined oils and clean-burning, bright spermaceti candles. The island’s specialty enterprise also garnered fame for its people and vitally linked them to the far corners of the globe. The island’s success was reflected in its teeming waterfront, the busy workshops and factories that operated around every corner, and the spacious homes of the captains and oil merchants. Nantucket also owed a substantial part of its economic success to the plain, frugal, and pragmatic philosophy of the Quakers, whose religious doctrines dominated island life from the 1720s to the 1820s. Quaker theology encouraged equality of the sexes, education for both men and women, and plainness in dress and living. It also emphasized industry and thrift and accepted material prosperity as a sign of God’s favor. The island’s reliance on the water forms the theme of Thomas Birch’s View of the Town of Nantucket, the earliest known painting of the town. Maritime activity fills the scene, with whalers and coastal traders lining the wharfs and passing to and fro. Philadelphian Joseph Sansom visited the island around 1810 and wrote, “It is pleasantly situated upon a gentle slope . . . surmounted by a row of 75
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Italian settee with canvaswork upholstery, detail, ca. 1943 Gertrude Monaghan (1887–1962), designer Anna Monaghan (1856–1943) and Hanna Monaghan (1889–1972), makers Wood, canvas, cotton; 36 x 70 x 29 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, bequest of Hanna D. Monaghan, 1972 (1997.101.1)
windmills, and flanked, to the right and left, by extensive ropewalks. There is generally 15 or 20 sail of square rigged vessels in port, with twice or three times that number of coasters, presenting a lively scene, as you enter from the sea; the stores and houses, which are built of timber, being mostly painted red, or white, [are] crowned by the steeples, or rather towers, of two Presbyterian [sic, Congregational] meeting houses.” The numerous Quaker meeting houses, being very plain, did not announce themselves on the Nantucket skyline. Numerous artifacts reflect the awful labor that underpinned Nantucket’s whaling wealth. A spectacular decorative engraving on part of the jawbone of a sperm whale depicts a range of whaling activities on the high seas. While small whaleboats hunt their prey, an enraged whale smashes a boat with its tail, propelling men and equipment into the air. Men in other boats catch and kill animals with iron harpoons and lances. Back aboard one of the motherships, men lean the blubber from a carcass while a stain of red spreads across the water. Similarly, a pair of paintings record the Nantucket ship Spermo in the course of a profitable voyage in 1820–23. The artist, J. Fisher, was clearly an experienced deep-water sailor and a whaler, for all the details of rig and action in the paintings are precisely correct. The scene Spermo Cutting In Whales On Japan captures the vile process of cutting the blubber off a slaughtered whale. Men haul aloft a large blanket piece, ready to be cut off, while an officer supervises from a boat in the cranes. The revolving carcass bloodies the water, attracting scavenging birds, while a lookout eyes the horizon for more whales. Ship Spermo Trying With Boats shows the noisome and smoke-filled practice of boiling whale blubber to render it into storable oil. The scenes recorded in these examples of whalemen’s art were repeated dozens of times on more than two thousand known Nantucket whaling voyages, reflecting the back-breaking and dangerous labor that gathered millions of gallons of oil to light and lubricate the industrial revolution. 76
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Engraved panbone, detail, ca. 1830 Unknown English artist Whale bone and ink; 39 5/8 x 14 1/2 x 6 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, acquired in trade from David Gray, 1955 (1956.3.1) Drum table swift, ca. 1840 Unknown maker Wood and whale ivory; 33 1/2 x 13 3/4 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of Frederick H. Gardner (1994.41.1)
Extraordinary terrors sometimes augmented the routine hazards of whaling life. On November 20, 1820, an enraged sperm whale, eighty-five-feet long and weighing about eighty tons, rammed the Nantucket ship Essex while the ship hunted whales near the equator in the remote Pacific. The ship promptly filled with water and rolled over, a total wreck. No whaling vessel had previously been attacked and sunk by a whale. The twenty men in the crew were left in their small boats, 1,300 miles from land. Fearing cannibals on the closest islands—twenty to thirty days’ sail away— Captain George Pollard Jr. and his mates, Owen Chase and Matthew Joy, set course for South America, hoping to run 3,000 miles against contrary winds before exhausting the limited food and water their three small boats could carry. Three months later, passing ships picked up just five emaciated survivors from two of the boats. Three other men were stranded on a remote island, and twelve men were dead—seven of them eaten in desperation by their starving shipmates. A short length of hand-twisted twine is all that remains of the doomed Essex. Twenty-one-year-old boatsteerer Benjamin Lawrence made it during the long months he spent in one of the ship’s boats. He kept it as a memento after his rescue, and it survives in the NHA collection today. While Nantucket’s whalemen roamed the seas, other islanders minded the island’s industries at home, running the maritime businesses that lined the wharves and operating the refineries and spermaceti-candle factories that transformed whale oil into saleable commodities. With many men away at sea for months and years at a stretch, the women of Nantucket took an active role in business and the running of domestic affairs. A verse collected by Eliza Brock, the wife of one Nantucket whaling captain, celebrates the freedom of many Nantucket 77
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Sampson Dyer, 1802 Spoilum (active ca. 1785–1810) Oil on canvas; 23 x 18 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of the Friends of the Nantucket Historical Association (2013.2.1) Captain Charles Myrick, 1879 J. Eastman Johnson (1824–1906) Oil on panel; 29 1/4 x 25 1/2 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of F. S. Church (1895.14.1)
women: “I have made up my mind now to be a Sailor’s wife, / To have a purse full of money and a very easy life, / For a clever sailor husband is so seldom at his home, / That his wife can spend the dollars with a will that’s all her own . . . .” Beginning in the 1820s, some enterprising women joined their sea-captain husbands on whaling voyages to the Pacific, often bringing their children with them. Among the best remembered is Susan Veeder, who sailed with her husband Charles and their young sons on the ship Nauticon between fall 1848 and spring 1853. The voyage was an eventful one, and Susan described and illustrated it in lively detail in a private journal, which is included in the exhibit. Four months out from Nantucket, Susan gave birth to a daughter, Mary Frances, at Talcahuano, Chile. All was well with the family until early 1850, when the child was accidentally poisoned by medicine while the ship lay at Tahiti. “Could we think of burying her at Tahita?” Susan wrote. “No, we could not. We must take her with us away. So we have had a lead coffin made and the corpse embalmed to take home with us.” Whaling provided economic opportunities for many islanders, including African Americans and Native Americans. Sampson Dyer, a man of mixed African and Wampanoag heritage, and his wife settled on Nantucket in the 1790s in the island’s small but thriving community of free black sailors and tradespeople. Dyer sailed on Nantucket sealing and trading voyages to China, where he had his portrait painted by the Chinese artist Spoilum. Captain Absalom F. Boston, whose likeness is also preserved in an important painting in the NHA collection, commanded the island’s first all-black whaling crew when he took the ship Industry out to the Cape Verde Islands in 1822. He was a third-generation islander and engaged in real-estate trading and innkeeping after seafaring. He and his family figured in a number of important milestones of local racial equality. An uncle, Prince Boston, was involved in the 1773 legal case that set in motion 78
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Islands Seen by Ship Nauticon, 1848–53 Susan Veeder (1816–97) Ink and watercolor on paper; 10 1/4 x 8 in. Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of the Friends of the Nantucket Historical Association, 1995 (Ms. 220 log 347) The Window Toward the Sea (Phebe Folger Pitman), 1886-87 Elizabeth Rebecca Coffin (1850-1930) Oil on canvas Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of Elizabeth R. Coffin, (1902.2.1)
the end of slavery on Nantucket. When his daughter, Phebe Ann, was denied admission to Nantucket High School, Boston began litigation that spurred the desegregation of local schools in 1846. Nantucketers, steeped in Quaker and Congregational ethics, took active roles in the anti-slavery and women’s suffrage movements of nineteenth-century America. Lucretia Coffin Mott and the Reverend Phebe Ann Hanaford were daughters of the island, and Frederick Douglass’s four visits to the island included his first public address, delivered at the island’s Atheneum in 1841. Whaling on Nantucket declined in the 1840s and 1850s as a sandbar increasingly hindered access to the harbor for larger ships and railroads gave a competitive advantage to mainland ports. Islanders left for opportunities elsewhere, and the population plunged from 8,800 in 1850 to 3,200 in 1875. Those who remained returned to fishing, shepherding, and farming and actively sought to reinvent the island as a resort for summer visitors, ripe with evocative old buildings, colorful residents, and plentiful sun and sand. As early as the 1840s, islanders opened hotels tailored to tourists. Concerted efforts to advertise the island as a “watering place” in the late 1860s blossomed in a rush of hotel building in the 1870s. More tourist development followed in the 1880s, including a seasonal railroad to carry visitors to outlying beach hotels. The summer colony attracted the painter Eastman Johnson, who became the primary artist of national importance associated with Nantucket in the late nineteenth century. He and his wife began summering on the island in 1870 and returned annually through 1890. He painted numerous important genre scenes on island, and, in the 1880s, created portraits of island civic leaders and retired mariners. Johnson used Captain Charles Myrick as the subject of a number of paintings, capturing the spirit of a retired
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Nest of eight Nantucket baskets, ca. 1895 Davis Hall (1828–1905) Oak, cane, brass Nantucket Historical Association collection, gift of Louise T. Stetson (1995.20.1a-h) Candlesticks, mid-nineteenth century Unknown maker Whale bone, whale ivory; 9 1/2 x 4 x 4 in. each Nantucket Historical Association Collection, gift of the Friends of the Nantucket Historical Association with support of the Gosnell and Geschke families (2008.10.1 & .2)
captain confined to island retirement. In a particularly poignant study in the NHA collection, Johnson portrays Myrick in reflective decline, holding a Malacca cane with an ivory handle, once a symbol of fashionable elegance but now a sign of decrepitude, and wearing a beaver hat on his drooping head. The island’s faded glory spoke to other artists as well, including Elizabeth Rebecca Coffin, the most important female artist associated with the island. She was a student of Johan Philip Koelman, William Merritt Chase, and Thomas Eakins, whose realist approach is evident in her surviving works. Many of her works depict Nantucket scenes, often approaching the island and its people from a nostalgic point of view. In The Window Toward the Sea, Coffin portrays octogenarian Phebe Folger Pitman knitting by the window of her kitchen, the rustic details of the furniture and household goods combining with the contemplative aspect of the sitter to conjure up an image of quiet life in a rural village—the very image of quaint Nantucket that was a major selling point of the island as a summer destination in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. A century and a half of promotion and development have transformed Nantucket from yesterday’s faded whaling port into today’s polished summer destination. Hundreds of thousands of visitors and seasonal residents come each year to enjoy the island’s historic charm and plentiful sand and scenery, underpinning a multi-billion-dollar economy based on real estate, construction, and tourism. As well, more than seventeen-thousand people live on island year-round—more than at the height of whaling—including growing communities of immigrants seeking to benefit from the island’s opportunities. The Nantucket Historical Association seeks to be a voice for the island and its history before all these diverse audiences, preserving and presenting the art and artifacts that illuminate the many fascinating stories of our little island in the Atlantic. 80
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Home of American Impressionism
Matilda Browne, Peonies, ca. 1907. Oil on wood, 11½"x14". Florence Griswold Museum, Purchase.
."4
“Think Giverny in Connecticut.” Willard Spiegelman, Wall Street Journal “. . . a must-see, thanks to the Krieble Gallery, the gardens, and the Griswold House, which housed the Art Colony of Old Lyme.” Diane Bair and Pamela Wright, Boston Globe “Visitors can stroll the gentle slope to the river and maybe, just maybe, experience a moment in which art, history, and nature combine to show them something amazing.” Justin Shatwell, Yankee Magazine
96 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, Connecticut • 860.434.5542 FlorenceGriswoldMuseum.org iStsaE
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Greenwich Historical Society ©DurstonSaylorPhotography
David Scott Parker Architects
170 Pequot Avenue • Southport, Connecticut 06890 • 203.259.3373 • dsparker.com 61109_PG_1.103.indd 82 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1
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Upholstered Corner Chair With Glass Ball Feet. Attributed to Louis Comfort Tiffany, Associated Artists. 1881-1883
By appointment only • 170 Pequot Avenue • Southport, Connecticut 06890 p. 203. 255. 2281 • aallc@dsparker.com • AssociatedArtists.net
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EXHIBITORS
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Charles Ede
A LA VIEILLE RUSSIE, INC.
LEBRETON
ADELSON GALLERIES, INC.
LES ENLUMINURES
ALEXANDER GALLERY
BERNARD & S. DEAN LEVY INC.
MICHAEL ALTMAN FINE ART
LOWELL LIBSON & JONNY YARKER LTD
APTER-FREDERICKS
NATHAN LIVERANT AND SON, LLC
ARADER GALLERIES
LOBEL MODERN
ARONSON OF AMSTERDAM
LOST CITY ARTS
MICHELE BEINY, INC.
MACKLOWE GALLERY, LTD.
H. BLAIRMAN & SONS LTD
MAISON GERARD
JONATHAN BOOS
MENCONI + SCHOELKOPF
BOWMAN SCULPTURE
JOAN B MIRVISS LTD
BROWSE & DARBY
LILLIAN NASSAU LLC
RALPH M. CHAIT GALLERIES, INC.
THE OLD PRINT SHOP, INC.
COHEN & COHEN
OLDE HOPE
PHILIP COLLECK, LTD.
PETER PAP ORIENTAL RUGS, INC.
THOMAS COLVILLE FINE ART
GERALD PETERS GALLERY
COVE LANDING
RONALD PHILLIPS LTD
DANIEL CROUCH RARE BOOKS
RED FOX FINE ART
DIDIER LTD
JAMES ROBINSON, INC.
DONZELLA
DAVID A. SCHORSCH ~ EILEEN M. SMILES
CHARLES EDE
PETER FETTERMAN GALLERY
STEPHEN SCORE, INC.
PETER FINER
S. J. SHRUBSOLE
GEMINI ANTIQUES LTD.
ELLE SHUSHAN
MICHAEL GOEDHUIS
ROBERT SIMON FINE ART
BERNARD GOLDBERG FINE ARTS, LLC
SPENCER MARKS
THOMAS HENEAGE ART BOOKS
GALERIE ST. ETIENNE
HILL-STONE, INC.
TAMBARAN
HIRSCHL & ADLER GALLERIES
CAROLLE THIBAUT-POMERANTZ
HIRSCHL & ADLER MODERN
ERIK THOMSEN
HYDE PARK ANTIQUES, LTD.
THROCKMORTON FINE ART, INC.
