Upload
chrissypbshow
View
1.282
Download
4
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
PRESIDENTS’ DAY WEEKENDFEBRUARY 18–22, 2011
Palmalm Beach Jewelelry,
ArtArt & Antntique Show
C1_PB11.indd C1C1_PB11.indd C1 1/27/11 6:16:29 PM1/27/11 6:16:29 PM
C2_PB11.indd C2C2_PB11.indd C2 1/27/11 6:16:49 PM1/27/11 6:16:49 PM
The Largest Show of its Kind in the United States
Palm Beach
Jewelry, Art &
Antique Show
Presidents’ Day Weekend
February 18–22, 201 1
201 1 Show Catalogue
001_PB11.indd 1001_PB11.indd 1 1/27/11 6:06:14 PM1/27/11 6:06:14 PM
From the Organizers,
Welcome to the eighth annual Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show — the largest show of its kind in the United States. As organizers, each year we strive for excellence, traveling to the fi nest art and antiques shows worldwide, in addition to frequenting the most important shows in the nation. As a result, it is our pleasure to present a prestigious international array of unique and highly esteemed exhibitors in each category.
A show of this magnitude presents challenges from inception and requires a coordinated effort from a myriad of people. We would like to show our gratitude by congratulating everyone involved in making the Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show a success. It is truly a team effort that requires seamless production from our hardworking offi ce staff to our technical and creative personnel that bring this event to life.
For the fourth year, we are proud to be associated with the Historical Society of Palm Beach County, the benefi ciary of our Opening Night Preview Party. Funds raised from the preview party will go towards the educational programs of the Richard and Pat Johnson Palm Beach County History Museum and the Historical Society of Palm Beach County. The museum enriches the lives of children and adults by making local history accessible, interesting and meaningful.
Most importantly, special thanks to our sponsors for their support and to our exhibitors and lecturers from around the world who travel here so that we may enjoy spectacular works of art, rare antiques and timeless treasures. To each participant, we offer our deep appreciation and gratitude.
To our visitors, we extend our warmest welcome and invite you to take advantage of this cultural experience and the opportunity to meet many of the world's most renowned and respected jewelry, fi ne art and antiques dealers who are eager to share their knowledge and treasures with you. We are also pleased to welcome you to other Palm Beach Show Group events:
Baltimore Summer Antiques Show, August 25–28, 2011 Dallas International Art, Antique & Jewelry Show, October 27–31, 2011
“It would take a lifetime of travel to experience all that the Palm Beach Show Group has to offer.”
Enjoy the Show!
Scott DiamentKris Charamonde
Show Organizers
Robert Samuels
002_PB11.indd 2002_PB11.indd 2 1/28/11 12:27:06 PM1/28/11 12:27:06 PM
Lecture Series Schedule
Private Preview Party
Friday, February 18 6:00�PM�–�10:00�PM
Benefi ting the Historical Society of Palm Beach County
The Largest Show of its Kind in the United States
Show Hours
Saturday February 19 11�AM�–�7�PM
Sunday February 20 11�AM�–�7�PM
Monday February 21 11�AM�–�7�PM
Tuesday February 22 11�AM�–�6�PM
Palm Beach Jewelry,
Art & Antique Show
201 1
CATALOGUE DESIGN AND PRODUCTION
Pure Imaging Inc., Watertown, Massachusetts USAPrinted in the USA
Tuesday, February 22
1:00�P.M.
Scott Diament G.G. G.I.A., President, CollectorsArtnet.com, COO, Palm Beach Show Group
Title: CollectorsArtnet.com: The Exciting New International Marketplace for Fine Art, Antiques and Jewelry
3:00�P.M.
Elias Martin, Floating World GalleryTitle: Roots and New Blooms: The Modern
Japanese Print as Avant Garde
Saturday, February 19
1:00�P.M.
Janet Drucker, Drucker AntiquesTitle: Dining in Style with Georg Jensen Silver
3:00�P.M.
Gloria Lieberman, Director of Fine Jewelry, Skinner, Inc.
Title: Signed Jewelry: How it Drives the Market and When Does it Add Value
Sunday, February 20
1:00�P.M.
Gordon Lewis, Senior Director and Vice President, The Fine Arts Conservancy
Title: The Uffi zi: Against All Odds. World War II and the Florence Flood
3:00�P.M.
Robert Lloyd, Robert Lloyd, Inc. Title: The Hallmarks of Great Britain and
America
Monday, February 21
1:00�P.M.
Anthony Peter Senecal, Historian, The Mar-a-Lago Club
Title: Mar-a-Lago: The Rich History and Jewels of the Marjorie Merriweather Post Era
3:00�P.M.
Tom Gregersen, Cultural Director, Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens
Title: Paintings and Calligraphy by 20th Century Zen Masters
003r3_PB11.indd 3003r3_PB11.indd 3 1/31/11 10:11:28 AM1/31/11 10:11:28 AM
Dear Friends:
I am pleased to welcome you to the 8th annual Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show at the Palm Beach County Convention Center in West Palm Beach, Florida.
Florida is proud to host this event, which draws more than 50,000 people from the United States and around the world to our state to view magnifi cent works of art. This annual milestone in the art com-munity features nearly 200 international exhibitors and is an important economic generator for Florida. Events like these are exactly what Florida needs to create jobs.
During your stay, I encourage you to enjoy the many delights that Florida's Cultural Capitol has to offer, including 47 miles of Atlantic shoreline, historic hotels, museums and performing arts venues, and world-class shopping and dining.
