Tag Archives: New York

Ceramics Fair Returns to Bohemian National Hall

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The New York Ceramics Fair celebrates its 13th year with the season’s first opening preview Tuesday, January 17th. For the second year, New York Ceramics Fair visitors can enjoy its elegant new venue, the Grand Ballroom of the Bohemian National Hall, home of the Czech Consulate, 321 East 73rd Street.

The January 17th preview, from 5 to 9 pm, is $90 per person and offers a “first look” at this year’s Fair enhanced by libations and a light repast. This year’s Ceramics Fair will again present a select group of world renowned galleries and dealers specializing in important pottery, glass and porcelain.

The Fair offers the most distinguished ceramics lecture series in the US. A complete schedule is available on the AmericanaWeek.com EVENT page.

While last year, a combination of economic concerns and uncertainty about the new venue resulted in a slightly smaller Fair than in years past, visitors to the 2012 Fair will enjoy the return of many US based galleries as well as a extensive participation of worldclass international dealers, many from the UK.

The 2012 Lecture Series, now being booked, will be presented in the recently renovated first floor Cinema, which can accommodate 60. Again this year, lecture tickets are $10 per lecture plus show admission of $20 (run of show). Series tickets for three lectures can be purchased for $25 plus show admission. The full lecture series will be announced in the coming weeks.

Bohemia National Hall is just 2 blocks from Sotheby’s and only 9 blocks from the Park Avenue Armory. The Fair is staged in its 4th floor Grand Ballroom and surrounding balcony.

The Ceramics Fair’s regular hours are Wednesday, January 18- through Satuday, January 21 from 11 am to 7 pm, and on Sunday, January 22 from 11 am to 4 pm. General admission for the run of the Fair is $20, with a color catalogue included.

Produced by Caskey Lees Inc., Topanga, CA, the New York Ceramics Fair is a vetted Fair at which collectors may purchase with confidence.

It’s Time to Embrace Americana Again

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MAD editorialThis editorial previously appeared in Maine Antiques Digest

Now is the time to embrace Americana.

Let’s face it, times are tough for the American decorative arts. Sure, there’s the two percent of the best of the best that still commands attention and high prices, but we can do more. For the industry to thrive, middle America needs to rediscover Americana.

But, you know what? Americana is hot at the other end of the spectrum too. At markets like the Brooklyn Flea, Millennials are eating up advertising signs, industrial remnants and other items that is nothing if it isn’t Americana. They may not call it that, but the love is there.

Looking forward to New York’s Americana Week in January, a discussion brought to light the need for a more comprehensive effort to promote the week, and bring new audiences in to discover Americana. Until now promotions have been aimed by individual shows and auctions at the same audience.

That realization has given birth to a new campaign called AmericanaWeek.com. Everyone involved is invited to participate, and absolutely everyone is encouraged to make it to New York for the week that celebrates not only Americana, but America.

That’s what a love for Americana is, isn’t it? A love for America and for the visible evidence of our history and traditions. A look through the headlines and it quickly becomes clear that we need a little boost. It’s time to renew the national affair with American Antiques.

It’s time to love Americana again.

Eric Miller
AmericanaWeek.com

AmericanaWeek.com Launches Social and Mobile Campaign to Ignite Sales of American Art and Antiques

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When New York’s Americana Week rolls around again in January 2012, dealers and show promoters will have the support of an independent news and education source. AmericanaWeek.com and its mobile app will help sellers reach more new buyers.

When New York’s Americana Week rolls around in January 2012, it will have the trans-media storytelling power of AmericanaWeek.com behind it, driving new audiences to traditional venues. AmericanaWeek.com is the awareness campaign launched recently to help introduce the events, dealers and arts of Americana Week to new audiences.

According to the campaign’s coordinators, Eric Miller, founder of Urban Art and Antiques (http://www.UrbanArtAntiques.com) and Calendar of Antiques (http://calendarofantiques.com), and Regina Kolbe, President of the marketing firm PR To the Trade (http://www.prtothetrade.com), AmericanaWeek.com is the public’s “Gateway to Americana Week.”

The AmericanaWeek.com website covers shows, auctions, attractions, places to stay and offers travel tips. A supporting mobile app will provide immediate access to the events and participants.