JAMES INFANTE
ROBERT YOUNG ANTIQUES
AMERICAN ANTIQUES
BARBARA ISRAEL GARDEN ANTIQUES KENTSHIRE KESHISHIAN KELLY KINZLE
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EXHIBITORS
A LA VIEILLE RUSSIE, INC. | D11 European and American antique jewelry, Fabergé, gold snuffboxes and objets de vertu, Russian decorative and fine arts. 745 Fifth Avenue, 4th Floor, New York, New York 10151 (212) 752-1727 Paul Schaffer, Peter L. Schaffer, and Mark Schaffer www.alvr.com alvr@alvr.com
ADELSON GALLERIES, INC. | E7 An exhibition of the work of Andrew Wyeth and Jamie Wyeth. The Crown Building, Entrance on 57th Street 730 Fifth Avenue, 7th Floor, New York, New York 10019 (212) 439-6800 Warren Adelson, Elizabeth Oustinoff, and Alan Adelson www.adelsongalleries.com info@adelsongalleries.com
ALEXANDER GALLERY | B4 Important 18th- and 19th-century American paintings and historical items, 15th- through 19th-century European paintings and works of art, illuminated books, and Oriental and Middle Eastern works of art. 115 East 72nd Street, Suite 1B, New York, New York 10021 (212) 472-1636 Fax: (212) 249-2306 www.alexandergallery.com somers@alexandergallery.com
MICHAEL ALTMAN FINE ART | C5 Advisory services in 19th- and 20th-century European & American paintings, drawings, and sculpture. 33 East 68th Street, New York, New York 10065 (212) 879-0002 Fax: (212) 897-0011 www.mnafineart.com info@mnafineart.com
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APTER-FREDERICKS | A4 18th- and 19th-century English furniture, including Queen Anne, Georgian, and Regency pieces and the works of Chippendale, Sheraton, Adam, Linnell, Ince & Mayhew, and Gillows. 265-267 Fulham Road, London SW3 6HY United Kingdom +44 (0) 20 7352 2188 www.apter-fredericks.com antiques@apter-fredericks.com
ARADER GALLERIES | D4 16th- through 19th-century natural history engravings and watercolors, colorplate books, important maps and atlases, and prints of the American West. Specializing in the works of Audubon, Catesby, Lear, Thornton, Redouté, Catlin, Bodmer, Bierstadt, Moran, Faden, Ortelius, Mercator, and Blaeu. 29 East 72nd Street, New York, New York 10021 (212) 628-3668 Fax: (212) 879-8714 1308 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107 (215) 735-8811 Fax: (215) 735-9864 Graham Arader III, President; Lori Cohen, Director www.aradergalleries.com loricohen@aradergalleries.com ARONSON OF AMSTERDAM | E13 Some of the earliest and rarest objects produced by the Delft factories in the 17th century, as well as a superb collection of 18th-century animals, figures, plaques, chargers, and other interesting wares. Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 45-b PO Box 15556, 1001 NB Amsterdam, The Netherlands 011 31 20 623 3103 Mobile: (646) 415-2561 www.aronson.com mail@aronson.com
MICHELE BEINY, INC. | D2 18th- and early 19th-century English and Continental porcelain and faïence, objets de vertu, and Renaissance jewelry; contemporary studio ceramics and glass. 53 East 82nd Street, New York, New York 10028 By appointment: (212) 794-9357 Fax: (212) 772-0119 Michele Beiny Harkins, President www.michelebeiny.com michele@michelebeiny.com
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EXHIBITORS
H. BLAIRMAN & SONS LTD | E12 19th- and early 20th-century design PO Box 6374, London W1A 3UR United Kingdom By appointment: Mayfair, London +44 (0) 20 7493 0444 www.blairman.co.uk blairman@blairman.co.uk
JONATHAN BOOS | D12 Specializing in 20th-century American art with a particular focus on Ashcan School, Modernism, Social Realism, and Post-War paintings and sculpture. 18 East 64th Street, 4th Floor, New York, New York 10065 (212) 535-5096 Jonathan Boos, Valerie Stanos www.jonathanboos.com info@jonathanboos.com
BOWMAN SCULPTURE | E1 Sculpture from the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. 6 Duke Street, St James’s, London SW1Y 6BN United Kingdom +44 (0) 207 930 0277 www.bowmansculpture.com gallery@bowmansculpture.com
BROWSE & DARBY | A7 British & French late 19th-and 20th- century paintings, drawings, prints, and sculpture 19 Cork Street, Mayfair, London W1S 3LP United Kingdom +44 (0) 207 734 7984 www.browseanddarby.co.uk art@browseanddarby.co.uk
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RALPH M. CHAIT GALLERIES, INC. | D9 Chinese works of art, including porcelain, jade, pottery, sculpture, ceramics, export silver, and Indian Colonial silver. Established 1910. 16 East 52nd Street, 10th Floor, New York, New York 10022 (212) 397-2818 Steven J. Chait, President Andrew H. Chait, Vice President, CFO www.rmchait.com info@rmchaitgal.net
COHEN & COHEN | C3 Chinese export porcelain and works of art from the 17th and 18th centuries. PO Box 366, Reigate RH2 2BB United Kingdom +44 (0) 1737 242180 Fax: +44 (0) 1737 226236 Gallery by appointment only at: 1 Essex Court, 30 St. James’s Place, London SW1A 1NR United Kingdom Ewa Cohen, Michael Cohen, & Will Motley, Manager www.cohenandcohen.co.uk info@cohenandcohen.co.uk PHILIP COLLECK, LTD. | B7 Specialists in 17th-, 18th-, and early 19th-century English furniture with an emphasis on chinoiserie and lighting. Established 1938. 311 East 58th Street, New York, New York 10022 (212) 486-7600 Mobile: (917) 692-8855 Mark Jacoby & Diana Jacoby, Owners www.philipcolleck.com info@philipcolleck.com
THOMAS COLVILLE FINE ART | C4 19th- and early 20th-century American and European paintings, drawings, and sculpture. 111 Old Quarry Road, Guilford, Connecticut 06437 By appointment: (203) 453-2449 1000 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10075 By appointment: (212) 879-9259 Thomas Colville, Owner; Kirstin Auer, Gallery Manager; Colleen Niarchos, Financial Coordinator; Jay Qin, Associate www.thomascolville.com tlc@thomascolville.com
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EXHIBITORS
COVE LANDING | A1 18th- and 19th-century English and Continental furniture, unusual works of art, fine objects, and idiosyncratic finds. 167 East 74th Street, New York, New York 10021 By appointment: (212) 288-7597 Angus Wilkie Len Morgan www.covelanding@gmail.com
DANIEL CROUCH RARE BOOKS | E14 Antique atlases, maps, plans, sea charts, and voyages dating from the 15th to the 19th centuries. 4 Bury Street, St James’s, London SW1Y 6AB United Kingdom +44 (0) 20 7042 0240 24 East 64th Street, New York, New York 10065 (212) 602-1779 www.crouchrarebooks.com info@crouchrarebooks.com
DIDIER LTD | D8 Artistic post-war jewelry by painters, sculptors, architects, and designers from the UK, Europe, USA, and South America. 66B Kensington Church Street, London W8 4BY United Kingdom +44 20 7221 1573 Cell: +44 7973 800415 Didier Haspeslagh & Martine Newby Haspeslagh www.didierltd.com info@didierltd.com
DONZELLA | B10 Post-war and contemporary design from the United States & Europe. 17 White Street, New York, New York 10013 (212) 965-8919 Paul Donzella, Principal Lori Scacco, Gallery Manager www.donzella.com info@donzella.com
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CHARLES EDE | C8 Established in 1971, Charles Ede is a Mayfair-based ancient art gallery specializing in exceptional objects from ancient Egypt, Greece, Rome, and the Near East. 1 Three Kings’ Yard, London W1K 4JP United Kingdom +44 (0)20 7493 4944 www.charlesede.com info@charlesede.com
PETER FETTERMAN GALLERY | D14 Classic 20th-century fine art photography. 2525 Michigan Avenue, Gallery A1, Santa Monica, California 90404 (310) 453-6463 Peter Fetterman www.peterfetterman.com peter@peterfetterman.com
PETER FINER | A3 Antique arms, armor, and related objects. 38 & 39 Duke Street, St James’s, London SW1Y 6DF United Kingdom +44 (0) 20 7839 5666 Fax: +44 (0) 20 7839 5777 The Old Rectory, Ilmington, Warwickshire CV36 4JQ United Kingdom +44 (0) 1608 682267 Fax: +44 (0) 1608 682575 From the USA or Canada: (800) 270-7951 www.peterfiner.com gallery@peterfiner.com
GEMINI ANTIQUES LTD. | B13 For over thirty-five years, Leon and Steven Weiss have been dealing in the highest quality American and European antique toys, still and mechanical banks, lead soldiers, and dolls. PO Box 635, Oldwick, New Jersey 08858 Leon Weiss: (917) 991-7352 Steven Weiss: (212) 729-0011 Gallery: (908) 823-4049 Fax: (908) 823-4519 www.geminiantiquesltd.com
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EXHIBITORS
MICHAEL GOEDHUIS | B1 Chinese contemporary ink art and Chinese and Japanese bronzes. 61 Cadogan Square, London SW1X 0HZ United Kingdom By appointment: +44 (0) 20 7823 1395 www.michaelgoedhuis.com london@michaelgoedhuis.com
BERNARD GOLDBERG FINE ARTS, LLC | B5 Specializing in American art and design, Bernard Goldberg Fine Arts, LLC has specific interests in American Modernism, the Stieglitz Circle, and the Ashcan School. New York, New York By appointment: (212) 813-9797 Bernard Goldberg, Owner Ken Sims, Gallery Manager www.bgfa.com info@bgfa.com
THOMAS HENEAGE ART BOOKS | D13 Thomas Heneage is the foremost specialist art bookshop in the Englishspeaking world. We focus on books for the art world from the ancient to the modern, and buy, sell, and curate art libraries. We also deal in fine works of art associated with antiquarianism in the library. 42 Duke Street, St James’s, London SW1Y 6DJ United Kingdom +44 (0) 20 7930 9233 www.heneage.com artbooks@heneage.com Instagram: @thomasheneageartbooks
HILL-STONE, INC. | D3 Old Master and Modern prints and drawings. 441 Elm Street, South Dartmouth, Massachusetts 02748 By appointment: (212) 249-1397 Alan N. Stone & Lesley Hill, Co-Directors www.hill-stone.com oldmaster@hill-stone.com
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HIRSCHL & ADLER GALLERIES | B9 American and European paintings, watercolors, drawings, and sculpture, 18th century to the present; American furniture and decorative arts, 1810 to 1910. 41 East 57th Street, 9th Floor, New York, New York 10022 (212) 535-8810 Fax: (212) 772-7237 Stuart P. Feld, President & Director Elizabeth Feld, Managing Director www.hirschlandadler.com gallery@hirschlandadler.com
HIRSCHL & ADLER MODERN | A9 Post-War, Contemporary, and Outsider painting, sculpture, and works on paper by important American and European artists. The Fuller Building, 41 East 57th Street, 9th Floor, New York, New York 10022 (212) 535-8810 Fax: (212) 772-7237 www.hirschlandadler.com modern@hirschlandadler.com
HYDE PARK ANTIQUES, LTD. | D5 Finest and most extensive collection of English antique furniture from the William and Mary through Regency periods, 1700 to 1825. Also specializing in 18th-century Chinese export and English porcelain, as well as sporting art. 836 Broadway, New York, New York 10003 (212) 477-0033 Fax: (212) 477-1781 Bernard Karr, President; Rachel Karr, Vice President; Patrick Bavasi, Director www.hydeparkantiques.com info@hydeparkantiques.com
JAMES INFANTE | C11 Specializing in 20th-century decorative arts and design, including the Wiener Werkstätte, Hagenauer Werkstätte, Carlo Bugatti, and iconic works of the period. New York, New York By appointment: (917) 864-6780 www.jamesinfante.com james@jamesinfante.com
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EXHIBITORS
BARBARA ISRAEL GARDEN ANTIQUES | C6 Medieval to mid-century modern statues, fountains, seats, sundials, urns, and ornaments from America, Europe, and Asia. 296 Mount Holly Road, Katonah, New York 10536 By appointment: (212) 744-6281 Fax: (212) 744-2188 Barbara Israel, President; Sylvia Falcón, Creative Director; Eva Schwartz, Director of Client Services www.barbaraisrael.com eva@bi-gardenantiques.com
KENTSHIRE | C1 Established in 1940 and in its third generation of family ownership, Kentshire is one of New York’s premier destinations for antique, estate, and fine period jewelry, as well as vintage costume and designer jewelry. Bergdorf Goodman, 754 Fifth Avenue, 7th Floor, New York, New York 10019 (212) 872-8653 608 Fifth Avenue, Suite 800, New York, New York, 10020 (212) 421-1100 Carrie & Matthew Imberman, Co-Presidents www.kentshire.com info@kentshire.com KESHISHIAN | C12 Rare antique carpets, tapestries, and needlework, from the Gothic to Pop Art periods. 73 Pimlico Road, London SW1W 8NE United Kingdom +44 (0) 20 7730 8810 Fax: +44 (0) 20 7730 8803 New York, by appointment: (212) 956-1586 Eddy Keshishian & Arto Keshishian, Partners www.keshishiancarpets.com info@keshishiancarpets.com
KELLY KINZLE | A13 American folk art, painted furniture, paintings, and tall case clocks. 9 Center Square, PO Box 235, New Oxford, Pennsylvania 17350 (717) 495-3395 www.kellykinzleantiques.com kellykinzle@comcast.net
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LEBRETON | D16 Founded in 1999, Lebreton Gallery promotes and preserves the works of major post-war French and European artists. Its distinguished and unique collection of furniture, ceramics, paintings, sculpture, and works on paper includes works by Magdalena Abakanowicz, Les Lalannes, Lynn Chadwick, Cesar, Pierre-Elie Gardette, Bruno Romeda, Jacques Adnet, Roberto Matta, Ruth Duckworth, and Suzanne Ramie. By appointment only (415) 291-8484 www.lebretongallery.com info@lebretongallery.com
LES ENLUMINURES | A6 Medieval and Renaissance illuminated manuscripts, miniatures, rings, and jewelry. 23 East 73rd Street, 7th Floor Penthouse, New York, New York 10021 +1 212 717 7273 980 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 13301, Chicago, Illinois 60611 +1 773 929 5986 1 rue Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 75001 Paris, France +33 1 4260 1558 All locations by appointment only. www.lesenluminures.com——info@lesenluminures.com
BERNARD & S. DEAN LEVY INC. | E6 17th- to 19th-century furniture and decorative arts with pieces in the Jacobean, William and Mary, Queen Anne, Chippendale, and Federal styles. 24 East 84th Street, New York, New York 10028 (212) 628-7088 www.levygalleries.com frank@levygalleries.com
LOWELL LIBSON & JONNY YARKER LTD | B8 Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker are international dealers in British art, specializing in paintings, watercolours, drawings, and sculpture of the seventeenth to mid-nineteenth centuries. 3 Clifford Street, London W1S 2LF United Kingdom +44 (0)20 7734 8686 www.libson-yarker.com lowell@libson-yarker.com jonny@libson-yarker.com
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EXHIBITORS
NATHAN LIVERANT AND SON, LLC | D10 18th- and 19th-century American furniture, paintings, and decorative arts. Specializing in fine examples of Connecticut and New England furniture made prior to 1840. 168 South Main Street, PO Box 103, Colchester, Connecticut 06415 (860) 537-2409 Fax: (860) 537-0577 Arthur S. Liverant www.liverantantiques.com mail@liverantantiques.com Follow us at www.facebook.com/NLS.antiques
LOBEL MODERN | A10 Lobel Modern was established by Evan Lobel in 1997. His vision was to promote important mid-20th-century design that focuses on exceptional craftsmanship and materials with an emphasis on furniture that crosses over into art. Lobel Modern has since become a critical resource for designers, architects, and collectors around the world. New York Design Center, 200 Lexington Avenue, Suite 915, New York, New York 10016 Saturdays by appointment www.lobelmodern.com info@lobelmodern.com
LOST CITY ARTS | B2 Established in 1982, Lost City Arts is recognized internationally as a leading source of mid-20th-century fine art, design, furniture, lighting, and accessories. 18 Cooper Square, New York, New York 10003 (212) 375-0500 Fax: (212) 375-9342 James Elkind www.lostcityarts.com info@lostcityarts.com
MACKLOWE GALLERY, LTD | C9 Tiffany Studios lamps, art glass, and bronzes; French Art Nouveau furniture, art glass, lighting, ceramics, and lithographs; important antique and estate jewelry. 445 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022 (212) 644-6400 Fax: (212) 755-6143 www.macklowegallery.com email@macklowegallery.com
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MAISON GERARD | C7 Maison Gerard was founded in 1974, specializing in French Art Deco furniture, lighting, and objets d’art. Today, Maison Gerard presents a range of work—from antiques to contemporary design—always with an emphasis on authenticity, historical context, and connoisseurship. 43 East 10th Street, New York, New York 10003 53 East 10th Street, New York, New York 10003 (212) 674-7611 www.maisongerard.com home@maisongerard.com
MENCONI + SCHOELKOPF | B14 Established in 2001, the gallery specializes in American art from 1800-1950 and has superior expertise in modernism, American impressionism, the Ashcan School, and in the work of the 19th-century genre and landscape painters of the Hudson River School. 22 East 80th Street, New York, New York 10075 (212) 879-8815 www.msfineart.com info@msfineart.com
JOAN B MIRVISS LTD | E5 Japanese fine art of the 17th – 21st centuries, specializing in important modern and contemporary Japanese ceramics, traditional screens and paintings, and ukiyo-e woodblock prints 30 East 78th Street, 4th Floor, Suite 401 (at Madison Avenue) New York, New York 10075 (212) 799-4021 Fax: (212) 721-5148 Joan B. Mirviss www.mirviss.com info@mirviss.com
