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    March 11, 2011

    Published by The Bee Publishing Company, Newtown, Connecticut

    WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. While the vast majority of thecountry bundled up in anattempt to fend off the lingeringcold snap that Old Man Winterhas served up this winter, spirit-ed crowds and brisk sales trans-formed Februarys Palm BeachJewelry, Art & Antiques Showinto a virtual heat wave. Buoyedby a healthy top-end market, top

    quality merchandise and facili-tated by the shows proactive pro-moters, the event was once againtermed by management as arousing success.

    The show is promoted by thePalm Beach Group, and manage-ment has a reputation for gettingthe crowds out to their shows.Palm Beach was no exceptionand the group rolled out the redcarpet for throngs of invitedguests on Friday evening, Febru-ary 18, for a gala preview partythat has not only become a pre-mier social event for locals, butalso a prime buying opportunityfor museum curators and seriouscollectors.

    The four-day show, openthrough February 22, is the flag-

    ship event for the promoters fea-turing 180 exhibitors. Dealersbring a wide range of merchan-dise that includes everythingfrom Monet paintings to dia-monds and jewelry that satisfieseven the most discriminatingtastes. Just how discriminatingare those Palm Beach tastes?One clue comes via a glancearound the shows parking lotwhere there are more Bentley,Rolls Royce, Austin Martin andFerrari automobiles than you canshake a stick at.

    In just eight years, and with lotsof regional competition,this showhas distinguished itself, thecream easily rising to the top.

    The combination of the high-caliber dealers that participate in

    Lillian Nassau, New York City

    Norman Rockwells Two Men Reading Detective Stories, left,Maurice Utrillos Restaurant Bibet a Saint Bernard, Ain,cen-ter and Gil Elvgrens Gentlemen Prefer were among the

    The C.B. Fish oil Out for a Drive on the Open Road wasattracting attention at Red Fox Fine Art, Middleburg, Va.,as was the bronze by Isidore Jules Bonheur.

    The Joseph Lee oil Schooner Mary E. Russ was marked$85,000, left, and the Hayley Lever oil Sailing at Marble-head was $145,000 at Vallejo Gallery, Newport Beach, Calif. Modern-Decor, Ann Arbor, Mich.

    Museum quality was the term dealer BillDrucker used for the rare hair comb in ster-ling with semiprecious stones designed byVivianna Torun Blow-Hde for GeorgJensen. Drucker Antiques, Mount Kisco,N.Y.

    Review and Photos by

    Antiques and The Arts Weekly

    David S. Smith, Managing Editor

    Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antiques Show

    The Robert Salmon paintingAt The Shore was $48,000,

    as was the Donald De Luebronze Seated Womanfrom 1934. Childs Gallery,Boston, Mass.

    Galerie Peter Hardt, Radevormwald, Germany

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    Originally Published in Antiques and The Arts Weekly, The Bee Publishing Company, Newtown, CT.Republished here with permission. May not be reproduced for further dissemination,

    either in print or electronically, without express permission of the publisher.

    ent to our guests is what weattribute to our success, saidScott Diament, chief operating

    officer of the Palm Beach ShowGroup.This is a show that trulyoffers something for every type ofcollector and every type of pricerange.Plush, white-carpeted floors

    add an air of elegance to theevent not only does it lookwonderful, but it is easy on thefeet a necessary thing whenpatrons are expected to maneu-ver the expansive floor for hourson end.While attendance numbers

    were not quantified in preciseterms, management reportedtens of thousands savvy collec-tors, industry experts and seri-ous buyers flocking to the PalmBeach Convention Center for

    the show. Management notedantiques industry icon RonaldBourgeault was in attendance.Ive never seen such crowds atan antiques show the previewparty was packed, stated theNew Hampshire auctioneer.Celebrities and local wealth

    were prevalent at opening,but sowere serious buyers. Maine deal-er Tom Veilleux reported twoimpressive sales during theopening night festivities. AJamie Wyeth ink and watercoloron paper, Cushing Saw, wasstickered at $110,000 and sport-ed a sold tag soon after the doorsto the show opened. Selling to alocal Palm Beach collector, the18-by-25-inch painting will beincluded in the Brandywinemuseums Jamie Wyeth exhibi-

    tion in June.Hyannis,Mass., nautical dealer

    Hyland Granby also reported a

    good showing in Palm Beach.From the stand in the front cor-ner of the exhibition hall, thedealer offered a wide variety ofmaterials ranging from ship por-traits to early marine-relatedcarvings. Among the early saleswas a large carved and gildedeagle by William Seward, circa1895. Granby related thatSeward was a ship carver thatworked in Baltimore and wasknown to have carved sternboards, although this particularcarving was believed to havehung in a public building.Marked $250,000, the eagle wassigned on the reverse with deepetched lettering,W Seward.

    A number of paintings also sold

    from the walls of Hyland Gran-bys booth, including a work byJames E. Buttersworth titledNew York Yacht Club Race.Other sales included a miniaturewagon with folk art ads from aNew York brewery, circa 1880; ascrimshaw whales tooth featur-ing a female pirate;and a secondcarved wooden eagle. Referringto the large eagle, dealer AlanGranby commented, I couldhave sold it three times I wishI had three of them.

    York County, Penn., dealer JeffBridgman, known for his impor-tant selection of American flags,offered what he termed to be thebest historical flag, extremelyrare and important, the flag ofGeneral Philip Henry Sheridan,circa 1862. Bridgman listed the

    flag among his sales, along withtwo great Civil War flags, a won-derfully carved eagle dating to

    the last quarter of the Nine-teenth Century that came out ofa federal courthouse in Colum-bus, Ohio, and a pair of beaded,doe-skin American Indian moc-casins with a circular Americanflag decoration,circa 1880.

