Music Valley Antiques Market, the second of the three big  Nashville shows during Heart of Country Week, was a great  success, according to promoters Jon Jenkins and Kay Puchstein of  Jenkins Show Management Company. Held at The Radisson Hotel on  Music Valley Way, next to Gaylord’s Opryland USA Resort and  Conference Center February 23-25, the show had more than 150  exhibitors offering antiques that were especially American in  provenance and style. It was, after all, Heart of Country Week  and dealers were there at the three shows and many were there  just for the buying.   Music Valley has evolved into the favorite for many dealers who  want to offer their collections in upscale settings where a  national audience comes to peruse and buy. This was clearly the  case, according to most exhibiting dealers interviewed. Halsey  Munson, formerly of Connecticut and now living in Decatur, Ill.,  said he “did very well. In fact, the opening day, Thursday, was  probably the best single day [of sales] I have ever had  anywhere!” He added that while Friday was quiet, there were more  sales Saturday, giving him an excellent total for his efforts.   New Hampshire dealer Michael Malloy was in his usual space on the  hotel’s atrium floor with an outstanding collection of early New  England furniture and paintings. His centerpiece was a New  Hampshire made chest-on-chest in maple that was offered at  $14,000 and found a new home. His sales also included an early  table, a cupboard and several of the paintings. Similarly Scott  and Penny Fithian took only one piece of furniture back to their  Cartersville, Ga., home for as Scott said, “We sold all but the  one piece.” Among their sales was a two-piece cupboard, in pine  and poplar with red paint from Virginia, priced at $2,200. The Flo Blue Shop, Birmingham, Mich., was there with thosedishes from England. Flo Blue is all this dealer offered and salesappeared to be going well by Saturday morning. The Bakers, Ohiodealers, were selling furniture and accessories in large quantity.From Gladstone, N.J., Mark Witus was there with his collection ofsmall and interesting antique objects. Typically, Mark can set upfor a show with two booth spaces filled when the largest object inhis collection is a child’s chair. Sharon Pesek, Pineapple Antiquesof Jacksonville, Fla., had a display of even smaller furniture,sized for a large doll house.   There was a collection of silhouettes in Gregg Ellington’s room.  The three were dated 1837 and signed Edouart and priced from  $2,800 to $3,695. This was in addition to the very special and  important collection of early dishes and stoneware he brought  from his Wilmington, Ohio, home.   Burleigh and Jean Wellington have been doing the show forever,  according to him. They have been carrying less furniture and more  small antiques, especially lighting. Burleigh has been a  collector of early iron lighting and other iron goods, which he  brought to the show. Trading as Zyzaar Antiques, they are from  Reading, Mass., and have been exhibiting in a room near the  elevator.   Laurie and Buddy Gaines have a home on an island on Florida’s  west coast but they also travel throughout the Midwest and New  England doing shows and finding more great stuff for their  collection and inventory. They are partial to early American  painted furniture and accessories so a small dry sink in worn red  milk paint fit right into their collection. There was also a  child’s chair and some early game boards.   There were several displays at the show that had the look of a  primitive one-room cabin in the wilderness. Anne Bedics from  Ackermanville made her display look almost Amish in the earth  tone colors of her collected antiques. Trading as The Cat Lady,  she also produces a show near her home in Bethlehem, Penn., for  25 dealers. Another dealer simulates a log cabin’s walls in its  room display with all the inventory the primitive objects made by  an early pioneer family. Massachusetts dealers Susan Worth and  Diane Halpern were working together for their colonial period  display.   In the hotel’s atrium there were about 40 dealers in room  settings and store display settings. Higganum, Conn., dealer Neal  Blodgett came with, as he put it, “all fresh stuff. Pat and I  reorganized our merchandise so we could be here with an entirely  fresh load.” Van and Candice Talbert of Aberdeen & Co.,  Asheville, N.C., carry early hardwood furniture to the show and  have been doing so for years successfully. Mapleside Antiques, Titusville, Penn., is new to MusicValley, with last fall marking the dealer’s debut there. Thepartners, Tom Varney and Cid Paden, have a collection of earlycountry furniture and accessories. Cid said, “We sold a few largeitems, a mule chest for $1,500 and a pie safe for about the samebut what really made the show for us was the variety and number ofour sales. We had a great number of sales ’cause they were there tobuy things at the show.”   Steve and Rhonda Cirillo from Orange, Mass., said they sold all  the furniture but one piece they had brought. Rhonda added they  used it as an opportunity to buy some new pieces while there.   These comments echoed those of the co-promoters, Jenkins and  Puchstein, as their visitor traffic was the best in the last five  years and Jon said, “We had more dealers come to us with ‘best  show ever’ than I can remember.” Kay added, “The furniture and  bags going out was terrific, we saw real collectors doing their  thing here this week.”   Jon noted, “The fall show, October 26-28, will be in one large  tent in the macadam lot across the street, but closer to Fiddlers  Inn. This should give the visitors an easier time to see the two  shows and in the tent it is all one level. With the Heart show  gone – in the fall only – we expect the buyers will be  concentrating their shopping more than now so we are really  excited about it. In fact, many of the Heart dealers are not  going to Texas and they are on the lists for Music Valley and  some for my father’s show at Fiddlers.”   Dates for next winter’s Music Valley show will be March 1-3,  which is later than Jenkins thought it would be while at this  past show. He did ask for the dates to be emphasized as the  hotels had caused several changes in the dates of these upcoming  shows.   For more information go to www.jenkinsshows.com or call  317-598-0012.          
 
    



 
						