LILLIAN NASSAU LLC | A2 For close to 75 years, Lillian Nassau LLC has offered museum-quality examples of the work of Louis Comfort Tiffany and Tiffany Studios, including leaded glass lamps and windows, favrile glass and pottery, mosaics, metalwork, and more, as well as late 19th- and early 20th-century decorative arts, design, and sculpture. 220 East 57th Street, New York, New York 10022 (212) 759-6062 Fax: (212) 832-9493 www.lilliannassau.com info@lilliannassau.com
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EXHIBITORS
THE OLD PRINT SHOP, INC. | A12 Our 62nd year exhibiting at The Winter Show, specializing in American prints, photographs, drawings, watercolors, paintings, and sculpture, 1700–1950; and antique maps, 1500–1880. 150 Lexington Avenue, New York, New York 10016 (212) 683-3950 Fax: (212) 779-8040 Robert K. Newman and Harry S. Newman www.oldprintshop.com info@oldprintshop.com
OLDE HOPE | E8 American folk and decorative arts of distinction PO Box 718, New Hope, Pennsylvania 18938 115 East 72nd Street, New York, New York 10021 (215) 297-0200 Patrick Bell & Edwin Hild www.oldehope.com info@oldehope.com
PETER PAP ORIENTAL RUGS, INC. | B15 Oriental rugs produced by Nomads, village weavers, and urban and village workshops, dating from the 17th through the early 20th centuries. 1225 Main Street, Dublin, New Hampshire 03444 (603) 563-8717 128 Presidio Avenue, San Francisco, California 94115 (415) 956-3300 Peter B. Pap, President www.peterpap.com info@peterpap.com
GERALD PETERS GALLERY | D15 19th- and 20th-century and contemporary American painting and sculpture 24 East 78th Street, New York, New York 10075 (212) 628-9760 www.gpgallery.com
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RONALD PHILLIPS LTD | E2 18th- and 19th-century English furniture. 26 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QL United Kingdom +44 (0) 20 7493 2341 www.ronaldphillipsantiques.com advice@ronaldphillips.co.uk
RED FOX FINE ART | E9 Established in 1979, Red Fox Fine Art is America’s leading gallery of 19th- and 20th- century sporting paintings and sculpture. 1 North Madison Street, Middleburg, Virginia 20117 (703) 851-5160 www.redfoxfineart.com tr@redfoxfineart.com
JAMES ROBINSON, INC. | Booth C2 Antique jewelry, silver, porcelain, and glass, along with handmade sterling silver reproductions. 480 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022 (212) 752-6166 Joan Boening, President; Edward Munves, Chairman; Marci Leggette, Manager; James Boening, Director www.jrobinson.com info@jrobinson.com
DAVID A. SCHORSCH~EILEEN M. SMILES AMERICAN ANTIQUES | A8 American decorative arts of the 18th and 19th centuries, specializing in folk art. 358 Main Street South, Woodbury, Connecticut 06798 (203) 263-3131––Fax:(203) 263-2622 www.schorsch-smiles.com
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EXHIBITORS
STEPHEN SCORE, INC. | E3 Line, Abstraction, Gesture and Paint Handling: American Folk to Modern Boston, Massachusetts (617) 901-0003 stephenscoreantiques@gmail.com
S. J. SHRUBSOLE | A5 English and American silver, 1450 to 1920; jewelry, 1750 to the present. 26 East 81st Street, New York, New York 10028 (212) 753-8920 Fax: (212) 754-5192 Timothy Martin, James McConnaughy, Benjamin Miller & Karin Shrubsole www.shrubsole.com inquiries@shrubsole.com
ELLE SHUSHAN | D1 Fine portrait miniatures, portrait waxes, and contemporary portrait photography. 1600 Arch Street, Suite 1603, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 (215) 587-0000 Elle Shushan www.elleshushan.com elle@elleshushan.com
ROBERT SIMON FINE ART | C10 Specializing in Old Master paintings and sculpture from Europe and the Americas, with an emphasis on works from the Italian Renaissance and Baroque periods. 22 East 80th Street, Fourth Floor, New York, New York 10075 (212) 288-9712 Fax: (212) 202-4786 www.robertsimon.com rbs@robertsimon.com
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SPENCER MARKS | E11 Spencer Marks specializes in fine and unique silver with a focus on the 19th and 20th centuries. PO Box 330, Southampton, Massachusetts 01073 (413) 527-7344 www.spencermarks.com info@spencermarks.com
GALERIE ST. ETIENNE | D7 Founded in 1939. Specializing in American and European self-taught artists, Austrian and German Expressionism. Representing the estates of Anna Mary Robertson (Grandma) Moses and Leonard Baskin. 24 West 57th Street, Suite 802, New York, New York 10019 (212) 245-6734 Fax: (212) 765-8493 www.gseart.com gallery@gseart.com
TAMBARAN | B3 Tambaran is one of New York City’s most respected Tribal Art galleries specializing in exceptionally beautiful museum-quality pieces. Founded in 1979 by Maureen Zarember, the gallery offers unrivaled expertise in African, Oceanic, and Northwest Coast American art to private collectors and museums all over the world. 5 East 82nd Street, New York, New York 10028 (212) 570-0655 www.tambaran.com tambarangallery@gmail.com
CAROLLE THIBAUT-POMERANTZ | D6 Vintage wallpaper panels—18th century to 1950s, and 20th- and 21st-century decorative arts. By appointment: New York: (212) 759-6048 Paris: +33 (0) 6 09 05 35 98 Carolle Thibaut-Pomerantz, Proprietor www.antique-wallpaper.com carolle@ctpdecorativearts.com
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EXHIBITORS
ERIK THOMSEN | B11 Erik Thomsen has been a dealer in Japanese art since 1984, specializing in antique and modern folding screens, scroll paintings, bamboo baskets, ceramics, and gold lacquer boxes. 23 East 67th Street, New York, New York 10065 (212) 288-2588 www.erikthomsen.com info@erikthomsen.com
THROCKMORTON FINE ART, INC. | B12 Pre-Columbian sculpture and textiles, Chinese archaic jades and ceramics, tribal art, and vintage photography. 145 East 57th Street, 3rd Floor, New York, New York 10022 (212) 223-1059 Fax: (212) 223-1937 Spencer Throckmorton, President www.throckmorton-nyc.com info@throckmorton-nyc.com
ROBERT YOUNG ANTIQUES | E4 Fine vernacular furniture and folk art 68 Battersea Bridge Road, London SW11 3AG United Kingdom +44 (0) 20 7228 7847 Robert Young & Josyane Young www.robertyoungantiques.com office@robertyoungantiques.com
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18.ALVR.6051_3.qxp_Layout 1 10/9/18 7:37 AM Page 1
A LA VIEILLE RUSSIE
745 Fifth Avenue • New York City • 10151 • +1.212.752.1727 • alvr.com
Pair of brilliant and baguette-cut diamond triple scroll earrings, set in platinum. French, ca. 1950. 18k gold necklace in a twisting design. French, ca. 1940.
Established 1851
Where the Unusual is Usual SM 104 Booth D11
61109_PG_104.175.indd 104 1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019.indd
1/4/19 2:15 1:21PM AM 10/10/18
FROM TROMPE
TO REALITY
alexandergallery.com
Booth B4 61109_PG_104.175.indd 105 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1
1/4/19 11:23 1:21 AM 11/19/18 AM
An Exhibition of the Work of Andrew Wyeth and Jamie Wyeth
Andrew wyeth (1917-2009)
Copyright@Andrew Wyeth
Mirror, Mirror, 1991, Watercolor and graphite on paper, 38 3/4 x 27 inches
The Crown Building, 730 Fifth Avenue 7th floor New York, NY 10019 www.adelsongalleries.com 212.439.6800
106 Booth E7 AdelsonGallery_Ad_TWS2019_LeftHandPage_11_20_18_FINAL.indd EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 106
11/29/18 11:39 AM 1/4/19 11:40 1:21 AM
An Exhibition of the Work of Andrew Wyeth and Jamie Wyeth
J a m i e Wy e t h (b. 1946)
Copyright@2018 Jamie Wyeth
Squirreling, 2018, oil on canvas, 36 x 48 inches
The Crown Building, 730 Fifth Avenue 7th floor New York, NY 10019 www.adelsongalleries.com 212.439.6800
Booth E7
AdelsonGallery_Ad_TWS2019_RightHandPage_11_20_18_FINAL EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 2 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 107
11/29/18 11:38 AM 1/4/19 11:41 1:21 AM
ABOVE: JOAN MIRÓ. Sans Titre, 1967. Gouache on Japan paper, 17⅞ x 24¼ inches. OPPOSITE: PABLO PICASSO. Tête accoudée (Dora Maar), 1942. Gouache and ink on paper, 11½ x 15¾ inches. 108 Booth C5 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 108
12/3/18 2:55 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Booth C5 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 2 61109_PG_104.175.indd 109
12/3/18 2:55 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Summer is coming
Booth A4 AF_WinterFairAd_2018.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 110 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 56
05/10/2018 11:22 1/4/19 1:21 11/5/18 6:25 AM PM
Booth D4 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 111
10/29/18 6:08 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Booth E13 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 112
11/12/18 11:10 PM AM 1/7/19 12:33
MICHELE BEINY
53 East 82nd Street . New York . NY . 10028
michele@michelebeiny.com
T. 212.794.9357 F. 212.772.0119
WWW.MICHELEBEINY.COM
BY APPOINTMENT Booth D2
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10/10/18 1:31AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
114 Booth E12 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 114
11/12/18 4:01 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
An Important Masterwork by Marsden Hartley
Marsden Hartley (American, 1877–1943)
Off to the Banks, 1936 Oil on composition board 18 x 24 inches
Specializing in 20th Century American Art 18 East 64th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10065 212.535.5096 jb@jonathanboos.com jonathanboos.com
Booth D12
EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 115
10/29/18 9:46 AM AM 1/4/19 1:21
BOWMAN SCULPTURE 6 Duke Street St James’s, London SW1Y 6BN
L’Éternel Printemps Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) Signed Rodin Inscribed F. Barbedienne Fondeur Bronze with rich brown patination Lifetime cast
www.bowmansculpture.com Booth E1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 116
11/7/18 6:07 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Browse & Darby
EDGAR DEGAS (1834-1917) Danseuse Assise c. 1897-1900 pastel and charcoal on paper mounted on card 22 3/8 x 16 1/2 inches
19 Cork Street . London W1S 3LP . UK Tel: +44(0)20 7734 7984 | Fax: +44(0)20 7851 6650 e-mail: art@browseanddarby.co.uk | www.browseanddarby.co.uk Booth A7 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 117
11/21/18 3:53 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
2630-CHAIT_was.qxp_Layout 1 10/24/18 8:18 AM Page 1
ESTABLISHED 1910
WORKS OF ART • CHINESE ART 16 East 52nd Street, 10th Floor, New York, NY 10022 Tel: 212-397-2818 www.rmchait.com • E-mail: info@rmchaitgal.net
SUPERB CHINESE BLUE AND WHITE PORCELAIN BALUSTER VASE, Decorated along the exterior with a scene from a classic tale. Kangxi period, ca: late 17th century Height: 18 1⁄4 inches (46.4 cm) Ex: Private American Collection 118 Booth D9 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 118
10/24/18 3:47 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
COHEN & COHEN Dealers in important Chinese Export Porcelain and Works of Art
The Martin Hurst Punchbowl Yongzheng/Qianlong period circa 1735-40 Diameter: 15¾ inches; 40cm This wonderful and famous bowl is from the Martin Hurst collection, which formed the basis for George Williamson’s important publication The Book of Famille Rose. There the bowl is described as “illustrating the high water mark of Famille Rose decoration”.
Gallery by appointment only at: 1 Essex Court, 30 St James’s Place, London, SW1A 1NR Correspondence: PO Box 366, REIGATE RH2 2BB, UK Tel: +44 (0)1737 242180 Fax: +44 (0)1737 226236 Email: info@cohenandcohen.co.uk Website: www.cohenandcohen.co.uk
Also Exhibiting at: Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show: 13-19 Feb 2019 Asia Week New York: 13-23 March 2019 Asian Art In London: November 2019
Booth C3 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 119
10/31/18 AM 1/4/19 11:06 1:21 AM
P hiliP C olleCk , ltd.
Antique English Furniture & Works of Art
Fine Six-Panel Chinoiserie Decorated and Gilt Tooled Leather Screen The center is painted in brilliant colors with birds and flowering branches within a border of symbolic antiques, all in imitation of a 17th century Chinese Coromandel lacquer screen. English circa 1700 Height: 75 ½” Length: 10’ Width Each Panel: 20” Mark and Diana Jacoby, Propr ietors Philip Colleck, Ltd. 311 East 58th Street New York, New York 10022 Showroom: 212-486-7600 Cell: 917-692-8855 philipcolleck.com info@philipcolleck.com
120 Booth B7 PhilipColleck_TWS_2019_Ad_BD_10_31_Pass8_v2.indd EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC100.indd 1 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 120
12/4/18 8:58 AM 9:02 1/4/19 1:21
s s
GUY PENE DU GUY(AMERICAN PENE 1884-1958) DU BOIS BOIS (AMERICAN 1884-1958)
Sportswomen, France, 1926 1926 OilSportswomen, on Panel | 21 France 3/4 x 18, inches Oildated on Panel 21 3/4du x 18 inches Signed and Guy|Pene Bois ‘26 lower left Signed and dated Guy Pene du Bois ‘26 lower left
THOMAS COLVILLE FINE ART THOMAS COLVILLE FINE ART 111 Old Quarry Road, Guilford, Connecticut 06437 | 203-453-2449 111 QuarryAvenue, Road, Guilford, Connecticut 06437 || 212-879-9259 203-453-2449 1000Old Madison New York, New York 10075 1000 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10075 | 212-879-9259 www.thomascolville.com | By Appointment www.thomascolville.com | By Appointment
EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC100.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 121 Du Bois Ad.indd 1
Booth C4 12/26/18 PM 1/4/19 12:37 1:21 AM 10/18/18 11:34 AM
cove landing 167 EAST 74TH STREET NEW YORK NEW YORK 10021 COVELANDING@GMAIL.COM 212.288.7597
A 19TH CENTURY ANGLO-INDIAN CARVED EBONY TILT-TOP CENTER TABLE THE TOP INLAID WITH RADIATING PLUMES OF SPECIMEN WOODS GALLE DISTRICT CIRCA 1825 30 1⁄ 2 INCHES HIGH 45 INCH DIAMETER A SIMILAR TABLE IS ILLUSTRATED IN AMIN JAFFER “FURNITURE FROM BRITISH INDIA AND CEYLON” FIGURE 142 PAGE 373
Booth A1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 122
10/31/18 9:08 AM AM 1/4/19 1:21
“The most important map in American history” - John Mitchell. A Map of the British and French Dominions in North America. [1773].
Daniel Crouch Rare Books info@crouchrarebooks.com crouchrarebooks.com
London 4 Bury Street St James’s London SW1Y 6AB +44 (0)20 7042 0240
New York 24 East 64th Street New York NY 10065 +1 (212) 602 1779 Booth E14
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1/4/19 1:21 AM
Winter Show 19.qxp_Layout 1 20/11/2018 15:37 Page 1
“There’s a little bit of sweetness in the heart of every woman’” Salvador Dali
Honeycomb Heart, c. 1953. Unique 18ct gold pendant/brooch in the form of an asymmetrical heart, the edge set with four rows of cabochon rubies, the centre with a honeycomb pattern highlighted with circular-cut diamonds, and with a pendant tear drop. Signed Dalí to inside edge of honeycomb at the top right. Made by Carlos Alemany, New York. 8.0 x 6.4 cm (3.15 x 2.5 ins) Didier and Martine Haspeslagh 66b Kensington Church Street,London, W8 4BY, UK Tel. +44 7973 800415 info@didierltd.com — www.didierltd.com — Instagram: @didierltd.com 124 Booth D8 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 124
11/21/18 1/4/19 5:53 1:21PM AM
Booth B10 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 125
11/1/18 6:41 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Booth C8 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 126
11/5/18 AM 1/4/19 10:56 1:21 AM
P eter F etterman G allery ClassiC Vintage & Modern Fine art PhotograPhy
Ansel Adams. Moon and Half Dome, CA, 1960 ŠAnsel Adams Trust
one of the largest inventories of Classic Photography in the United states Private Appointments available.
2525 MiChigan aVe. | gallery a1 | santa MoniCa, Ca 90404 www.PeterFetterMan.CoM | P. 310-453-6463 | inFo@PeterFetterMan.CoM Booth D14 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 127
11/14/18 PM 1/4/19 12:49 1:21 AM
38/39 Duke Street, St James’s, London SW1Y 6DF T: +44 (0) 20 7839 5666 | E: gallery@peterfiner.com | www.peterfiner.com
A Rare Italian Close Helmet for the Field, c. 1540 Northern Italy, probably Milan. Steel. Provenance: Private collection, France. Booth A3 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 128
11/14/18 11:04 PM AM 1/7/19 12:34
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx The 2019 Winter Antiques Show at The Park Avenue Armory! xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx January 18th - 27th xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Park Ave at 67th Street x New York City, NY 10065 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx thewintershow.org xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Open Daily 12pm–8pm
Opening Night Party January 17th, 2019
Sundays & Thursdays 12pm–6pm
Young Collector’s Night January 24th, 2019
For tickets or additional information contact one of us.
