Category Archives: AmericanaWeek.com

Americana Week 2013 Dates Announced

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It’s never too early to start planning for Americana Week and with the dates so recently announced, we want to pass them on to you.

AmericanaWeek.com is putting the opening and closing dates at January 20 – 27. Here’s how the shows will open up:

New York Ceramics Fair: Wednesday, January 22 – Sunday, January 27.  Admission: $20, includes illustrated catalog

Bohemian National Hall, 321 East 73rd Street

Winter Antiques Show: Wednesday, January 25- Sunday, February 3, 2013. Open daily 12 p.m. – 8 p.m.. Sundays & Thursday 12 p.m. – 6 p.m.. Opening Night Party, January 24, 2013  *Benefit Show for East Side House Settlement

Park Avenue Armory, 67th Street and Park Avenue
As auctions and other Show dates become available, we will post them here. Please visit again soon.

Antiques Dealers’ Association of America to Honor Folk Art Society

The American Antiques Show Display, 2012

Later this month the Antiques Dealers’ Association of America, a group whose mission is make more professional the business of buying and selling antiques, will honor The American Folk Art Society as the recipient of the 2012 ADA Award of Merit in recognition of the group’s outstanding contributions to the fields of American decorative arts and antiques. The award’s presentation and dinner will be held in conjunction with the prestigious Philadelphia Antiques Show at its new location at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in downtown Philadelphia on April 28th.

Established in 1978 at the forefront of American interest in the subject, the membership of The American Folk Art Society has devoted itself to raising awareness of 18th- and 19th-century American folk art through research and writing, lectures, and the support of public exhibitions. Although a few early American collectors such as Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, Electra Havemeyer Webb and Bertram K. and Nina Fletcher Little made the acquisition of folk art throughout the 20 th century a priority, the real movement to appreciate this untrained and expressive art for its own aesthetic merit did not gain momentum until the late 1970s and early 1980s. As the debate raged about what defined American folk art, members of The American Folk Art Society were pulling artists from obscurity and shedding light on such topics as schoolgirl art, folk art by and about women, African-Americans, and regional folk artists.

Over its thirty-four years of existence, the Society has completed more than sixty research trips, exploring and illuminating the folk art collections of public institutions and private individuals throughout the country—from New York City to Santa Fe, and Williamsburg to Milwaukee.

FIVE REASONS MAKE YOUR WAY TO PHILLY FOR ANTIQUES WEEK 2012

Wanamaker Organ Photo by Eric

Antiques Week in Philadelphia is quickly approaching. Hundreds of dealers will be making their way to the City of Brotherly Love in April for the Philadelphia Antiques Show and the 23rd Street Armory Antiques Show, as well as museum exhibits, performances and gallery events.

This year there are more reasons than ever to come to Philly, take in the sights and stay longer. We offer just five at PhiladelphiaAntiquesWeek.com.

Onto Nashville for Antiques Week

Americana Week 2012 Pier Show Eric Miller Photo

With Americana Week under our belts, it’s time to move south to Nashville and Antiques Week there. Right now promoters and dealers are busy setting up for the Heart of Country Show and the Tailgate-Music Valley Show, this year in a new location.

We’ve created a full schedule of activities for the week on NashvilleAntiquesWeek.com. Following Nashville will be promotions for Asia Week NYC, Philadelphia Antiques Week,  Antiques Week NYC,  and others. Also planned is a site to promote a nationwide Antiques Week in the U.S. Information is available at www.antiquesweek.com

We’re also happy to report on the success of AmericanaWeek.com. It is estimated that we had a reach of 5,000 individuals visiting the site during Americana Week, a reach of 9,000 individuals in January and in the neighborhood of 26,000 from our launch in September until the close of Americana Week January 29.

White Gloves, Skate Boards & Beer Can Tabs As Art At Outsider Art Fair

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The Outsider Art Fair is not an antiques show. It is an art show that displays works by artists that are anything but academic. Outsider opened last night with a salsa band and champagne toast to Sanford Smith, who has nurtured this genre since the fair’s inception 20 years ago.

The art here comes in all shapes and sizes, from the tiniest intricately carved peach stones (see yesterday’s blog) to wall sized mixed media pieces. All, remember, by artists who have not received formal art training and whose imaginations and obsessions drive them to create out of whatever materials are available.

I saw at least two young galleriests with a uniquely contemporary and American take on art brut.  Make Skateboards, Brooklyn, NY, for instance, offered boards with artistic designs, that are both essential gear and collectibles. They also showed more traditional forms of raw art.  At Red Truck Gallery, New Orleans, Noah Antieau displayed works by seven artists he plans to follow as they mature. Among the more finished and complex pieces were works by Bryan Cunningham of Detroit, MI, whose frames incorporate beer can tabs and laces.

Noah Antieau of Red Truck Gallery, New Orleans

At Chicago based Peter Schopf Gallery, Ellen Green’s “flash gloves” are steaming hot. White gloves, those essentials of propriety, are tattooed with suggestions of sexuality and rebellion. Yes, they are todays’ featured image.

Today, the American Folk Art Museum kicks off the 20th edition of Uncommon Artists, a series of talks about timely subjects coordinated with the Fair by Lee Kogan, curator emerita.

Finally, El Museo del Barrio and the Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne, Switzerland,

Chair, boards, art at Make Skateboards

are participating for the first time, lending a unique curatorial point of view to the entire genre.

Outsider Art Fair is a Best Bet for today, Saturday and Sunday. It’s definitely the downtown answer to the uptown scene. And, Outsider is located in midtown, at 7 W. 34th Street.