:The International Fine Art and Antique Dealers Show turned 16 at
the Seventh Regiment Armory this October 21-28. Updated over the
years through the infusion of more Twentieth Century decorative
arts, it remains a crossroads between innovation and tradition,
articulating the latest collecting and design trends while
maintaining its unrelenting emphasis on connoisseurship.
The show's eclecticism is a direct reflection of organizers Anna
and Brian Haughton's broad enthusiasms for the art of every epoch
and ethos. Standing in front of Maison Gerard's rigorously edited
stand - a luxurious, cream-colored Art Deco dressing room fitted
with a Ruhlmann vanity, stool and daybed - Mrs Haughton expressed
approval.
"Isn't this chic? When Maison Gerard told me they were bringing
only four things, I was a little worried," confessed the
organizer, who ultimately could not have been more pleased.
"Brian and I have always believed that this show needs
diversity."
From ancient mosaics at Michael Ward and Company to 1940s French
design at Vallois, the International Show crisscrossed collecting
cultures. The range of prices was even greater. At Kenneth
Rendell, $1,500 got you a musical quotation penned by Noel
Coward. At Hirschl & Adler Galleries, another $4.2 million
bought you John Singer Sargent's sublimely elegant full-length
portrait of the Countess of Clary Aldringen. Sargent painted the
captivating countess with a cigarette in one hand; her
disapproving husband ordered the artist to paint the cigarette
out.
Always a laboratory for changing taste, the International Show
this year registered the enthusiasm many younger collectors feel
for Modern decor. Maroun Salloum of Paris featured European
decorative arts made between 1895 to 1930 in a display
contrasting a huge pair of Chinese lacquered cabinets with alpaca
mounts, $450,000, and a pair of Josef Hoffman ebonized armchairs
of 1910, $130,000.
Arlie Sulka and Eric Silver of Lillian Nassau, Ltd, demonstrated
that their reputation for fine Tiffany design extends to other
major Twentieth Century talents, as well. In addition to dazzling
fragments of Tiffany murals, including one from the demolished
Henry Havemeyer house on Fifth Avenue, they featured a Ruhlmann
bibliotheque, $295,000, which the gallery's late founder imported
from France in the mid-1970s.
More Twentieth Century European design found its way to Brussels
dealer Philippe Denys. There, pale, parchment-covered Italian
furniture of the 1940s played against the dark tones of Danish
stoneware by Thorsson.
John Alexander of Philadelphia has become America's most visible
spokesman for English Modern Movement furniture, from Reformed
Gothic to Aesthetic and Arts and Crafts design.
Dealer John Levittes' packed booth contained wonderful examples
of each, at prices that remain attractive relative to work from
many other periods. Highlights included a red and green painted
Ambrose Heal high chest; a fancifully decorated court cupboard;
and a massively architectural Reformed Gothic sideboard by
Charles Bevan for Lamb of Manchester, circa 1865. The later, an
architectural wonder in rich English brown oak, ebony and marble,
sold at about $50,000. A chastely understated oak
dresser-sideboard, $26,000, inspired by the Cotswold School,
stood in contrast to the elaborated ornamented Bevan work.
Though American furniture was far from plentiful, it was in rich
abundance at Hirschl & Adler Galleries, where 12 Philadelphia
Classical chairs, $200,000, were paired with a gleaming mahogany
Cumberland-action banquet table, $285,000, 1181/2 inches long.
Another New York dealer in American Classical furniture, Carswell
Rush Berlin, displayed two important center tables against the
backdrop of a full-length portrait. The visage belonged to Major
General Sir Neil Campbell, as painted by Casimir Carbonnier
(1787-1873), whose work is represented in the collection of the
National Portrait Gallery in London. Of interest to Berlin, the
Campbell portrait was reproduced in Nancy McClelland's pioneering
1939 book, Duncan Phyfe and The English Regency.
McClelland chose the picture because it depicts extravagantly
gilded French furniture in the latest archaeological taste.
Berlin believes that the furniture may still be in a museum
somewhere in Elba.
Increasingly, exhibitors are regarding major antiques shows as
ways of renting not only space, but time. Some dealers are
creating mini-exhibitions, up for less than a week, that are as
detailed and thoughtfully planned as long-term gallery
installations, down to the erudite catalogs published to go with
them.
Aronson of Amsterdam, Amsterdam.
Aronson of Amsterdam, for instance, used the venue to present
a recently acquired collection of important Dutch delft assembled
by a German enthusiast, Dr Gunther Grethe. The collector
specialized in marked pieces from the Seventeenth Century, most of
them Oriental in decoration. A circa 1685 blue and white baluster
vase and cover, 293/8 inches tall, for Samuel van Eenhoorn, of De
Grieksche A factory, was, at $165,000. Aronson's catalog, which
assembles and interprets the pieces and their marks, is a must-have
reference for delft collectors.