Steven Weiss 212-729-0011
Ray Haradin 412-343-8733 raytoys@aol.com
Bre Day 412-841-0623 bremarieday@gmail.com
Leon Weiss 917-991-7352 leonweiss@me.com
Booth B13
EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 129
11/28/18 PM 1/4/19 12:55 1:21 AM
Wei Ligang, Bell Chanting Covering the Shu Pavilion, 2015, ink and acrylic on paper, 38 × 351/2in
61 C ADOGAN SQUARE · LONDON SW1X 0HZ T + 4 4 (0 )207 82 3 1 3 9 5 C ELL +1 917 455 103 5 LONDON@MICHAELGOEDHUIS.COM
·
W W W. M I C H A E L G O E D H U I S . C O M
130 Booth A3 Goedhuis Winter Show ad.indd EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 130 1
27/10/2015 10/29/18 1:0112:21 PM 1/4/19 1:21 AM
Booth B5 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 131
12/3/18 PM 1/4/19 12:45 1:21 AM
We buy aRt libRaRies in the united states Recently New York New York Baltimore Santa Monica Washington
acquiRed
The Library of Professor Jim Draper The Jewellery Library of Ralph Esmerian Thomas Segal Gallery Library The Old Master Library of Professor Jean Luc Bordeaux The Library of Philip Conisbee
thomaS heneage art BookS 42 Duke Street St J ameS ’ S L onDon SW1Y 6DJ The foremost specialist art bookshop in the English speaking world. We focus on books for the art world from the ancient to the modern, and buy, sell and curate art libraries. We also deal in fine works of art associated with antiquarianism in the library. +44 (0)20 7930 9223
•
artbooks@heneage.com
•
www.heneage.com
Booth D13 US FINAL 4 with bleed.indd 1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 132
27/10/2015 10:40 12/10/18 4:25 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Booth D3 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 133
10/25/18 3:23 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
William MacLeod
(1811–1892)
View of the City of Washington From the Anacostia Shore, 1856 Oil on canvas, 37 x 53 in. Signed and dated (at lower right): Wm MacLeod 1856
THE FULLER BUILDING 41 E A ST 57 TH STR E E T N E W YO R K 10 0 2 2 212 . 535 . 8 810 HIRSCHL ANDADLER .COM
134 Booth B9 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 134
10/29/18 9:35 AM AM 1/4/19 1:21
David Ligare
(b. 1945)
Still Life with Figs, Peaches, and Rose, 2018 Oil on canvas, 40 x 60 in. Signed and dated (at lower right): L; (on verso): D. Ligare / 2018
THE FULLER BUILDING
HIRSCHL & ADLER MODERN
41 E A ST 57 TH STR E E T N E W YO R K 10 0 2 2 212 . 535 . 8 810 HIRSCHL ANDADLER .COM
Booth A9 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 2 61109_PG_104.175.indd 135
10/29/18 9:35 AM AM 1/4/19 1:21
HYDE PARK ANTIQUES, LTD. FINEST ENGLISH 18TH AND EARLY 19TH CENTURY FURNITURE
A George III Brass-Mounted Padouk, Fustic and Satinwood Commode CIRCA 1775
836 BROADWAY NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10003 212-477-0033 hydeparkantiques.com For the serious collector and true connoisseur
136 Booth D5 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 136
11/15/18 5:05 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Booth C11 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 137
12/27/18 AM 1/4/19 10:10 1:21 AM
BIsrael.WAS.Fall2018v3_BI.WAS.ad.2018 10/26/18 1:20 PM Page 1
A bronze fountain figure by American sculptor, Edith Barretto Parsons (1878-1956), entitled "Frog Baby", inscribed “EDITH BARRETTO PARSONS”. The figure, a girl standing on a sphere resting on four frogs, each hand holding the leg of a squirming, captured frog, raised on a lead pump housing, the whole in a lead ground basin 49 ins. in diameter, American, ca. 1940. Overall 52 ins. high. Barbara Israel Garden Antiques specializes in the finest antique garden ornament and furniture from Europe and America. Call to inquire about our on-site ornament placement and design services. By Appointment · Katonah, N Y · 212-744-6281 www.barbaraisrael.com Booth C6 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 138
10/29/18 1/4/19 2:53 1:21PM AM
BERGDORF GOODMAN 754 5th Avenue, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10019 WWW.KENTSHIRE.COM
Booth C1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 139
11/12/18 AM 1/4/19 11:09 1:21 AM
A fine Brussels Tapestry,The Defeat of Porus from The Story of Alexander the Great series, late 17th century. Workshop of Geraert Peemans.
KESHISHIAN
73 Pimlico Road, London SW1W 8NE, UK. Tel +44 207 730 8810 New York Tel 212 956 1586 info@keshishiancarpets.com www.keshishiancarpets.com
Booth C12
11/29/18 11:15 AM 1/4/19 11:35 1:21 AM
TWS_KESHISHIAN_Ad_2019_ab_11_20_18_Final EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 Left.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 140
KELLY
KINZLE 717.495.3395
kellykinzle@comcast.net
Visit us online at KellyKinzleAntiques.com
Outstanding Carolina Map Powder Horn from the French and Indian War Owned by Captain Charles Fornin Richardes of the 95th Regiment stationed at Fort Prince George. Masterful polychrome engraving with fine detail showing a view of the city of Charleston and the rivers surrounding the city. The horn also includes vignettes of Fort Prince George and Fort Johnson, numerous other details and fine banded and sawtooth borders. 12" long.
141 Booth A13 Kinzle_WAS19.indd 48
EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 141
11/21/18 11:40 AM
11/21/18 6:25 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
LEBRETON
LEBRETONGALLERY.COM Booth D16 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 142
10/29/18 4:36 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Les enLuminures paris • new york • chicago
Book of Hours (Use of Paris) France, Paris, c. 1400-1410 15 large miniatures by the Master of the Bible Historiale MS fr. 159 f.109v - f.110, Female donor presented by patron saint John the Baptist
1, rue Jean-Jacques Rousseau Escalier A, 2e étage 75001 Paris, FRANCE tel +33 1 42 60 15 58 info@lesenluminures.com
23 East 73rd Street 7th Floor, Penthouse New York, NY 10021, USA tel +1 212 717 7273 newyork@lesenluminures.com
980 North Michigan Ave. Suite 1330 Chicago, IL 60611, USA tel +1 773 929 5986 chicago@lesenluminures.com
JOB: EastSideHouse_WAS_2019 CYANMAGENTAYELLOWBLACK
www.lesenluminures.com www.textmanuscripts.com www.medievalbooksofhours.com www.medieval-rings.com EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1
EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 143
11/14/18 11:05 AM
Booth A6
11/14/18 11:05 AM 1:21 AM
www.lesenluminures.com www.textmanuscripts.com www.medievalbooksofhours.com www.medieval-rings.com1/4/19
Levy.WAS ad.19.FINAL_Layout 1 10/18/18 10:29 AM Page 1
A detail from a Three Shell Blocked Front Chest of Drawers.
Please contact the gallery for a copy of our 2019 catalog.
24 East 84th Street • New York, NY 10028 212-628-7088 • www.levygalleries.com Monday-Friday 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Other times by appointment
We will also be open the following Saturdays: January 12, 19, and 26.
Booth E6 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 2 61109_PG_104.175.indd 144
10/29/18 6:44 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
George Romney 1734–1802 · detail from The Leveson-Gower Children: a study for Romney’s masterpiece, 1776 Pen and brown ink and brown wash · 9⅜ x 9½ inches · 238 x 241 mm
Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd British Art 3 Clifford Street · London W1S 2LF +44 (0)20 7734 8686 pictures@libson-yarker.com www.libson-yarker.com
Booth B8 LL&JH_2019.indd 1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 145
28/09/2018 14:31 10/8/18 1:49 PM 1/4/19 1:21 AM
N A T H A N L I V E R A N T A N D S O N, LLC •ANTI Q U E S • 168 SOUTH MAIN STREET • PO BOX 103 • COLCHESTER, CT 06415 • (860) 537-2409
www.liverantantiques.com • e-mail: mail@liverantantiques.com 146
Booth D10 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 146
11/12/18 4:35 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Booth A10 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 3 61109_PG_104.175.indd 147
11/19/18 5:03 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
Specializing in 20th Century Fine art and Design
“Chinoise” Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875 – 1942) Gilded Plaster, 1913
Lost City Arts 18 Cooper Square New York, NY 10003 212-375-0500
www.lostcityarts.com
148 Booth B2 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 148
12/3/18 AM 1/4/19 11:55 1:21 AM
445 PARK AVENUE • NEW YORK, NY 10022 212-644-6400 • www.MackloweGallery.com
Macklowe Gallery specializes in antique and estate jewelry, the lamps and glass of Louis Comfort Tiffany, French Art Nouveau furniture and objects, and lithographs by Alphonse Mucha. Booth C9 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 149
10/24/18 8:51 AM AM 1/4/19 1:21
Booth C7 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 150
11/21/18 6:33 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
GOGYO THE FIVE ELEMENTS Five Japanese Masters of the Art of Clay
火 Fire
木
土
Wood
Earth
水
金
Water
Metal
JOAN B MIRVISS LTD
JAPANESE ART Antique - Contemporary 39 East 78th Street, 4th Floor | New York NY 10075 Telephone 212 799 4021 | www.mirviss.com Booth E5 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC100.indd 1 WAS 2019 Catalogue Ad11.indd 61109_PG_104.175.indd 151 1
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Oscar Florianus Bluemner
(1867–1938)
Silver Moon,
1927 Watercolor and pencil on paper, 13⁵⁄₁₆ x 9¹⁵⁄₁₆ inches Signed at lower right with monogram: Bluemner
Thomas Wilmer Dewing
(1851–1938)
May (Welcome Sweet Springtime),
c. 1890–1900
Oil on canvas, 20¼ x 24¼ inches Signed at lower right: TW Dewing
Menconi + Schoelkopf 22 e 80 st, nyc 10075
212 879 8815
info@msfineart.com
msfineart.com
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154 Booth A2 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 154
10/31/18 1:50 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
SPECIALISTS IN AMERICAN ART FROM 1700 TO 1950 AND OLD MAPS FROM 1500 TO 1880
An important and rare image in memory of Alexander Hamilton, engraved by J. Scoles, c.1805. The two female figures on either side of Hamilton’s monument are Liberty on the left and Columbia on the right. Liberty is holding a liberty pole, a staff with a Phrygian cap, which became a rallying point for the Sons of Liberty during the Revolutionary War. Columbia is seen holding the American Flag, the fifteen star, fifteen strip flag authorized by the Flag Act of January 13, 1794. It was the only United States flag to have more than thirteen stripes. ONE OF THE MANY IMPORTANT AND RARE WORKS OF ART BEING OFFERED
INC.
OVER 100 YEARS OF BUYING, SELLING AND BUILDING AMERICAN ART COLLECTIONS
WWW.OLDPRINTSHOP.COM ROBERT K. NEWMAN HARRY S. NEWMAN 150 LEXINGTON AVENUE AT 30TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10016-8108 TEL 212.683.3950 INFO@OLDPRINTSHOP.COM
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10/24/18 3:01 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
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10/24/18 6:54 AM PM 1/4/19 1:21
WinterShow-2019.RIGHT:PeterPap
10/26/18
2:01 PM
Page 1
Peter Pap Oriental Rugs, Inc. DISTINCTIVE ANTIQUE RUGS SINCE 1976
Kashgar circa 1800 East Turkestan 7' 1" x 12' 5"
This exceptional carpet was woven in the Tarim Basin area of what is now the Chinese autonomous region of Xinjiang, most probably in the vicinity of the ancient Silk Road city of Khotan. Weavings from the oasis cities of this region combine Chinese and local design elements and are often informed by models from further west in Central Asia and beyond.
Exhibiting:
April 26 – 28, 2019 The Philadelphia Antiques & Art Show The Navy Yard, Philadelphia
128 Presidio Avenue San Francisco, California 415.956.3300 By Appointment
1225 Main Street Dublin, New Hampshire 603.563.8717 By Appointment
inquiries @ peterpap.com
View over 1,500 rugs online www.peterpap.com
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1/4/19 1:21 10/29/18 4:05 AM PM
EDWARD HOPPER (1882-1967)
Sierra Madre at Saltillo, 1943, watercolor on paper, 20 x 28 inches. © 2019 courtesy Gerald Peters Gallery
24 EAST 78TH STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10075 | (212) 628 - 9760 | WWW.GPGALLERY.COM 158 Booth D15 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 158
10/29/18 1:09 PM 1/4/19 1:21 AM
1 North Madison Street, Middleburg , VA 20117 www.redfoxfineart.com 703.851.5160 above: FRANK W. BENSON (American, 1862-1951) Lower Camp Pool (detail), oil on canvas, 32 x 40 inches, signed and dated ‘28
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11/7/18 9:28 AM 1/4/19 1:21
3964 Winter Antiques Handbook DPS.qxp_3964 Winter Antiques Handbook DPS 31/10/2018 13:32 Page 1
RONALD PHILLIPS FINE ANTIQUE ENGLISH FURNITURE
A PAIR OF GLOBES BY SENEX DATED 1715 PROVENANCE: EDWARD HOLYOKE 9TH PRESIDENT OF HARVARD COLLEGE 26 BRUTON STREET, LONDON W1J 6QL +44 (0)207 493 2341 ADVICE @ RONALDPHILLIPS.CO.UK
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3964 Winter Antiques Handbook DPS.qxp_3964 Winter Antiques Handbook DPS 31/10/2018 13:32 Page 2
RONALD PHILLIPS FINE ANTIQUE ENGLISH FURNITURE
THE GLEMHAM HALL GAINSBOROUGH ARMCHAIRS RETAINING ORIGINAL NEEDLEWORK
RONALDPHILLIPSANTIQUES.COM 161 Booth E2 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 2 61109_PG_104.175.indd 161
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2629-ROBINSONwas.qxp_Layout 1 10/18/18 12:27 PM Page 1
INC. ESTABLISHED 1912
Antique Jewelry ~ Silver ~ Objets ~ Porcelain ~ Glass
NEW YORK 480 Park Avenue 212.752.6166
NANTUCKET 2 S. Beach Street 508.825.8909
info@jrobinson.com Booth C2 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 162
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David A. Schorsch~Eileen M. Smiles
American Antiques
ANTIQUARIAN EQUITIES, INC. 358 MAIN STREET SOUTH, WOODBURY, CONNECTICUT 06798 TELEPHONE: 203-263-3131 TELEFAX: 203-263-2622 EMAIL: CONTACT@SCHORSCH-SMILES.COM WWW. SCHORSCH-SMILES. COM EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 163
Booth A8 10/29/18 6:44 AM PM 1/4/19 1:22
I LIFT MY LAMP BESIDE THE GOLDEN DOOR
I LOVE NEW YORK QUILT Embroidered Silk • 1893 Maker Unknown • Commemorates “Mother F 1813 - 1894” Dimensions: 61 1/2 x 62 inches The “I Love New York” Quilt features Early Agrarian Motifs and Engineering Marvels after the Civil War along with The Liberty Bell: 1776 Statue of Liberty: 1886
Brooklyn Bridge: 1883 Cleopatra’s Needle in Central Park: 1881 The Great Chicago Ferris Wheel: 1893 The Eiffel Tower: 1889 • Engineered by Eiffel, who built the Statue of Liberty.
Boston, MA stephenscoreantiques@gmail.com Booth E3 TWS_Stephen_Score_Ad_2019_FINAL_11_27_v2.indd EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 164
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An American Aesthetic Movement Jug New York, 1881 by Tiffany & Co. • Height: 8 1⁄2"; Weight: 35 oz.