“People may know about Americana Week,” Eric Miller said, “but how do you instill the desire to buy? The best way is to create a sense of pride in American works of art, much as the new Chinese buyers have in their culture and heritage.”

AmericanWeek.com addresses that with trans-media storytelling. “Simply put, that means creating interesting content about the collecting areas and then spreading it across the social channels in the ways that resonate with the users those channels.” (http://www.americanaweek.com)

Ms. Kolbe added, “Americana Week.com is the first time dealers and shows have an independent Internet source to carry their message. The message is the back-story of American art and antiques, the back-story of the American dream brought to life through the hands of painters, crafts people and makers from Colonial times to the present.

“When a connection is established between the visual and the historical, the next step is wanting to shop for authentic Americana.”

The AmericanaWeek.com website will post content from contributing editors and dealers who participate in the campaign. While press releases will not be accepted, participants will be free to write on their specialty, once the site’s coordinators approve the subject matter. An editorial board is currently being established to moderate and maintain a healthy balance of editorial matter.

At its most effective, the content will paint Americana with a broad brush, connecting socially-inclined web users and allowing them to relate Americana to their specific interests, Mr. Miller stated.

The mobile app will fill the needs of people who take their content “lite” and on the go. It also serves as an on-the-spot guide for visitors in search of specific items or specific dealers.

AmericanaWeek.com (http://www.americanaweek.com) is a co-op ad based program, open to every organization that benefits from Americana Week events. Combo media packages offer exposure on the website, the app and across social media.

For more information on how to be an AmericanaWeek.com participant, please visit http://www.AmericanaWeek.com.

See this article on Yahoo News.

See this Article in ArtFixDaily.

See this article on the Calendar of Antiques.

Looking for America in Americana

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Broadly speaking, Americana is the material products that come from a uniquely American experience. A Kentucky bureau, an Amish quilt, a Coca-Cola sign, a Schwinn bicycle and a Harley Davidson can all be seen and celebrated as Americana. To celebrate Americana is to celebrate American material culture. It’s as broad and deep as the country and open to both the narrow and expansive interpretations.

When we think of Americana, we often think of the folk art, colonial furniture and other items that relate to the people here in the early days- our ancestors. That’s one definition, and you’ll find lots of that in the

museums and shows at Americana Week. Americana goes beyond that. Andy Warhol brought forth a certain way of looking at Americana, and his iconic images are Americana as much as the soup cans he depicted are.

Then there’s the Americana of the West, and of Native Americans. As different people and cultures are woven into the American fabric, what is seen as Americana broadens and brings new stories to light.

Recently on ebay I spotted a Chock full o’Nuts coffee can with an image of the World Trade Center on it. That’s Americana. Watch an episode of American Pickers, from Coke signs to Schwinn bicycles, that’s Americana. In fact, lots of people are out there at flea markets and fairs finding Americana without ever thinking much about what it is. But looking for Americana is a process of looking for America, and one of discovering ourselves, our history and the stories about the people the items bring to life.

And so I asked a few folks for their definitions. I hope you’ll add yours in the comments section. We’ll continue to add more.

“Ordinary items that reflect the way American’s lived in the past.”

Mary Kates Ballard

“From my perspective, Americana reflects who we are. After 1830 we shook the allegiance to European roots and began to form our own ideas. Since our backgrounds are German, English, Irish, Scotch and even French, we couldn’t help but reflect those cultures. However we began to make furniture from native woods, pine, poplar, cherry and walnut instead of importing mahogany from Europe. Basic needs were met when we made blanket chests, food safes and cupboards. Many were painted and decorated to reflect the ancestry of the makers.

Booth of flag dealer Jeff Bridgman at Antiques and Art at the Armory in 2010

Women contributed by gathering together to make quilts, coverlets and carpets. These were made in the colors and designs that reflected their individual backgrounds, much the same as flags. We didn’t have fine institutions for education in the arts but we had artists who painted signs and decorated wagons and many also drew and painted portraits or landscapes for their customers as gifts or extra money.

We are a proud people and like decorative objects and so we began to create chalk ware (actually a form of paper mache) figures to resemble the fine English Staffordshire and to decorate our every day stoneware with wonderful pictures of flowers and animals. School girls practiced the art of sewing and embroidery.