    Tenafly, N.J., dealer MichaelBorghi displayed an assortment

    Russian enameled silver in the booth of John Atzbach, Red-

    Works by Alexander Calder, center, were flanked by oils byRichard Pousette-Dart at Michael Borghi Fine Art, Tenafly,

    English and Continental furniture atMichael Pashby, New York City. Valevio Antiques, Coral Gables, Fla.

    Seventh Century Tang dynasty pottery figures were at J.R.Richards, Los Angeles.

    William Cook, England

    The monumental FrederickJudd Waugh, 70 DegreesNorth, was a highlight atMichael Latragna Fine Art,Fort Myers, Fla.

    Boasts Huge Crowds And Active Selling

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    Tenafly, N.J., dealer MichaelBorghi displayed an assortmentof paintings that ranged fromworks by Richard Pousette-Dart,boldly displayed on the frontexterior walls of the stand, topaintings and watercolors byAlexander Calder, Hans Hof-mann and Norman Bluhm.Borghi reported the sale of a

    Bluhm watercolor from 1957,along with an important Hans

    Hofmann painting titled BlueSymphony that the dealer hadpriced at $165,000.Two interesting paintings by

    Emile Munier were featured atRehs Galleries, New York City.Muniers Feeding the Rabbits,was marked at $250,000, anddisplayed alongside of it was acharming scene depicting two

    cherubs that was titledArmistice and was marked

    price on request.Crowds have been great, said

    New Orleans dealer Bill Rau,M.S. Rau Antiques. Weve beenas busy as we can be and sold aselection of art,silver and jewelryto collectors from around theworld. The dealers offered astunning selection of artworksthat included a Monet and a

    Manet, as well as iconic Ameri-can works, such as NormanRockwells Two Men ReadingDetective Stories, and Gil Elv-grens pinup art painting Gen-tlemen PreferThere is a considerable amount

    of jewelry on the floor of the showand it ranges from the glitzy andwearable, to pieces bound formuseum collections.Camilla Dietz Bergeron sold

    several important pieces of jewel-ry, including a Van Cleef &Arpels invisibly set sapphire and

    Sallea Antiques, New Canaan, Conn.

    Eve Stone finalizes a sale during the preview party. EveStone Antiques, Woodbridge, Conn.

    Marsden Hartley, top, and John Marin paintings at GodelFine Art, New York City

    Guarisco Gallery, Washington, D.C.

    Asiantiques, Winter Park, Fla.

    Two works by Emile Munier were featured at Rehs Galleries,New York City, with Feeding the Rabbits, left, marked at$250,000,while Armistice was price on request.

    A Fourteenth Century seated gilt-bronzeBuddha from Central Tibet was at TK AsianAntiques, New York City. It was flanked by apair of dreamstones from the YunnanProvince.

    Malcolm Magruder, Millwood, Va.

    George Shultzs Summer Afternoon, left, William Clos-sons Preparing for the Pageant, center, and Lillian Burk

    Meesers The Chinese Vase were featured at Brock & Co.,Concord, Mass.

    A silver and mixed metalsJapanesque water pitcherby Tiffany, circa 1878, was ahighlight at Spencer Marks,East Walpole, Mass.

    The Roy King wooden sculpture Horse andRider was flanked by works by RockwellKent, Charles Burchfield and AndrewWyeth from the Tom Veilleux Gallery, Port-land, Maine.

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    Works by Fernando Botero at Frederic GotGallery, Paris

    Hyland Granby, Hyannis, Mass.

    rings, a Buccellati sapphire anddiamond cuff and a monumentalpair of antique diamond dropearrings.Las Vegas and Manhattan jew-

    elry dealer Fred Leighton was onhand for the show and the seduc-tive selection kept a crowd ofshoppers in front of the booth atall times. Manned by a smart-looking staff, owner RalphEsmerian was not seen behindthe counter at preview.New York City dealers Mack-

    lowe Gallery reported the sale ofa significant collection of ArtNouveau jewelry that wasbought up by one collector.Museum quality was the term

    dealer Bill Drucker used for arare and stylish hair comb ofsterling and semiprecious coloredstones that had been designed byVivianna Torun Blow-Hde forGeorg Jensen. Among severalpieces of Jensen jewelry in thebooth, the Mount Kisco dealersalso offered a stunning selectionof Jensen silver, including anexceedingly rare figural lampdesigned by Johan Rohde in1920, number 382, that retaineda custom green silk shade. Other

    standouts from the Jensen silverincluded a samovar, a candelabradesigned by Harald Nielson and

    a rare covered bonbonniere from1926.Other sales reported from

    around the floor included amakassar ebony buffet with nick-eled hardware and a marble topby French maker Maurice Rinck,circa 1930, at Valerio Antiques;Audubon prints at Graham Arad-er; a collection of original artwatercolor childrens book illus-trations at Carlson and Steven-son; a Nineteenth Century silvertray by London maker BenSmith at Robert Lloyd;and a dra-matic Albert Paley hand-forgedsteel stand at Lillian Nassau.Also popular was the shows lec-

    ture series that featured GloriaLieberman of Skinner jewelrydepartment; Tom Gregersen, cul-tural director of the MorikamiMuseum and Japanese Gardens;and Gordon Lewis, senior direc-tor and vice president of the FineArts Conservancy. Among thedealers presenting lectures wereJanet Drucker, Robert Lloyd andElias Martin of Floating WorldGallery.The next show for the Palm

    Beach Group will be the Balti-more Summer Antiques Show

    scheduled for August 2528. Forinformation, 561-822-5440 orwww.palmbeachshow.com.

    Galerie Vivendi, Paris

    Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antiques Show