S. J. Shrubsole 26 East 81st Street, New York, NY 10028 Tel: (212) 753-8920 • E-mail: inquiries@shrubsole.com • www.shrubsole.com Booth A5 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 165
10/15/18 9:45 PM AM 1/7/19 12:37
Maxine Helfman (born 1953) Forefathers, 2018 archival pigment prints series of 16, edition of 7
www.ElleShushan.com Booth D1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 166
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ROBERT SIMON FINE ART Exhibiting at The Winter Show
â—†
Booth number C12
Spanish Colonial, Cuzco School eighteenth century
Baptism Dish Silver, 9H inches high, 17H inches wide
22 east 80th street, new york, ny 10075 t: 212.288.9712 rbs @ robertsimon.com www.robertsimon.co m Booth C10 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 167
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Spencer Marks
Fine Antique & 20th Century Silver www.spencermarks.com
From the desk of: “Diamond Jim” Brady
Exceptional American art nouveau desk set by Whiting, New York City, c. 1900, design attributed to Charles Osborne
Spencer Gordon, III Mark F. McHugh
P.O. Box 330, Southampton, Massachusetts 01073 (413) 527-7344 Member: The Art and Antiques Dealers League of America, CINOA & The Antique Dealers’ Association of America Booth E11 east side r lhp.indd 1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019.indd 2 61109_PG_104.175.indd 168
10/5/2018 8:34:58 10/8/18 2:09AM PM 1/4/19 1:22 AM
GALERIE ST. ETIENNE Celebrating Our 80th Anniversary
Exhibiting works by Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka, “Grandma” Moses, Egon Schiele and other gallery “firsts”
Clockwise from top left: Egon Schiele, Portrait of a Woman with Orange Hat (Gerti Schiele) [detail], 1910. Watercolor and black crayon on paper. Signed and dated, lower right. 17 1/2" x 12" (44.5 x 30.5 cm). Kallir D. 499. Oskar Kokoschka, Standing Nude Girl [detail]. 1919. Pen and ink on cream wove paper. Signed, lower right. 26 3/8" x 16 1/2" (67 x 41.9 cm).
Gustav Klimt, Tragedy [detail], 1897-98. Pencil and black crayon on soft, heavy tan wove paper. 18" x 12 3/8" (45.7 x 31.4 cm). Anna Mary Robertson “Grandma” Moses, Auction #2 [detail], 1961.Oil on pressed wood. Signed, lower left. 16" x 24" (40.6 x 61 cm). Kallir 1508. © 2019 Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY
24 West 57th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 212-245-6734 gallery@ gseart.com www.gseart.com Booth D7 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 169
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C a r o l l e T h i b au T - P o m e r a n T z a nTique W allPaPer P anels • a rTs D eCoraTifs neW York : By Appointment Only Tel: +1 212 759 6048
•
carolle@ctpdecorativearts.com
P aPiers P einTs a nCiens Paris : Tel: +33 6 09 05 35 98
Wood-block printed wallpaper panel, late 18th century, France Booth D6 WallpaperPageAd116a.indd 1 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 171
11/6/18 4:26 PM 11/7/18 12:41 5:59 PM 1/7/19
23 East 67th Street
Phone
212 288 2588
New York, NY 10065
info@erikthomsen.com
art, gold lacquer works, bamboo baskets,
Open Mon – Fri 11– 5
www.erikthomsen.com
and ceramics from the 5th to the 21st c.
Japanese folding screens, paintings, ink
172 Booth B11 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 172
12/10/18 6:07 AM PM 1/4/19 1:22
THROC KMORTON FINE ART
OLMEC
Standing Figure
1100-500 BCE, Serpentine, W: 15 in. (Los Angeles, California Collec tion, 1970s)
1 4 5 E A S T 5 7 t h S T R E E T, 3 r d F L O O R , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 2 2 Tel. 212. 223. 1059 Fax. 212. 223. 1937 www.throckmorton-nyc.com info@throckmorton-nyc.com Galler y Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 11 AM - 5 PM Booth B12 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_104.175.indd 173
11/19/18 PM 1/4/19 12:18 1:22 AM
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Thomas Doughty
Views of the Fairmount Waterworks, 1826
SCHWARZ www.schwarzgallery.com
1806 Chestnut Street Philadelphia PA 19103 215 563 4887 mail@schwarzgallery.com
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178
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We celebrate East Side House Settlement and The Winter Show’s 65th Anniversary Sapphire Jubilee
Sound Point Capital Management, L.P. 375 Park Avenue, 33rd Floor New York, NY 10152 212.895.2260 soundpointcap.com
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Photo Courtesy of Nathan Kirkman 61109_PG_176.240.indd 181 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC101.indd 1
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Long–Billed Curlew Polychrome wood decoy Salem, Massachusetts area, 1880–90
AUCTION NEW YORK JANUARY 2019 EXHIBITION FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 1334 YORK AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY 10021 ENQUIRIES +1 212 606 7130 ERIK.GRONNING@SOTHEBYS.COM SOTHEBYS.COM/TEIGER #SOTHEBYSTEIGER SOTHEBY’S, INC. LICENSE NO. 1216058. © SOTHEBY’S, INC. 2018
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DOWNLOAD SOTHEBY’S APP FOLLOW US @SOTHEBYS
1/4/19 12:48 1:47 AM 12/12/18 PM
susanferrierinteriors.com 183
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May 31–June 2, 2019
Mount Vernon Symposium “Fashionable above two thousand years” Classical Art and Architecture of the Founding Era
Men and women of America’s founding era inhabited a world heavily influenced by ancient Rome and Greece. Classical references permeated everything from government and education to drama and literature. In art and architecture, advocates of the classical tradition aimed “to fix the Taste” of the fledging nation on a noble and enduring simplicity, “fashionable above two thousand years.” George Washington himself embraced this spirit, introducing neoclassical ornament in the New Room at Mount Vernon and setting the president’s table with allegorical figures representing the arts and sciences. Join leading curators, historians, and art and architectural historians as they examine a wide variety of Greco-Roman styles, influences, references, and forms that early Americans admired and celebrated.
La Peinture (Painting), Angoulême porcelain, Paris, France, ca. 1789. This recently rediscovered biscuit porcelain figure is one of 12 classically attired figures of the arts and sciences sent to George Washington by Gouverneur Morris in 1790. Courtesy of Stephen L. Zabriskie of Aurora, NY
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mountvernon.org/mvsymposium
11/29/18 7:17 AM PM 1/4/19 1:47
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Earning Your Trust Since 1890
40 West Gude Drive, Suite 100, Rockville, MD 20850 Tel: 202.628.1281 Fax: 202.628.2366 Email: info@weschlers.com www.weschlers.com EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_176.240.indd 186
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APPRAISERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA the premier organization for appraisers of the fine and decorative arts
Insurance, Donation & Estate Appraisals The Appraisers Association of America has a membership of 750 appraisers across the country specializing in 121 different areas. Our members hold the highest level of expertise, and have unparalleled experience valuing art. All of our members prepare appraisals according the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice, surpassing the qualification required by the IRS. To learn more about finding the right appraiser to value your art, contact us at (212) 889-5404, ext. 14 or visit www.appraisersassociation.org.
Excellence: Standards, Education and Practice 188
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11/28/18 1:06 AM PM 1/4/19 1:47
Winter Antiques Show
The premier event for master drawings, paintings and sculpture. Take a journey through art history on Madison Avenue
Master Drawings New York 2019 january 26 –f e bruary 2
Preview january 25
www.masterdrawingsnewyork.com Please contact us for a complimentary brochure. masterdrawingsny
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masterdrawingny
masterdrawingsny
Arshile Gorky, Untitled (from a 1931 Sketchbook) Courtesy of Pavel Zoubok Fine Art, New York Š 2018 The Arshile Gorky Foundation/ Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
11/28/18 AM 1/4/19 10:15 1:47 AM
nyc | chgo 646.485.8081 | 312.787.6123 branca.com 191
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A Rizzoli Electa publication
OLANA.org EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC.indd 1 61109_PG_176.240.indd 192
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American Furniture, Folk & Decorative Arts To be offered April 2019: One of the earliest hand-drawn views of Harvard College “An East Perspective View From the Church in Cambridge� (detail), by Samuel Griffin (1762-1812), Class of 1784, watercolor and ink on laid paper, framed 14 1/2 in. x 21 in. (sight). provenance: By descent in the family of the artist to the present owner.
inquiries: Lynda Cain | 267.414.1237| lcain@freemansauction.com
freemansauction.com |
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1808
chestnut st | philadelphia, pa
11/19/18 6:10 AM PM 1/4/19 1:47
AUCTIONS ~ APPRAISALS ~ ART ADVISORY ~ ESTATE SALES 1120 N. FAIRFAX STREET, OLD TOWN ALEXANDRIA, VA 22314 www.potomackcompany.com ~ 703.684.4550 ~ VA#0704
THE ROBERTA TANKEL EUROPEAN PORCELAIN COLLECTION & PRIVATE FRENCH FURNITURE COLLECTION FROM A CHATEAU IN FRANCE February 2019 Auction
Preview: January 21 - February 2
Pair of Meissen Potpourri Urns with Leopard Head Covers
Pair of Meissen Figural Groups of the Four Seasons Spode Five-Piece Floral Decorated Cobalt Ground Garniture, circa 1817
François Linke Pair of Louis XV Style Ormolu-Mounted Mahogany Commodes, mounted by Leon Messanger, circa 1900 Provenance: Château de Malesherbes
Louis XIV Style Ormolu-Mounted Ebony Cabinet signed and dated henry Dasson 1877 after a model by André-Charles Boulle
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Pair of Charles X Gilt Paris Porcelain Lion Form Potpourri on Tole Bases, circa 1825
François Linke Louis XVI Style Ormolu-Mounted Mahogany Regulator Clock, circa 1900
Paul Sormani Louis XVI Style Ormolu & Sèvres Porcelain-Mounted Table, Late 19th Century
1/4/19 1:47 12/19/18 2:15 AM PM
AUCTIONS ~ APPRAISALS ~ ART ADVISORY ~ ESTATE SALES 1120 N. FAIRFAX STREET, OLD TOWN ALEXANDRIA, VA 22314 www.potomackcompany.com ~ 703.684.4550 ~ VA#0704
“my country ’tis of thee, sweet land of liberty” important american collections in our nation’s capital February 2, 2019 Auction Preview: January 21 - February 2
Guy Carleton Wiggins (American, 1883-1962) 5th Ave. at 55th St. Looking North, signed Oil on canvasboard: 12 x 16 in. Private Sale
Old Pension Building Built 1882-1887 by General Montgomery Meigs Now the National Building Museum
Rare Caspar Buberl (1834-1899) Union General Relief for the Pension Building, Washington D.C. Cast in terracotta from 1887 mold commissioned by Quartermaster General Montgomery Meigs (1816-1892), and by descent, Sion Hill Estate
President Thomas Jefferson, ALS, Delaware, Dated July 23, 1801. “It is disheartening to see on the approaching crisis of election, a division of that description of republicans which has certainly no strength to spare. But, my dear friend, if we do not learn to sacrifice small differences of opinion, we can never act together.”
James Edward Buttersworth (British, 1817-1894) Schooner Off Coastline with Lighthouse, Possibly Sandy Hook, signed Oil on board: 10 x 8 in.
Albert Bierstadt (American, 1830-1902) Sunset Study, signed Oil on canvas: 7 x 9 in.
Boston Chippendale Carved Mahogany Bonnet-Top Chest on Chest, ca. 1770, Inscribed “S.F. Smith, Newton Centre, Mass” Probably owned by Samuel Francis Smith Author of “My Country ’Tis of Thee”
Futility by Morgan Robertson, Rare First Edition, 1898 Fictional account of The Titan, which sank after hitting an iceberg in the Atlantic Ocean. Printed 14 years before the sinking of The Titanic, the uncanny similarities include carrying an insufficient number of lifeboats, hitting an iceberg during the night in April, and sinking in the North Atlantic
regional consigning - contact potomack representatives free shipping for qualifying consignments
Greenwich, CT Suzanne Branch suzanne@potomackco.com
New York, NY Matt Sturtevant matt@potomackco.com
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Long Island, NY Lisa Grygiel lisa@potomackco.com
Charlottesville, VA Robin Stafford robin@potomackco.com
Baltimore, MD Frances Krongard frances@potomackco.com
Seattle, WA Kathryn Coldiron kathryn@potomackco.com
1/4/19 1:47 12/19/18 2:18 AM PM
EAST SIDE HOUSE SETTLEMENT Providing Education, Innovation and Results . . . For the Whole Family
EMPOWER
INSPIRE
EDUCATE
EXPERIENCE
ENRICH
EXCEL
ACHIEVE
PERSEVERE
East Side House Settlement is a community-based nonprofit organization providing education and social services throughout the Bronx and Northern Manhattan. We believe that education is the key that enables all people to create economic and civic opportunities for themselves, their families, and their community. We enrich, supplement and enhance the New York City Education system and place post-secondary options within reach of students. We provide workforce development and career readiness training infused with technology to enable community participants to improve their economic status and lead more fulfilling lives.
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East Side House Settlement Board of Managers Chairman Philip L. Yang Jr. President Thomas H. Remien
East Side House Settlement Programs
Vice Presidents Courtney Booth Christensen Dolores O’Brien Miller Treasurer Richard E. Kolman Secretary Stephanie B. Clark Lorri J. Ahl Lucinda Ballard Debra Del Vecchio Marvena Edmond William S. Elder Fay Gambee Mrs. Thomas Shircliff Glover Thaddeus I. Gray Wendy Holmes Barclay G. Jones III Mrs. Leslie Keno Stephen J. Ketchum George G. King Christopher LaSusa Michael R. Lynch Robert L. Meyer The Honorable Eugene Oliver Jr. Robert Pondiscio Elizabeth Donnem Sigety Mrs. Charles F. Smithers Richard Ziegelasch Honorary Members Robert F.R. Ballard* Mario Buatta Mrs. Roland W. Donnem Ms. Christine Janis Andrew P. Siff Executive Director Daniel Diaz Associate Executive Directors Natalie Lozada Khris Harrison *Past President
EAST SIDE HOUSE PROGRAMS
PARTNER SCHOOLS
Community Initiative
Elementary Schools
Read NYC
PS 30 Wilton PS 179
Early Childhood Services
Urban Scholars Community School
Pre-Kindergarten Program Head Start
Middle Schools
Day Care
Accion Academy
Family Literacy
Mott Hall Community School
Youth and Young Adult Services
MS 337 The School for Inquiry and Social Justice
Attendance Improvement/ Dropout Prevention
PS/MS 18 Park Terrace
After-school and Evening Educational Program
High Schools
Certification Training
Alfred E. Smith Young Adult Borough Center
High School Equivalency Education Parent Engagement Services Post-secondary Planning & Readiness Summer Day Camp
A. Philip Randolph Camps High School
Arturo A. Schomburg Satellite Academy Bronx Bronx Regional High School George Washington Educational Campus Young Adult Borough Center Health Opportunities High School
Adult Services
Herbert H. Lehman High School
Adult Literacy Education Social Services Program
Herbert H. Lehman High School Young Adult Borough Center
Senior Citizens Program
High School for Excellence and Innovation
Financial Literacy Program
Mott Haven Community High School
Workforce Development
Mott Haven Educational Campus School for Tourism and Hospitality
Community Technology Services Computer Classes
Colleges
Certification in Microsoft Office
CUNY Borough of Manhattan Community Center
Community Advocacy
CUNY Bronx Community College CUNY Hostos Community College CUNY Lehman College
East Side House Settlement 337 Alexander Avenue Bronx, New York 10454 Telephone: (718) 665-5250 Fax: (718) 585-1433 www.eastsidehouse.org
197
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THE HERITAGE SOCIETY East Side House Settlement has established the Heritage Society, in which membership is offered to qualified donors based on their cumulative gifts through direct contributions, bequests, and scholarships. Our intention is to recognize and honor generous donors whose contributions are vital to the fulfillment of our mission and to the continued legacy of philanthropy, which has benefited East Side House for more than one hundred and twenty-five years. For information, please contact Laura Daley, Director of Development at East Side House Settlement at ldaley@eastsidehouse.org or 718-665-5250. Philanthropist ($250,000 and over) ANONYMOUS ROBERT ALTMAN ESTATE OF LOUIS W. BOWEN ESTATE OF JOYCE GOLDEN ESTATE OF WILLIAM & ANN ZELL Patron ($100,000 to $249,999) W. GRAHAM ARADER III MR. & MRS. MARVIN H. DAVIDSON ESTATE OF C. WARREN FORCE ESTATE OF BERENICE B. HETKIN ESTATE OF JULIE KAMMERER RANDALL McCALLUM MRS. EDMOND J. SAFRA MRS. CHARLES F. SMITHERS JEAN L. & ROBERT A. STERN ENDOWMENT PHILIP L. YANG JR. Sponsor ($50,000 to $99,999)
David Long
Mimi & Peter Haas Fund
Michael Bank
Elizabeth Valk Long
Ms. Teresa F. Heinz
Mr. & Mrs. Carl S. Forsythe III
Michael Lynch & Susan Baker
Wendy Holmes & Kevin McAlister
Michael Gleissner
Jack C. McAlinden
Christine Janis
Richard B. Hollaman
Estate of Cleo Lawson Mitchell
Barclay G. Jones III
Ms. Ezra Kaplan
John H. Reilly Jr.