Americana is really the feeling that all of these objects gives us; one of warmth, friendliness and texture. Some of us are lucky enough to have inherited the originals; others have become collectors through antiques sales and flea markets. But there are many reproductions available that will create a great Americana facsimile. Mostly Americana makes you feel good and makes you proud. Obviously as the years pass, the images will change and take on a new persona.”

Bettianne Sweeney

Discovering Old New York: A Visit to the Merchant’s House

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A list of things to do in New York City doesn’t commonly include house tours. Of the five major early east coast cities (also including Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Charleston), it’s probably harder to get a sense of the distant past in New York than the others. From about the time of the Erie Canal, New York has been immersed in a continual process of renewing and rebuilding, a process that has made the city what it is, but has largely confined the past to museums.

Perhaps the best place to get a sense of New York around the time of the Erie Canal is the Merchant’s House at 29 East Fourth Street near Washington Square, in what was known as the “Bond Street Area.” Seabury and Eliza Tredwell were typical merchants in 1830s New York, then more of a prosperous seaport than the international center of finance, fashion and most everything else it is today. Tredwell, a hardware importer, might have been lost to history as many other merchant families from the era, except that the house survived.

When many of their neighbors later moved to more to more fashionable uptown neighborhoods, the Tredwells stayed. Their eighth child, Gertrude,

Merchants House Exterior

was born in the house, never married, and died in an upstairs bedroom in 1933. Three years later, the house, and all its furnishings, was opened to the public as a museum.

Built in 1832, the Merchant’s House exemplifies a transitional architectural style. The façade, with its steeply pitched roof, dormer windows, marble door surround, and elaborate fan light, recalls

 

earlier Federal-style homes, while inside, the formal Greek revival parlors reflect the latest architectural fashion of the day. The Merchant’s House is considered New York City’s prime example of a Greek revival home.

The house today has few of the amenities that were later added to other early town homes. The kitchen is in the basement, and no bathrooms were ever added to the first or second floors. The parlor and dining rooms still have gas chandeliers, although they have been adapted with fiber-optic lights that give a sense of the look of gas lighting.

When you walk up to the house, it seems to be somewhat out of place in busy, modern New York. The left side adjoins a non-descript garage with a steel door, while on the right is a construction site. The Tredwells wouldn’t have recognized either, and the homes of their neighbors are long-ago removed.

Ringing the doorbell, you’d almost expect Gertrude to answer. Instead a buzzer sounds, and pushing the door open you step into a vestibule decorated with painted marble bricks, a popular scheme of the era. The hall is long and the check-in is in the back in an old sun porch. As you pass the parlor and the dining room along the way, it’s hard to pay much attention when it’s suggested the tours should start in the basement.

But it’s down the stairs and into a small room where the Tredwells spent much of their time. During the day it was the children’s play area; in the evening the family took its meals there, where they were brought by servants from the kitchen next door. One technological advance the Tredwells did adopt was a cast iron stove, which now accompanies a built-in beehive bake oven and large cooking hearth.

The rear courtyard seems a bit strange, with the remnants of an old building acting as a wall to the east, and decorative plantings where once there would have been grass and even a cow.

Merchants House Ceiling

Upstairs the rooms are filled with New York Furniture, some attributed to notable cabinetmakers including Duncan Phyfe and Joseph Meeks. A square grand piano sits in the parlor beneath an intricate ceiling with a recessed medallion and perforated plaster cornice. The mantles are granite and include carved classical columns. The dining room is furnished with a mahogany New York sideboard. The pairs of windows at either end of the house are centered by floor to ceiling gilt mirrors.

If there is one thing missing from New York, it’s this sense of what the city was like, a sense of the way early New Yorkers lived. If the Tredwells had lived in the present day, they might be living in a condominium, or even in a New Jersey suburb. The grand piano might be replaced by an entertainment center, gas by electricity, servants by restaurants, bells by phones–and the list continues. They would have been as out-of-place in our world as we are in theirs. Lucky for us their home is in our world, and through it we are able to get a glimpse of who they were, what New York was, and where it all has led.