Wearing a blue blazer emblazoned with his New York Yacht Club
insignia, Hyannis Port, Mass., dealer Alan Granby displayed
copies of his new book, A Yachtsman's Eye: The Glen Foster
Collection of Marine Painting. "Glen was one of the country's
great amateur yachtsmen and a preeminent collector of maritime
art," said Granby, who has documented the collection in his new
volume. A trio of paintings by Thomas Whitcombe (English,
1763-1824) from the Foster collection, sold by Phillips and
Bonhams several years ago, depicted the battle between the
American Privateer Comet and the British vessel
Hibernia.
Brian Haughton's meticulously produced 2004 catalog, Splendour
in the Grass: Birds, Beasts and Flowers in European Ceramics,
elaborated on treasures in the London dealer's stand. The
catalog's cover piece was a Chelsea porcelain dish of circa 1758,
exquisitely painted with a rustic vignette by Jefferyes Hammett.
English furniture dealers Diana and Mark Jacoby of Philip
Colleck, Ltd, saved a wonderful pair of George II side chairs for
the show. Combining walnut and mahogany, the transitional seats,
$68,000, came, most recently, out of a house in Cambridge, Mass.
The Jacobys displayed the chairs with an ingenious Georgian
mahogany octagonal rent table.
Always full of surprises, the International Show included Old
Master pictures, sometimes in places where you did not expect to
find them. Ursus Books of New York, for instance, had Holbeins.
There, a first-edition volume of Imitations of Original
Drawings, published in London for John Chamberlaine and
including Holbein portraits of Henry VIII's courtiers, was
$38,500.
Another extraordinary work on paper was Jill Newhouse's
precociously avant-garde Brittany seascape by Vuillard, a
distemper drawing, $650,000, of 1909.
Some exhibitors comfortingly feature reliably the same work from
year to year. Longtime exhibitor Alistair Sampson is always at
the ready with polished English oak and English needlework of the
best quality. Drop-dead embroidery this year included an early
Eighteenth Century pictorial needlework depicting a couple taking
tea in a pavilion, $95,000. Research reveals the couple to be
Reverend Jacob Chilton and his wife Rebecca of Suffolk. Another
Sampson treasure was a Charles II mirror, $245,000, a masterpiece
of carved lime wood in the style of Grinling Gibbons.
The International Show's opening night preview party - chaired by
Jamee Gregory, Leslie Jones and Lavinia Snyder - on October 21
drew 1,000 visitors and raised $1 million for Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. Patrons through the
course of the week included Calvin Klein, Joan Rivers, Michael
Bloomberg, Steve Martin and Stephanie Powers.
Sales included "Diana Victorious," a terra-cotta sculpture on a
gray porphyry base acquired by the Norton Museum of Fine Art from
David and Constance Yates. Fine arts sales included Agnews' "Miss
Drury Lowe," an winsome oil on canvas portrait of 1770 by George
Romney; a Thomas Gainsborough drawing; and a William Turner
watercolor.
The Jamestown Museum in Virginia purchased a Seventeenth Century
English jug from the Surrey-Hampshire border-area from London
dealer Jonathan Horne. Fragments of such pottery have been found
at English Colonial settlements.
Furniture sales included, at Patrick Perrin, a pair of Regence
gilt mirrors, a console, a boulle clock, commode, two small
tables and a pair of sconces. Cheneviere sold a set of 12 Belgian
dining chairs, circa 1800; a circa 1780 Florentine table in the
Etruscan taste and a Russian mahogany mirror of circa 1825. The
Chinese Porcelain Company sold a pair of Louis XVI bergeres and a
satinwood commode by Roger Vandercruse, known as Lacroix (Maitre
1755).
Arms and armor dealer Peter Finer parted with a suit of North
German field armor made for the court of Julius Duke of
Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, circa 1652-63; a Bohemian Pavise shield
of circa 1485; and a gold and enamel sword made by Ray &
Montague of London for a six-figure sum.

Jill Newhouse, New York CIty.
Hyland Granby sold a prisoner-of-war bone ship model,
paintings, ships' clocks and a pair of giltwood eagles. Primitive
art specialist Douglas Dawson of Chicago wrote up a pre-Columbian
Veracruz yoke, an Eighteenth Century Indonesian torso, several
pre-Columbian textiles and a circa 1400 Caddoan pot from the
Arkansas Valley in eastern Oklahoma.
Dealers in Twentieth Century design reported brisk sales. Vallois
parted with lamps by Eckardt Muthesius, architect of the 1930
Palace of the Maharajas in Indore, plus furniture by Jean Michel
Frank, Diego Giacometti and Alberto Giacometti. Maroum Salloum
sold two wooden stands by the Englishman Herbert Ward. Philippe
Denys sold his 1940 parchment-covered coiffeuse, plus a
chandelier by Seguso, a wingback chair by Fritz Henningsen and a
desk by G. Ulrich.
There were good reports from two new exhibitors. Raffety and
Walwyn, clock dealers from London, sold five Eighteenth Century
marquetry tall case timepieces. A mahogany serpentine
bureau-bookcase of circa 1770 and a pair of early Nineteenth
Century carved giltwood wall lights left Ronald Phillip's stand.
After a brief respite, Haughton International Fairs returns to
the Seventh Regiment Armory with the International Asian Art
Fair, April 1-6, and the International Fine Art Fair, May 13-18.