Paul Tudor Jones
Stephen J. Ketchum
Candida Romanelli
Mr. & Mrs. Mark Elliot Kingdon
Coco & Arie L. Kopelman
Estate of Joseph D. Ryle
Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Kolman
James F. McCollom Jr.
Stephen R. Seiter
Mr. & Mrs. Henry R. Kravis
The Honorable Eugene Oliver Jr.
Jeffrey M. Siegal
Valerie Anne Kreiger
George D. O’Neill
Elizabeth Donnem Sigety
Anuj Malhotra
Thomas Remein & Mary Anne Hunting
Peter & Lenore Standish
Stephen J. McCarthy
Rodney Strickland
Ellen and Robert Meyer
Francesco Scattone
Joan P. Young
Dolores O’Brien Miller
Supporter ($25,000 to $49,999)
Friend ($10,000 to $24,999)
Peter Muller
Dr. Darrick E. Antell
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Ames
Mr. & Mrs. James N. Noonan
Mr. & Mrs. Robert F.R. Ballard
Jonathan Brandt
Sally Phipps
William Callanan
Mr. & Mrs. Henry R. Breck
Emily Israel Pluhar
Christopher J. Carrera
Frank Brunkhorst
Caxton Associates LP
Mario Buatta
Alexander & Suzanne Rhea Foundation
Kevin Cottrell
Margaret M. Clucas
Mark Schienberg
Peter D’Angelo
Marina Rust Connor
Debora H. Schnappauf
David L. Duffy & Marcelline Thomson
Robert A. Constable
Andrew P. Siff
Sarah Lund Donnem
Harvey Silverman
John G. Duffy
Ruth Hall Smithers
Lindsay Gruber Dunham
Nancy F. Solomon
Pamela Fiori
William W. Stahl Jr.
Jean Fleischhacker
Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Wachenheim
Karen Kemp Glover
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kingman Weld
Frances Goodwin
Glenn E. Whitmore
Susan Gordon
William Zeckendorf
Morgan Stanley
Thaddeus I. Gray Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association Richard Green Sven Hsia Chandra Jessee
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Olde Hope
Fay Gambee
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FOUNDATIONS, TRUSTS, AND CORPORATIONS
$100,000 or more
$10,000 or more
The Clark Foundation
Rose M. Badgeley Residuary
Robin Hood Foundation
Charitable Trust Bank of Montreal
$50,000 or more
CAM Capital
Altman Foundation
Capital One
Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller
Goldman Sachs
Fund
Harris Mathews Charitable
Hagedorn Fund
Foundation
Gladys and Roland Harriman
Heinz Family Foundation
Foundation
Henry and Lucy Moses Fund
Willowbridge Associates Inc.
Hyde and Watson Foundation International FC Stone
$25,000 or more
MUFG Foundation
BTIG, LLC
Neuberger Berman Foundation
KCL Capital, L.P.
The New Yankees Stadium Fund
George Link Jr. Foundation
New York City Football Club
Theodore Luce Foundation
Reavis Page Jump LLP
National Center for Families Learning
$5,000 or more
Teagle Foundation
Theodore H. Barth Foundation
Weeden & Co. LP
Colgate-Palmolive Con Edison Epstein Teicher Philanthropies Tanaka Memorial Foundation
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INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP GIFTS
President’s Circle ($5,000 or more)
Supporters ($1,000-$2,400)
Donors ($500-$999)
AIG
Ms. Lorri Ahl & Mr. Michael Edsall
Dr. Darnisa Amante
Nauman Barakat
Ice-T & Coco Austin
Mr. & Mrs. David Blank
Frank Brunkhorst
Robin Aviv
Ms. Anne Tracy Bricker
Chris J. Carrera & Emily Chen
Bank of Montreal
Ms. Lori Cohen
Courtney & Gus Christensen
Mr. Kells Barnett
Ms. Lizzie Decarlo
Debra & Claudio Del Vecchio
Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Berbaum
Mr. John Edmonds
Thaddeus I. Gray
Kevin Brandmeyer
Empanadas for the Bronx
Wendy Holmes & Kevin McAlister
Mr. Kenneth Brown
Ms. Andrea Henderson Fahnestock
Coco & Arie L. Kopelman
Dayton Carr
Mr. & Mrs. Xavier Flouret
Christopher LaSusa
Mr. & Mrs. Craig Cerrone
Ms. Wendy Goodman
Scott McCormack
Msgiavonni Clements
Mr. Christian Gudefin
Ellen & Robert Meyer
Sheridan W. Culvahouse
The Honorable Eugene Oliver Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick M. Danziger
Hospitality Committee for United Nations Delegations, Inc
Stephen Prince & Hailey Lustig
Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Danziger
Ms. Christine Janis
Thomas Remien & Mary Anne Hunting
Mr. & Mrs. Gordon DuGan
Ms. Celerie Kemble & Mr. Boykin Curry IV
Samlyn Capital, LLC
Mr. Daniel Furstenberg
Francesco Scattone
Goldman Sachs Gives
Susan S. & Kenneth L. Wallach Foundation
Scott Gottlieb
Mr. & Mrs. Fanjul
Ms. Barbara Haley
Eric Wenberg
JP Morgan Private Bank
Eric Wittenberg
Mr. Michael Kleinberg
Philip L. Yang Jr.
Mr. Paul Koenigsberg
Mr. & Mrs. William Zeckendorf
Mr. Michael Landrigan Mr. Pablo Lapuerta
Sustainers ($2,500-$4,999)
Joe Lodi
Mr. William Lavia John T. Lillis Steven Litt Thomas Mahoney Mr. & Mrs. Edgar M. Masinter Mr. Joseph Mauro Mr. & Mrs. David Andrew McCreery Mr. & Mrs. Richard Prosser Mellon Todd & Nicole Michaels Mr. Richard Morris Mr. & Mrs. Gerald R. Noonan
Mr. & Mrs. Robert F.R. Ballard
Ambassador & Mrs. John L. Loeb Jr.
The John N. Blackman Sr. Foundation
Michael Lynch & Susan Baker
Ms. Ruthann Cloman
Ms. Jennifer Margo
Sarah Lund Donnem
The M & T Charitable Foundation
Fay Gambee
Mr. Charles Murphy
Georgescu Family Foundation
Mr. Jeffrey Nicholas
Goldman, Sachs & Company
Mr. Lorenzo Ottaviano
Mr. Samuel Hamsley
Janet C. Ross
Mr. Steven Harris
Allessandro Saracino-Fendi
Mr. Chris Heinz
Mr. Paul Schulman
United Neighborhood Houses of New York, Inc.
Ms. Teresa F. Heinz
The Selz Foundation
Nicole Walters
Mr. Samuel Hensley
Mr. Shimon Zlotnikov
iStar Inc.
Shore Point Distributing Company, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. Barclay Jones
Mr. Andrew P. Siff
Mr. Peter Lamm
Elizabeth Donnem Sigety
Dolores O’Brien Miller
Peter & Susan Solomon
Liz & Jeff Peek
Bonnie & Tom Strauss
Ms. Schnappauf & Mr. Shipps
Mr. Robert Valdes-Rodriguez
Mr. & Mrs. Francois J. Maisonrouge
Mr. & Mrs. James M. Noonan Ms. Jill Pemberton Jean Perrachon Jackie & Mike Powers Mr. Bruce Reilly Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Rittereiser Mr. & Mrs. Jon W. Rotenstreich Samuel Seymour, Esq. Mr. & Mrs. Richard Solar
W.B Mason Pasakorn Yongvanich
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Associates ($100-$499)
Ms. Miranda Garrison
Maria Patterson, Esq.
Samantha Gellent
Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm Pease
Alfred M. Abate
Mr. & Mrs. Timothy M. George
Chris Pocock
Afro Ethos Ltd.
Bill Gonser
Ms. Julie Porter
Mr. & Mrs. Ainar Aijala
Mr. Noah Goodman
Sabrina Pryce
Kiarash Akrami
Mr. N. Green
Claudia & Karan Raichand
Richie & Jasmin Allred
Ms. Victoria Greenleaf
Vishal Rathee
Ms. Emilie Antonetti
Deborah Handesy
Ms. Ellen M. Richardson
Mr. & Mrs. Ayvazian
Chris Henrich
Brigitte Roepke
Mr. & Mrs. George Baker IV
Mr. & Mrs. Mark Higgins
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Schliemann
Mr. Jerome Ballan
Mrs. Sally H. Hollaman
Ms. Jean Jean L. Schmidt
Mrs. Walter Ballinger
Christina Honeysett
Peter Schwartz
Bella
Ms. Marilyn C. Hoyt
Ms. Christina Sheng
Jill Black
Jacqueline Tracey Huff
Mr. Laurence T. Sorkin
Ms. Jill Bossert
Iridescent
Sandy Sposato
Shacazia Brown
The Jacques Family
Catherine G. Sweeney
Mr. Roberto Buaron
Ligia Jaramillo
Dario Timotic
Ms. Rececca Burgoyne-Allen
Eula C. Johnson
Myriam Torres
Phyllis Burton
Robert Kaplan
Adriane Trisciuzzi
Mr. Marino Camelo
Justena Kavanagh
Mr. Andreas M. Turanski
Nancy G. Carr
KC & MK
Siddhartha Vaidya
Jonathan Carson
Mr. & Mrs. Mike Kempner
Mr. Scott Valentine
Mr. & Mrs. John Chachas
Mr. Sergey Kraytman
David Watt
Tara Chambers
Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Krinsky
Richard Weil, Esq.
Nikhil Chatterjee
Mr. Jon Kully
Jennifer Werner
Mr. Yannick Chiasson
Mr. & Mrs. Sacha Lainovic
Matt Whitworth
Dustin Cidorowich
Stephen LeMenager
Ken Whyte
Mr. Steve Corsun
Blake Leong
Mr. Andrew W. Wilson
Terrence & Charlotte Daley
Rasheedah Leslie
Nija Wilson
Ms. Marna Davis
Mr. David Lester
Mr. Kane Wu
John M. Delehanty, Esq.
Mr. Howard B. Levi
Mr. George Zinycz
Ms. Sue Devine
Amy Lewandowski
Mr. Spencer Zuech
Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Diserio
Vivian Lewis
Timothy Domian
Marian Lindberg, Esq.
Alexandra Doan Drucker & David Drucker
Holly Liss
Marvena Edmond Philip Colleck, Ltd.
Ms. Barbara Edwards John Edwards Heather Egan Ken Engelhart Samantha Everette Patricia Fagin Mr. & Mrs. James J. Finn Sarah Frazier Lori Freeman Edwin Frolich Chris Garrett
Heather Mack Ana Maldonado The Maritime Aquarium at Norwalk Inc. Jason McCoy Patrick McLaughlin Daniel McNamara Cody & Ben Melby Richard & Elizabeth Miller Margaret Morris Khanh Nguyen Nicholas, Amanda & James Opinsky
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East Side House In Communities with Extraordinary Challenges . . . The communities East Side House serves are some of the most vulnerable in New York City. The children and families of these communities face unimaginable challenges every day— from the lack of basic needs such as food, health care, and shelter, to community violence, and a failing education system.
. . . East Side House Brings the Power of Opportunity Despite these facts, these communities are made up of children, young adults, and parents who want more for their families. We see the potential of each individual and each family. We know with the right opportunity, they will thrive.
Providing quality education services is our mission. We go beyond the basics: every student in our early childhood programs has access to cutting-edge technology to bolster their ability to compete with their more affluent counterparts; elementary and middle school students are provided with STEM enrichment activities, culinary activities, chess, and leadership development; adults are provided with curated trainings that lead to high-demand jobs; and senior citizens are offered technology training, recreational activities, and physical fitness to make their senior years safe and fulfilling. The cornerstone of our work is with at-risk young adults. These high school age students are provided with paid internships, certification training that leads to jobs, college exploration that opens eyes, and meaningful relationships with mentors who support each student’s goals. By providing opportunity, we restore hope to the 10,000 individuals and families we serve every year.
These communities are home to some of the most troublesome distinctions: Highest rate of youth ages 16-24 who are out of work and out of school, at 30% Highest high school dropout rate, at 15% Lowest rate of adults with a college degree, at 10% Third highest rate of students living in temporary housing, at 20% Highest rate of families living in concentrated poverty at 69%, with 37% of the population making less than $15,000 a year
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At East Side House, the impact is real: 96% of our preschool students exceed New York State learning standards 89% of our summer literacy camp students improve reading skills 81% of our high school students earn a high school diploma 99% of graduates exit our programs with a constructive post-secondary path 74% of our high school graduates enroll in college 18% of our high school graduates enter the workforce 7% of our high school graduates pursue post-secondary job training
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Pathways That Lead to Progress Our Post-Secondary Pathways (PSP) program was born from the realization that the “college-for-all” mantra limits students from pursuing opportunities that lead to viable and sustainable careers. For the 30 to 40 percent of East Side House graduates who wish to pursue careers that do not require a college degree, those plans have been uncharted paths—until now. Building off the successes of our college access and workforce development programs, East Side House developed the Post-Secondary Pathways program to provide students with the opportunity to earn certificates in two high growth industries: healthcare and technology. The program’s model is unique in today’s educational landscape, allowing students to earn credentials while still enrolled in high school. Through partnerships with CUNY’s Lehman College and Bronx Lebanon Hospital, the program provides a wide range of training and learning opportunities, which this year included EKG/phlebotomy, pharmacy technology, construction, CPR, Microsoft Office Suite, and information technology (CISCO Networking). Carlos Otero, a new graduate of East Side House’s Bronx Haven High School, took full advantage of the opportunity. A lifelong lover of video games, Carlos chose the technology track and earned not one, but two certificates in basic technology skills and in software operations. “I was excited to know that I could actually put my interests on a job application and use them to build a career.” In the program’s pilot year, 150 students have received a wide range of training and learning opportunities in the health care and technology fields. The program also provides students with guided occupational preparation through career assessments, life-skills classes, career exploration activities, and internships. East Side House offers a critical solution that equips students with skills that can place them in a direct pipeline to high quality jobs. It’s just one more way we stand out as an innovator—designing educational programs that target the most critical tools necessary to build a successful future.
“This program model leverages all we have learned in 127 years of community groundwork. When you provide students with opportunity, they excel.” —Daniel Diaz, East Side House’s Executive Director.
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Giving Students The World . . . For students in the communities we serve, travel is an unobtainable dream, as most households struggle to meet basic everyday needs. Many East Side House students rarely have the opportunity to leave the city, much less travel to another country. In an effort to always provide students with enriching opportunities that will help them keep pace with an increasingly globalized world, East Side House created the Student Ambassadors Program. The program was designed with one goal: to provide East Side House students with a platform upon which they can grow into the next generation of leaders.
In the program’s inaugural year, staff embarked on a rigorous nomination process to select 20 Student Ambassadors. Students had to submit personal statements, letters of reference, academic transcripts, attendance records, and commit to a demanding leadership development workshop series.
Quotes from the Student Ambassadors “Being a Student Ambassador made me feel so proud—seeing Europe was incredible. I don’t want to think about where I might be without this chance.” –Carlos
The selected Student Ambassadors worked diligently for months developing communication, teamwork, public speaking, fundraising, and advocacy skills. They were required to participate in community give-back projects and document all their Student Ambassador experiences. Students dedicated themselves to all this while managing their high school course load, their other responsibilities such as work and family caregiving, and challenges like homelessness and family disruption.
“I am grateful to have these opportunities with East Side House. Today, I’m creating a future so unlike my past.”
All this hard work culminated in a 10-day trip to Europe where students visited London, Paris, Rome, and Florence to explore what they’ve only ever seen in their textbooks.
“I love East Side House, we’re a family now, and I will never forget them.”
–Ashley “We all grew together. Everything we did through this program was impactful.” –Tiffany “It felt like a dream that we just went through.” –Matthew
–Viola
This type of academic enrichment is a gateway to awe-inspiring lessons; lessons that transform education from a classroom environment to a world where anything seems possible. For students who are defeating all odds, testing their wings with Student Ambassadors is a life-changing experience. 204
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Meet the East Side House Student Ambassadors
When he reflects on his experience with East Side House, Matthew explains his life was one that quickly could have turned into a dark place if he had not been offered the chance to change. “I believe some opportunities come to you at just the right time. East Side House came to me at a time when I needed it most.”
