The 2005 Boston Antiques Show breezed into town March 31-April 3  with antiques offered by 37 dealers at the Park Plaza Castle.   The well-attended preview party had a distinctly sporty flavor: a  live auction offered grand events with the Patriots, the Red Sox  and the Boston Celtics.   Myra Kraft, whose family owns the Patriots, is a tireless  supporter of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Boston (BGCB) and an  array of other area charities. The Henry family, owners of the  Red Sox, is also involved deeply in area philanthropy. The  preview party and auction and a benefit brunch raised more than  $500,000 that will support the club’s operating expenses.   Diane and Meg Wendy put together a bright, attractive and  seamless show. “Sales were better than last year, and our goal is  that next year is even better,” said Diane after the event.   A number of new dealers this year expanded the event’s areas of  interest. Sylvia Powell Decorative Arts, Boston Rare Maps, Linge  de Berry, Finch & Co., Dawn Hill Antiques, G. Evans, Ltd,  Choate & von Z, Blue Heron Interiors and Sphere Gallery were  all first-time exhibitors at the show.   London dealer Sylvia Powell Decorative Arts brought choice  Nineteenth Century English pottery with stylized grotesque faces  by Martin Brothers, including a large circa 1895 loving cup and  an interesting grinning pitcher. The grotesque faces were usually  politically inspired.   Ms Powell also showed Ruskin high-fired vases in gorgeous colors,  an exceptional Royal Doulton vase by Harry Allen, “Beyond Man’s  Footsteps,” and Doulton Lambeth wares, including a vase with  lions by Hannah Barlow and Emily Stormer.   Among the choice pieces from Fair Trade Antiques of Shelburne  Falls, Mass., was a circa 1900 Anglo Raj rosewood campaign chest  of drawers with carved sunburst drawers. Another piece of  interest was a handsome circa 1840 butler’s desk in mahogany and  satinwood. Devonia-Antiques brought some of the exquisite porcelain andstemware of the gilded age that Bostonians are accustomed to seeingin the shop’s Beacon Hill location. The booth was filled with casesof Italian, English and French stemware. A large dining table setwith fine and dramatic porcelain dominated the space.   Other dealers from Beacon Hill include Akin Antiques and  Lighting, which offered an enviable selection of chandeliers for  every taste. Gallagher Christopher had an appealing array of  Venetian glass, a handsome Eighteenth Century Georgian walnut and  parcel-gilt overmantel mirror, with the original classical  painting and a nice, circa 1730-1740 George II settee with carved  lion masks and paw feet.   The booth of North Norwich, N.Y., dealer J. Gallagher was  resplendent with gleaming brass andirons and fireplace fenders,  most Eighteenth and early Nineteenth Century American pieces. A  particularly striking fireplace bench drew much interest among  the partygoers crowded into the booth.   Ware Neck, Va., dealers Vent D’Est offered stylish Continental  furniture and objects to whet most palates. A substantial  Victorian gilt pier mirror that measured 57 by 65 inches hung  above a Louis XV-style wrought iron balcony made into a console.  Other choice pieces for sale were a Louis XV walnut armoire, made  in Bordeaux area in the 1750s, and a George III mahogany tall  chest with escargot feet and fine reeding across the top.   Glenbrook Antiques offered an imposing, 89-inch circa 1820  English Regency mahogany sideboard with four drawers above a  cabinet and butler slides on either side. An American  Regency-style double-pedestal dining table, made in Boston in  about 1920, had a figured mahogany top that extended to 102  inches. It was handmade by Linger of Boston and noted on the  underside “for Mrs. M.I.” An array of Victorian hall lanterns  rounded out the fine objects of view.   The Hudson, N.Y.-based Glenbrook has recently moved from 433 to  510 Warren Street.   Pride of place in the booth of London’s Finch & Co. went to  the Eighteenth Century Oil-on-canvas primitive portrait of a  pointer whose collar was inscribed “Thynne Worthy – Chilton  Candover 1749.” The village among the hills in the background of  the picture is believed to be Chilton Candover in Hampshire.   A group of four Eighteenth Century English armorial reverse  paintings on glass, each with the motto “Si Sit Prudentia”  beneath the shield, had once been used as coaching panels. A  Spanish Gothic, carved wood Christ dating from 1480-1520 was a  most compelling object. Finch also brought along a cabinet of  ancient and medieval curiosities that generated much attention.   Cunha-St John came from Essex, Mass., with a fine selection of  English furniture that ranged from a Regency dining table on four  daintily gadrooned and splayed legs to a notable small English  sideboard. A circa 1750 George III mahogany blanket chest on  frame was impressive, as was a nice Sheraton mahogany wing chair  in scarlet upholstery. The booth was finished with an array of  Dutch pottery and fine Irish glass, the latter from the dealer’s  personal collection.   Glen Cove, N.Y., dealers Henry and Nancy Fender offered walls  full of convex mirrors that were eye catching, to say the least.  They included examples of the English Regency, the Georgian  Period, Classical examples and chinoiserie. It was not all  reflection, however, as the Fenders offered a George III mahogany  chest-on-chest with nice dentil molding and a fine George III  mahogany bachelor’s chest. Blue Heron Interiors of Cohasset, Mass., filled its boothwith high quality pictures by American artists including a finemarine picture, “Boston Harbor, 1878,” by Clement Drew and “The RedBoat” by Albert Thayer.   Boston dealer Richardson-Clarke showed paintings such as Jane  Peterson’s “Venice,” a selection of watercolors by Nineteenth  Century West Point drawing instructor Truman Seymour and an  imposing painting by J. Ambrose Prichard, “An October Morning,  Duxbury, Mass.”   Marlene and John Forster of Sarasota, Fla., have worked out a  congenial dealership. Marlene is a purveyor of nice estate  jewelry while John offers barometers and other instruments. Sold  tags were dotted around the booth early in the preview. Perhaps  the most unusual piece was a circa 1820 angled brass barometer  that was signed by J. Laffrancho of Ludlow, England. Another  piece of interest was an aneroid barometer made sometimes between  1840 and 1875.   For information, 914-698-3442.          
 
    



 
						