Based on the more than 400 people who gathered in the ballroom of the Inn at Reading September 30 and October 1, it seemed nearly everyone who was anyone in the doll business turned out to bid in Noel...
Responsibility for the Seventh Regiment Armory was formally transferred to the Seventh Regiment Conservancy on November 14, clearing the way for long delayed and much needed repairs to the Tiffany-decorated...
The Manhattan Vintage Show has been a tradition at the Metropolitan Pavilion for the past 17 years. For the past four years this tri-annual event has seen each show outdo the last and this October 13 and 14 saw the attendance...
On November 3–4 Jim Burk and Barry Cohen combined their antiques dealers into one show under one roof and were encouraged by a 45 percent increase in the gate over November 2005.
The Nineteenth Century was the age of self-invention. Versatile Americans of exceptional ambition and intellect sought their fortunes wherever they could, the country’s vast frontier providing fertile...
The Center for Photography at Woodstock is presenting two gallery exhibitions, “Passionate Attitudes” and “German Herrera: Between Here & Now,” through December 23.
The folk artist Mose Tolliver, whose self-portraits and vivid images of nature, people, animals and the female form were done with humble house paint and made him one of the leaders of the modern-day outsider...
Beginning Saturday, November 18, the Stamford Museum & Nature Center (SM&NC) will present the exhibition “Teresa Barkley: A Life in Quilts,” showcasing a series from the artist’s more than...
Clars Auction Gallery ended its 2005-06 season on a golden note with the sale of a gold quartz and gold knobbed ebony walking cane, dated 1871, that set a new record at $49,725.
The New-York Historical Society (N-YHS) will open “New York Divided: Slavery and the Civil War,” the final exhibition in its groundbreaking series on slavery and its impact on the people, landscape,...