Matthew Singh East Side House School: Bronx Haven High School Current Status: 2018 High School Graduate During his first two years of high school, Matthew lost his way when he began following the wrong crowd and skipping class. Before long, the bright, self-described lover of philosophy was in his own philosophical crisis, one that stripped him of purpose. “I knew I could do better for myself. I realized change was inevitable. To transition into something better, I just needed motivation,” said Matthew. He found that motivation when he transferred to East Side House’s program at Bronx Haven High School. East Side House held him accountable for his role not only in the school but in the community. “If I came in late to class, they wanted to know why, and I had to provide an answer,” said Matthew. Despite being nearly a year and a half behind in high school credits, it was clear the right guidance and structured support could enable Matthew to succeed.
Staff encouraged Matthew to apply to the Student Ambassador’s program. When selected, Matthew felt he had a new purpose. “I felt I had a great responsibility in being chosen,” said Matthew, “I felt like I had never achieved anything incredible before. This trip changed all of that.” Even getting on a plane alone was a life-changing experience for Matthew. Matthew didn’t stop there. Once he returned from the trip, he applied to the Global Citizen scholarship program and was one of twelve students in the world to be accepted. Through the program, he participated in a social justice course and visited South Africa with peers from across the globe. “Education matters,” said Matthew, “I could have been lost in the system, if not for opportunities I’m being given.” Today, Matthew credits East Side House with helping guide him toward a deeper vision for his life. After finishing his East Side House internship, he plans to pursue college studies in social justice, a path he believes was cultivated by becoming a Student Ambassador.
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Kelly Castillo East Side House School: Mott Haven Community High School Current Status: Attending Borough of Manhattan Community College
Judged. Labeled. Stuck. These were the words Kelly used to describe her experience in school after returning to New York City following seven years living in the Dominican Republic. At age 12, she was placed into English Language Learners (ELL) classrooms to build proficiency in the English language. Kelly excelled and caught up quickly, soon surpassing her peers. She felt lost and unchallenged around students who were still struggling with the language. Ironically, her frustration led her to fall behind in her classes. Weeks of disengagement turned into months. Soon, she learned she would not be on track to graduate. It was a friend’s Instagram post about East Side House that gave her the sudden burst of hope she was praying for. Kelly made her way to an open house for Mott Haven Community High School. “I knew right away this was where I wanted to be. The staff saw me for who I was, they saw me for the potential I had,” said Kelly. Kelly said she felt the support she received from East Side House staff was more than just academic. Like many students at East Side House high schools, the connection of resources through East Side House’s Social Services program can provide the missing piece in a young person’s educational journey. Staff helped her address the emotional challenges she had struggled with throughout her life. “I grew up without my father in my life,” said Kelly, “I often felt pushed aside, but here I felt like someone really listened to me.”
Kelly not only caught up in her classes, she sped ahead. Soon she was on track to graduate—a year earlier than predicted. The ultimate turning point came with her acceptance into the Student Ambassadors Program, which Kelly called the “happiest moment of her life.” As she traveled through a whirlwind of new experiences, she felt a sense of clarity for the first time. “My path was clearer than it used to be, and I understood there was so much more to explore.” She is now in her first year at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, where she studies liberal arts, and is working in East Side House’s early childhood education program. Upon completion of her second year, she plans to transfer to a four year college and pursue a degree in environmental studies or journalism. “I always had it in me. I had the potential. East Side House just put wings on my back,” said Kelly.
We thank all the patrons of The Winter Show for making these accomplishments a reality.
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Dealers & Galleries
Mark and Marjorie Allen
Bernard & S. Dean Levy, Inc.
Arader Galleries
Nathan Liverant and Son, LLC
Avery Galleries
Mellin’s Antiques
Diana H. Bittel Antiques
Moderne Gallery
Philip Bradley Antiques
Lillian Nassau, LLC
Jeff R. Bridgman
Old Hope Antiques, Inc.
Marcy Burns American Indian Arts, LLC
The Old Print Shop
Ralph M. Chait Galleries
Peter Pap Oriental Rugs, Inc.
H. L. Chalfont American Fine Art & Antiques
Janice Paull
Charles Clark
Sumpter Priddy III, Inc.
Clarke Gallery
Francis J. Purcell Antiques
The Cooley Gallery
Christopher T. Rebollo Antiques
Paul J. DeCoste
James Robinson Inc.
Dolan/Maxwell
David Schorsch and Eileen Smiles
Driscoll Babcock
Schwarz Gallery
M. Finkel & Daughter
S. J. Shrubsole, Corp.
Gemini Antiques, Ltd.
Elle Shushan
Gleason Fine Art
Ian Simmonds
Guarisco Gallery
Elliott & Grace Snyder
Stephen and Carol Huber
Somerville Manning Gallery
Hyde Park Antiques
Spencer Marks
Barbara Israel Garden Antiques
Philip Suval, Inc.
Johanna Antiques
Susan Teller Gallery
Christopher H. Jones Antiques
Thistlethwaite Americana
Kentshire
Jayne Thompson Antiques
James M. Kilvington, Inc.
Jeffrey Tillou Antiques
Kelly Kinzle Antiques
Earle D. Vandekar of Knightsbridge, Inc.
Greg K. Kramer & Co.
William Vareika Fine Arts
Betty Krulik Fine Art
Whitman Antiques
Polly Latham Asian Art
Bette and Melvyn Wolf, Inc.
James L. Price Antiques
Managed by Disaia and Bittel 208
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Philadelphia Antiques & Art Show April 26 – 28, 2019 Benefiting the Philadelphia Museum of Art, presented with The Women’s Committee
Presenting Sponsor
Philadelphiaantiquesandartshow.com
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15830-Ceramics & Furniture Winter Antiques Show ad TRADE_Layout 1 11/14/18 12:04 PM Page 1
Ceramics Up-Close: Hands-On Study Days APRIL 4–5, 2019 Join Winterthur staff, visiting scholars, and fellow collectors for this intimate and limited-registration opportunity to get an up-close look at ceramics.
Dish, London or Bristol, Eng., 1680–1710. Bequest of Henry Francis du Pont 1954.0537
Registration and details at 800.448.3883 or visit winterthur.org/ceramicsupclose.
Furniture Up-Close: Joinery and Early Cabinetmaking APRIL 25–26, 2019 Join Winterthur staff, visiting scholars, and fellow collectors for this intimate and limited-registration opportunity to get an up-close look at 17th- and 18th-century American furniture, materials, tools, and techniques. Valuables chest, Salem, Mass., 1679. Gift of Henry Francis du Pont 1957.540
Registration and details at 800.448.3883 or visit winterthur.org/furnitureupclose. 210
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James Aponovich, North Wind Clearing, 2016, oil on canvas, 40 x 50 in, Clark Gallery, Boston
January 16 - 20, 2019 22nd Edition — Reinventing the Art Fair Experience
Contemporary art, sculpture, photography, and art performances Palm Beach County Convention Center nextlevelfairs.com/artpalmbeach
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11/19/18 5:56 AM PM 1/4/19 1:47
19 – 28 JUNE 2019
HIGH QUALITY, VETTED ART, ANTIQUES, JEWELLERY & COLLECTORS’ PIECES
Buy with confidence from an inspiring array of beautiful, unusual and rare objects from antique to the present day from 160 dealers.
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GLADWELL & PATTERSON
MACKLOWE GALLERY
CANTOR FINE ART
16TH ANNUAL
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FEBRUARY 13-19, 2019 PRESIDENTS’ DAY WEEKEND PALM BEACH COUNTY CONVENTION CENTER
650 Okeechobee Blvd. West Palm Beach, FL 33401
FINE ART • HISTORIC • MODERN • SILVER • ASIAN ART & ANTIQUES • FURNITURE • CONTEMPORARY ART • AMERICANA • RARE BOOKS AND MANUSCRIPTS • PORCELAIN • CERAMICS & POTTERY
CAVALIER GALLERIES
M.S RAU ANTIQUES • OBJETS D’ART • TEXTILES • ORIENTAL CARPETS • WATCHES • CLOCKS • SCULPTURE • BRONZES • ANTIQUE & ESTATE JEWELRY • ART GLASS • ANTIQUITIES THROUGH 20TH CENTURY DESIGN
PalmBeachShow.com
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B E A C H
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11/1/18 5:14AM PM 11/5/18 AM 1/4/19 11:03 1:47
LITTLE CASSIOBURY: THE COLLECTION OF SUSAN LYALL AUCTION • January 16, 2019 VIEWING • January 12–15 • 20 Rockefeller Plaza • New York, NY 10020 CONTACT • Emily Shwajlyk • eshwajlyk@christies.com • +1 212 636 2227 christies.com/americana
Image copyright The Estate of Edward Seago, courtesy of Portland Gallery, London
Auction | Private Sales | christies.com Christie’s Inc. License #1213717
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Antiques, Art and Exquisite Objects
SAVE THE DATE! The 13th Annual Newport Show
July 27-28, 2019 GALA PREVIEW PARTY JULY 26, 2019 401.846.2669 TheNewportShow.com @TheNewportShow St. George’s School Ice Rink 375 Purgatory Road Middletown, RI
To benet Newport Historical Society and The Boys & Girls Clubs of Newport County. Early 18th century tall case clock from the Newport Historical Society’s collections.
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IMPORTANT AMERICAN FURNITURE, FOLK ART AND SILVER AUCTION • January 18, 2019
PROPERTY FROM THE WESTERVELT COMPANY
VIEWING • January 12–17 • 20 Rockefeller Plaza • New York, NY 10020 CONTACT • Sallie Glover • sglover@christies.com • +1 212 636 2230 christies.com/americana
EDWARD HICKS (1780–1849) The Peaceable Kingdom, c. 1833 oil on canvas 17 ½ x 23 ½ in. (44.45 x 59.69 cm.) Estimate: $800,000–1,200,000
Auction | Private Sales | christies.com Christie’s Inc. License #1213717
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DISCOVER DESIGN W H E R E YO U LI V E
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new york cottages & gardens november 2018
COTTAGESGARDENS.COM | NOVEMBER 2018
SLEEK RETREATS BRIDGEHAMPTON CARMEL CHELSEA EAST HAMPTON SOUTHOLD
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The world’s most prestigious art magazine
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Auctioneers & Appraisers of America’s Finest Estates & Collections
Auction January 30
NEW YORK
Michele Giovanni Marieschi (Italian, 1710-1743), Venetian Capricci: A Pair (One shown), Oil on canvas Old Master Paintings & Drawings / English & Continental Furniture & Decorative Arts / Russian Works of Art Specialist: Elaine Banks Stainton, 212-427-4141 ext. 249, Paintings@Doyle.com DOYLE
AUCTIONEERS & APPRAISERS
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1 7 5 E A S T 8 7 T H S T R E E T, N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 1 2 8
DOYLE.COM
11/28/18 AM 1/4/19 10:40 1:47 AM
At Asian Art Newspaper we love our print issue...
...ideal for home birds and those that like to relax, think, and dream However, sometimes you will want to read on the go... so you can read our digital edition online or any device Our newsletter is blooming, so join the group to keep up to date And join us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to keep the conversation going SAVE 25% ON A NEW PRINT SUBSCRIPTION email info.asianart@btinternet.com quoting WAF18 Find a wealth of articles covering all Asian art in our large archive, as well as articles from the current issue on line at Asianartnewspaper.com
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Entrusted with quality consignments for generations • American & European Fine Art, Period Furniture & Decorative Arts • Native American Artifacts
• Asian Art • 20th Century Design • Fine & Vintage Jewelry • Musical Instruments
SOLD $8,100
American Bull Weathervane, attributed to J. Howard & Co., West Bridgewater, Mass.
SOLD $12,600
Courtney & Tennant Civil War Confederate Naval Officer’s Sword by Robert Mole & Sons, Birmingham, England
SOLD $6,840
SOLD $45,600
Resquicio by Jose Antonio Fernandez-Muro (Argentinian, 1920-2007)
American Burl Painted Covered Bowl
SOLD $16,800
Redware Pan, Ex Stephen-Douglas (Vermont)
SOLD $5,160
Smith and Wesson New Model No. 3 Target .38-44 cal. Revolver
SOLD $8,400
2.64ct Diamond Ring
SOLD $16,800
SOLD $62,500
Newcomb College Art Pottery Vase by Harriet Joor
SOLD $20,000
Virginia Chippendale Secretary Bookcase
Columbus, Ohio
Rare Chinese Yongzheng Doucai Bowl
SOLD $22,800
Lake Maurepas, LA (Louisiana) by Joseph Rusling Meeker (American, 1827-1887)
SOLD $26,400
Pennsylvania Decorated Dutch Cupboard, attributed to Lancaster County
• AUCTIONEERS & APPRAISERS • St. Louis, Missouri
GARTH’S
selkirk
garths.com • 740.362.4771
selkirkauctions.com • 314.696.9041
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1954
1830
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Social Register Association
Winter 2019 The Association salutes the Winter Antiques Show for its support of East Side House Settlement. www.SocialRegisterOnline.com
SRCommittee@TheSocialRegister.org 224
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Bespoke Sculptural Lighting Handmade in London | Delivering Worldwide
www.camerondesignhouse.com info@camerondesignhouse.com
*Featuring the Lohja chandelier as seen at The Winter Show’s Cafe
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Get MODERN this winter. Subscribe online at www.modernmag.com
design decorative arts architecture
www.modernmag.com
architecture
JOB: EastSideHouse_WAS_2019 CYANMAGENTAYELLOWBLACK
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12/19/18 6:24 PM 12/19/18 6:24 PM 1/7/19 2:02 PM
HOLIDAY
HOUSE DESIGN SHOW SAVE THE DATE! HOLIDAY HOUSE HAMPTONS SUMMER 2019 HOLIDAY HOUSE NYC FALL 2019
FOLLOW US FOR UPCOMING EVENTS! @ H O L I D AY H O U S E D E S I G N S H O W @ H O L I D AY H O U S E D E S I G N S @ H O L I D AY H O U S E N Y C O N TA C T U S F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N O N H O W T O G E T I N V O LV E D O R T O D E S I G N A R O O M : I N F O @ H O L I D AY H O U S E N Y C . C O M W W W. H O L I D AY H O U S E D E S I G N S H O W. C O M
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BENEFITING D E SI G N BY I N T E R I O R M A R K E T I N G G RO U P P H OTO BY JA M E S J O H N J E T E L
1/4/19 1:47 12/26/18 6:59 AM PM
CRYSTALCO.COM 800.221.5830
WE ARE PROUD TO SUPP ORT
EAST SIDE HOUSE SE T TLEMENT & T H E 6 5 TH A N N U A L W I N T E R S H O W WE C ON G R AT UL AT E T HE DE SI G N C H A IRS
F R A N K D E B I A S I | V I C T O R I A H A G A N | J O H N B . M U R R AY & HONORARY CHAIR
FR AN O’BRIEN
Crystal & Company, recently acquired by Alliant Insurance Services, is the home for talented insurance professionals: creative, committed to their clients, and driven to deliver extraordinary results.
We are proud to support the
Eastside House Settlement’s Winter Show 2019
1919 Investment Counsel works closely with clients to deliver investment management and advisory services tailored to their values and goals. We serve individuals, families, foundations, endowments and institutions. Lu Han Client Advisor (212) 554-7111 lhan@1919ic.com BALTIMORE
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•
www.1919ic.com BIRMINGHAM
•
CINCINNATI
•
NEW YORK
•
PHILADELPHIA
•
SAN FRANCISCO
12/3/18 1/4/19 2:13 1:47 PM AM 10/17/18 12:42 PM
Welcomes
The Winter Antique Show
“If this restaurant had a clock, its hands would be stopped at five minutes before nouvelle cuisine, when meat was carved to cover the plate and sauce came on the side and nobody turned down potatoes, when people eating a roast with a good but not-too-expensive Bordeaux could hardly imagine a better night out.” - THE NEW YORK TIMES
LUNCH
Weekdays 12 Noon - 2:30PM
DINNER
Sunday from 5PM Monday - Saturday from 5:45PM
BRUNCH Sundays 12 Noon - 3PM
(212) 390-8060 • 14 EAST 60 TH ST. (btwn MADISON & FIFTH) NYC • WWW.ROTISSERIEG.COM 61109_PG_176.240.indd 229 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC151.indd 1
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We Have You Covered
In nearly fifty years of innovation Phoenix Lithographing has become one of the largest commercial printing companies in our marketplace serving art galleries, auction houses and art shows with sheetfed, web and digital printing.
Phoenix Lithographing Corporation salutes East Side House Settlement for outstanding achievement in the South Bronx. WWW.PHOENIXLITHO.COM
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19_nyias_winter_antiques_final.pdf
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C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY
CMY
K
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Planetary Recreations, Inc. CONCESSIONAIRES
(212) 757-0309 planetary@mindspring.com
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GRIEF
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EDUCATION
THEATER
ARMORYONPARK.ORG (212) 933-5812 @PARKAVEARMORY Photo: Naho Kubota
Photo: Stephanie Berger
FINALE OPERA
SURPRISE
POLITICS
ART
Photo: Stephanie Berger
Photo: James Ewing
Photo: James Ewing
Photo: James Ewing
DANCE
Photo: Stephanie Berger
Photo: Stephanie Berger
Photo: Stephanie Berger
TECHNOLOGY
Photo: James Ewing
PHILOSOPHY
Photo: Stephanie Berger
Photo: James Ewing
MUSIC
Photo: Da Ping Luo
Photo: Philip Greenberg
CULTURE
Photo: Stephanie Berger
LISTENING
Photo: James Ewing
GLEE
Photo: Stephanie Berger
JAZZ
IMAGINE THE POSSIBILITIES OF PARK AVENUE ARMORY
12/19/18 4:52 PM 1/9/19 12:27
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A La Vieille Russie, Inc. D11 Adelson Galleries, Inc. E7 Alexander Gallery B4 Apter-Fredericks A4 Arader Galleries D4 Aronson of Amsterdam E13 Barbara Israel Garden Antiques C6 Bernard & S. Dean Levy Inc. E6 Bernard Goldberg Fine Arts, LLC B5 Bowman Sculpture E1 Browse & Darby A7 Carolle Thibaut-Pomerantz D6 Charles Ede C8 Cohen & Cohen C3 Cove Landing A1 Daniel Crouch Rare Books E14 David A. Schorsch ~ Eileen M. Smiles   American Antiques A8 Didier Ltd D8 Donzella B10 Elle Shushan D1 Erik Thomsen B11 Galerie St. Etienne D7 Gemini Antiques Ltd. B13 Gerald Peters Gallery D15 H. Blairman & Sons Ltd E12 Hill-Stone, Inc. D3 Hirschl & Adler Galleries B9 Hirschl & Adler Modern A9 Hyde Park Antiques, Ltd. D5 James Infante C11 James Robinson, Inc. C2 Joan B Mirviss LTD E5 Jonathan Boos D12 Kelly Kinzle A13 Kentshire C1 Keshishian C12 Lebreton D16 Les Enluminures A6 Lillian Nassau LLC A2 Lobel Modern A10 Lost City Arts B2 Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd B8 Macklowe Gallery, Ltd. C9 Maison Gerard C7 Menconi + Schoelkopf B14 Michael Altman Fine Art C5 Michael Goedhuis B1 Michele Beiny, Inc. D2 Nathan Liverant & Son, LLC D10 Olde Hope E8 Peter Fetterman Gallery D14 Peter Finer A3 Peter Pap Oriental Rugs, Inc. B15 Philip Colleck, Ltd. B7 Ralph M. Chait Galleries, Inc. D9 Red Fox Fine Art E9 Robert Simon Fine Art C10 Robert Young Antiques E4 Ronald Phillips Ltd E2 S.J. Shrubsole A5 Spencer Marks E11 Stephen Score, Inc. E3 Tambaran B3 The Old Print Shop, Inc. A12 Thomas Colville Fine Art C4 Thomas Heneage Art Books D13 Throckmorton Fine Art, Inc. B12
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CANARD CAFE
A13
B15
A12
E14
C11
E12
D16
C12
B14
B13
E13
D14
D15
E11
C10
A10 C9 B12
B11
D13 C8
B10
A9
D12
C7
E9
D11
D10
B9 A8
E8
BAR A7
B7
B8
C6
B5
B3
D7
D6
E7
B1
C4 D5
B4
E5 C1
A3
D8
E6 C3
A4
D9
C5
A6
A5
East Side House
B2
A2
C2
SHOW ENTRANCE
D4
D1
D2
E4
Nantucket Historical Association
A1
D3
E1
E2
E3
TO COAT CHECK
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A monthly podcast hosted by Benjamin Miller
Podcast presented by:
“It couldn’t be more important to think about the objects that we’re surrounding ourselves with, to think about the craftsmanship, the history, and the story” 61109_PG_176.240.indd 238 EastSideHouse_WAS_2019_CC151.indd 1
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The Winter Show would like to thank the following: MARK AISTON Aiston Fine Art Services ALICE ALLEN ANITA BASSIE Group M Design ANNE MARIE BERMAN Canard Inc. JILL A. BOSSERT Advertising Director, The Winter Show Catalogue JOHN BRANNIGAN Exhibition Employees Union Local 829 MAUREEN BRAY American Art Dealers Association JOHN BRUNO Exhibition Employees Union Local 829 CAROL CADOU Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library COURTNEY CALDWELL Park Avenue Armory ANDREW CALIFANO DEREK CARROLL East Side House Settlement INGRID CAROZZI Tin Can Studios GREGORY CERIO The Magazine Antiques SARAH COHEN MARGOT COLWELL Mindshare DONNA CORBIN Editor, The Winter Show Catalogue FELIPE CORREA Somatic Collaborative WALTER CORTES East Side House Settlement CUSEUM LAURA DALEY East Side House Settlement JEFF DALY Jeff Daly Design IRIS DANKNER Holiday House FRANK DE BIASI DANIEL DIAZ East Side House Settlement RAYMOND DOWD Dunnington Bartholow and Miller JULIA DRUCKER PLUS/Group M KATIE EVANS Cameron Design House GEORGETTE FARKAS Rotisserie Georgette SUE AND STUART FELD STEPHEN FERRARA Exhibition Employees Union Local 829 JENNIFER GALANTE JFM Group WENDY GOODMAN MAGDA GRIGORIAN Sharp Communications HANNAH CECIL GURNEY de Gournay VICTORIA HAGAN JOHN HAMILTON Select Contracting Inc. KEITH HARRINGTON Phoenix Lithographing Corporation BROOKE HARRIS Tin Can Studio MICHAEL HARRISON Nantucket Historical Association MICHELLE HELLMAN Third Eye LEVI HIGGS SOLAH HWANG Third Eye BRIDGETTE HYNES Nantucket Historical Association MATTHEW IMBERMAN Kentshire THOMAS JAYNE KEN JIA GM Printing ANITA JORGENSEN Anita Jorgensen Lighting Design AMITABH JOSHI Vacant Light THOMAS KEARNS GT Custom Inc. STEPHEN KENNARD Canard Inc. KENNETH J. KERRIGAN Exhibition Employees Union Local 829 VAJRA KINGSLEY The Magazine Antiques CONNIE KOCH Ahoy Studios ARIE KOPELMAN DENIS KUCHTA Ahoy Studios JEFF LANGENDORFF Masterpiece Printers LUCAS LIND
MELISSA HELWIG LIUZZI Select Contracting Inc. WAYNE LOWERY Park Avenue Armory JUSTINE LYNCH de Gournay RYAN MAERZ Canard Inc. TYLER MAHOWALD Third Eye JESSICA MARSILLO The JFM Group LLC AMANDA MARTIGNETTI The JFM Group LLC JOHANNA MCBRIEN Antiques & Fine Art KEVIN MCCORMACK Select Contracting Inc. ALEXANDRIA MCCLURE PLUS ROBERT MCGINLEY Chubb PETER MCGOUGH JOANNA MCNAMARA Chubb DANIEL MEEKER Daniel Meeker Lighting and Set Design STEPHANIE MESQUITA Park Avenue Armory BILL MIKULIK Sea Group Graphics REBECCA MILLER Nantucket Historical Association WENDY MOONAN JOAN MORGAN The JFM Group LLC JOHN B. MURRAY FRAN O’BRIEN Chubb Personal Insurance STARR ORTIZ The JFM Group MITCH OWENS TASO PANAGIOTOPOULOS 4Over4 JASON PAUL TrasaTerra ELIZABETH PERGAM Sotheby’s Institute of Art CAMILLE PITTS Chubb KATHARINA PLATH Head & Hand PR JESSICA PORTER Art Table ZAC POSEN Brooks Brothers MORGAN POTTS Third Eye ANN-MARIE RICHARD Sotheby’s Institute of Art ALONSO DIAZ RICKARDS REBECCA ROBERTSON Park Avenue Armory ASHLEY DEVENISH ROBINSON Sotheby’s Institute of Art CHARLOTTE ROSS-LONERGAN JAMES RUSSELL Nantucket Historical Association LILLI SCHEUERLEIN AHOY Studios LEWIS SCHULTZ Mindshare MARY SHERIDAN Chubb LAUREN SHORTT First Republic ELIZABETH D. SIGETY, ESQ. Fox Rothschild LLP ADAM SINGER MaxxMail USA JOHN SMIROLDO INCOLLECT, Antiques & Fine Art ADDISON, ALSTON & SILAS SMITH TOMAS SOKOL Group M DENISE SOMNER Ahoy Studios DON SPARACIN The Magazine Antiques ERIK SPINK Vacant Light TAYLOR STEBBINS de Gournay JOE STRIEFSKY Select Contracting Inc. LUKE SYSON The Fitzwilliam Museum DAN TANZILLI Third Eye ADRIAN TAYLOR Hyde Park Mouldings JULIETA VELAZQUEZ East Side House Settlement STELLENE VOLLANDES Town & Country TY YORIO Citadel Security ANIKA ZEMPLENI Third Eye
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Index to Advertisers EXHIBITORS
EXHIBITORS (continued)
MUSEUMS
A La Vieille Russie, Inc. ........................... 104 Adelson Galleries, Inc. ..................... 106, 107 Alexander Gallery ................................... 105 Michael Altman Fine Art .................. 108, 109 Apter-Fredericks ..................................... 110 Arader Galleries ....................................... 111 Aronson of Amsterdam ............................ 112 Michele Beiny, Inc. .................................. 113 H. Blairman & Sons Ltd ............................ 114 Jonathan Boos ........................................ 115 Bowman Sculpture .................................. 116 Browse & Darby ....................................... 117 Ralph M. Chait Galleries, Inc. ................... 118 Cohen & Cohen ....................................... 119 Philip Colleck, Ltd. ................................. 120 Thomas Colville Fine Art .......................... 121 Cove Landing ......................................... 122 Daniel Crouch Rare Books ...................... 123 Didier Ltd ............................................... 124 Donzella ................................................. 125 Charles Ede ............................................ 126 Peter Fetterman Gallery ...........................127 Peter Finer ............................................. 128 Gemini Antiques Ltd. .............................. 129 Michael Goedhuis ................................... 130 Bernard Goldberg Fine Arts, LLC ............. 131 Thomas Heneage Art Books ................... 132 Hill-Stone, Inc. ....................................... 133 Hirschl & Adler Galleries ......................... 134 Hirschl & Adler Modern .......................... 135 Hyde Park Antiques, Ltd. ........................ 136 James Infante ........................................ 137 Barbara Israel Garden Antiques .............. 138 Kentshire ............................................... 139 Keshishian ............................................. 140 Kelly Kinzle ............................................. 141 Lebreton ................................................ 142 Les Enluminures .................................... 143 Bernard & S. Dean Levy Inc. .................... 144 Lowell Libson & Jonny Yarker Ltd ........... 145 Nathan Liverant and Son, LLC ................ 146 Lobel Modern ......................................... 147 Lost City Arts ......................................... 148 Macklowe Gallery, Ltd. ........................... 149 Maison Gerard ....................................... 150 Menconi + Schoelkopf ......................152, 153 Joan B Mirviss LTD .................................. 151 Lillian Nassau LLC .................................. 154 The Old Print Shop, Inc. .......................... 155 Olde Hope .............................................. 156 Peter Pap Oriental Rugs, Inc. .................. 157 Gerald Peters Gallery .............................. 158 Ronald Phillips Ltd ........................... 160, 161 Red Fox Fine Art ..................................... 159 James Robinson, Inc. ............................. 162 David A. Schorsch ~ Eileen M. Smiles American Antiques ............................. 163 Stephen Score, Inc. ................................ 164 S. J. Shrubsole ....................................... 165 Elle Shushan .......................................... 166 Robert Simon Fine Art ............................ 167 Spencer Marks ....................................... 168
Galerie St. Etienne ................................. 169 Tambaran .............................................. 170 Carolle Thibaut-Pomerantz ..................... 171 Erik Thomsen ..........................................172 Throckmorton Fine Art, Inc. ................... 173 Robert Young Antiques .......................... 174
Drayton Hall ............................................ 69 Florence Griswold Museum ...................... 81 George Washington’s Mount Vernon ....... 184 Olana Partnership .................................. 192 Preservation Society of Newport County ................................... 58 Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library ......62
ANTIQUES & FINE ART DEALERS PUBLICATIONS/MEDIA
Antique Textiles Galleries ....................... 189 Appraisers Association of America .......... 188 Associated Artists LLC ............................ 83 Gill & Lagodich ........................................ 48 Incollect ......................................... 234, 235 New York Design Center ......................... 178 RAF Jewels ..............................................47 Schwartz Gallery .................................... 176 Stair ......................................................... 71 Yew Tree House Antiques ......................... 51
Apollo Magazine ................................... 220 Asian Art Newspaper ..............................222 Curious Objects ......................................238 Hearst Corporation .................................. 46 Luxe Interiors + Design ........................... 218 The Magazine Antiques ........................... 64 MODERN magazine ................................226 New York magazine ..................................35 NYC&G .................................................. 219
LIGHTING & REPRODUCTIONS
REAL ESTATE
Chadsworth Columns .................................2 Charles Edwards Antiques ................185, 187 Munder-Skiles ........................................ 49
Carriage Properties ................................. 68 Sotheby’s International Realty ....................3 SHOWS & AUCTIONS
INTERIOR DESIGNERS & ARCHITECTS Branca Interiors ....................................... 191 Cameron Design House ..........................225 Craig & Company .....................................53 Cullman & Kravis ......................................52 Drake/Anderson ..................................... 179 Ferguson & Shamamian .......................... 60 Susan Ferrier Interiors ............................ 183 Victoria Hagan Interiors ............................ 31 Ralph Harvard ......................................... 56 Historical Concepts ................................. 42 John B. Murray Architect ......................... 30 David Scott Parker Architects ...................82 Peter Pennoyer Architects ....................... 50 Thomas Pheasant ...................................177 G.P. Schafer Architect ............................... 4 Eric J. Smith Architect ............................. 181 INSURANCE, LEGAL & FINANCIAL 19/19 Investment Counsel .......................228 Chubb .........................................Back cover Crystal & Company .................................228 First Republic ........................................... 12 Goldman Sachs ........................................ 14 Northeast Acquisitions ...........................232 Sound Point Capital Management L.P. .... 180 PHILANTHROPY Bloomberg Philanthropies ........................26 Holiday House NYC ................................227 LUXURY RETAIL Brooks Brothers ................................. 32, 33 Bulgari ........................... Inside front cover, 1 Chanel ..................................................... 10 Elizabeth Locke Jewels ..............................5 Neiman Marcus Group ....... Inside back cover
2019 Gala Preview of the New York International Auto Show .........................25 2019 New York International Auto Show ........................................... 231 The Art & Antiques Fair Olympia .............. 212 Art Palm Beach ........................................ 211 Christie’s .......................................... 214, 216 Delaware Antiques Show ......................... 210 Doyle Auction House ............................... 221 Freeman’s ............................................... 193 Garth’s Auctions .....................................223 Master Drawings New York ...................... 190 The Newport Show .................................. 215 Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antiques Show ..................................... 213 Philadelphia Antiques and Art Show ......................................208, 209 Potomack Company ......................... 194, 195 San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show ..................................... 217 Sotheby’s ................................................ 182 Swann Galleries ....................................... 43 Weschler’s Auctioneers & Appraisers ...... 186 SPECIAL SERVICES Aiston Fine Art Services ..........................236 Canard, Inc. ............................................. 70 Park Avenue Armory ...............................233 Phoenix Lithographing Corporation ........ 230 Planetary Recreation ...............................232 Rotisserie Georgette ...............................229 Social Register Association .....................224 Travel with the Met ....................................23
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GREAT ART INSPIRES GOOD WORKS On its 65th anniversary, we salute The Winter Show and its support of East Side House Settlement.
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THE WINTER SHOW 2019
A Benefit for East Side House
65th Anniversary Sapphire Jubilee
Your Passion, Protected. We know the value of what you build, create, and collect. We’re proud to protect your passion.
Expect more.
chubb.com/expectmore
65 Celebrating 65 Years
©2018 Chubb. Coverages underwritten by one or more subsidiary companies. Not all coverages available in all jurisdictions. Chubb®, its logo, and Chubb. Insured.SM are protected trademarks of Chubb.
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