Best wishes for a successful event and an enjoyable visit to the Sunshine State.
Sincerely,
Rick ScottGovernor of Florida
February 18, 2011
4
RICK SCOTTGOVERNOR
THE CAPITOLTALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA 32399 • (850) 488-2272 • FAX (850) 922-4292
004_PB11.indd 4004_PB11.indd 4 1/27/11 6:07:00 PM1/27/11 6:07:00 PM
Dear Guests,
On behalf of the City of West Palm Beach, it is my pleasure to welcome you to the Eighth Annual Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show. This much anticipated event brings over 200 prestigious dealers from around the world to the Capital City of the Palm Beaches at the Palm Beach County Convention Center.
I would like to extend hearty congratulations to the show organizers: Kris Charamonde, Scott Diament and Rob Samuels. The Palm Beach Jewelry Art & Antique Show has become a vital part of the Palm Beach season, both in terms of the cultural experience it provides and the economic advantages it brings to our community through tourism and international business.
In addition to enjoying the amazing collection of art, antiques and jewelry, I encourage you to explore the many other treasures the City has to offer. After show hours, walk across the street to CityPlace for fabulous dining and shopping, see a show at the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts or visit our picturesque waterfront.
Enjoy your stay in West Palm Beach, and enjoy the show.
Sincerely,
Lois J. FrankelMayor
5
005_PB11.indd 5005_PB11.indd 5 1/27/11 6:07:22 PM1/27/11 6:07:22 PM
OFFICIAL INFORMATION SOURCE FOR VISITORS AND MEETING PLANNERS
1555 PALM BEACH LAKES BOULEVARD, SUITE 800, WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA 33401T. 561.233.3000 F. 561.233.3009 palmbeachfl.com
Greetings,
On behalf of the Palm Beach County Convention and Visitors Bureau, I would like to extend a warm welcome to all of the guests and exhibitors attending the 8th annual Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show. This prestigious event brings history and culture to the forefront at our state-of-the-art Palm Beach County Convention Center.
Congratulations to Kris Charamonde, Scott Diament and Rob Samuels, for organizing this international event that has become a tradition and major destination for renowned exhibitors, distinguished collectors and lovers of fi ne art and antiques.
Our community is privileged to host this world-class show, and we invite you to discover The Palm Beaches where, for over 100 years, travelers from around the world have stayed, played and experienced the genuine hospitality and breathtaking beauty of America’s First Resort Destination®.
Enjoy the show and make The Palm Beaches your own — the best way to experience Florida!
Sincerely,
Jorge PesqueraCEO/President
6
006_PB11.indd 6006_PB11.indd 6 1/27/11 6:07:43 PM1/27/11 6:07:43 PM
CONTENTS
Show Hours & Preview Party 1
Lecture Series 3
Letters of Greeting 4
Retro Revival 12by Lynn Morgan
American Modernism: The Shein Collection 18by Charles Brock & Nancy Anderson, with Harry Cooper
Participating Exhibitors 28
Advertisements 189
Index of Exhibitors 223
Future Palm Beach Show Group Exhibitions 230
FRONT COVER
William Samuel Horton (1865–1936), Children on an English Beach, ca. 1918.Oil on board, 15 x 18 inches. Courtesy of Brock & Co., Concord, Massachusetts.
BACK COVER
“Pavot” flower pin set with “mystery set” ruby petals, round diamond pistil center, three pavé set leaves and stem with round and baguette diamonds, mounted in platinum and 18k gold, signed Van Cleef & Arpels and numbered with French assay marks, circa 1960s. Courtesy of J.S. Fearnley, Atlanta, Georgia.
7
007_PB11.indd 7007_PB11.indd 7 1/28/11 12:29:11 PM1/28/11 12:29:11 PM
What can you be sure about in times like these? As a client of UBS, you can be sure that we remain one of the best
capitalized banks in the world.* That we remain focused on strengthening the capabilities our clients have demanded
for over 140 years. Most of all, you can be certain that we’ll take the time to listen, to understand and to help you find
the appropriate long-term solutions. These are the certainties of the relationships we have with our clients. Today, more
than ever, you can be sure that our commitment to them is unwavering.
For a complimentary consultation, contact
The Barron Group
Advisory & Brokerage Services
Michael S. Barron, CFP® Ronnie C. Simpson Todd D. Barron, CFP®, ChFC®, CLU®
Senior Vice President–Investments Vice President–Investments Vice President–Investments
Senior Portfolio Manager Portfolio Manager Portfolio Manager
Portfolio Management Program Portfolio Management Program Portfolio Management Program
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
440 Royal Palm Way, Third Floor, Palm Beach, FL 33480
561-659-9581 888-310-9378
www.ubs.com/team/barrongroup
The times are uncertain. The relationship isn’t.
*Based on a comparison of UBS’s June 30, 2008 Tier 1 capital ratio against Tier 1 capital ratios most recently reported by banks governed by the Basel I or II Capital Accords. UBS Financial Services Inc. is a subsidiary of UBS AG. ©2010 UBS Financial Services Inc. All rights reserved. Wealth management services in the U.S. are provided by UBS Financial Services Inc., a registered broker-dealer offering securities, trading, brokerage, and related products and services. Member SIPC. Member FINRA. CFP® is a certification mark owned by Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, Inc. 26.30_Ad_9x10
008_PB11.indd 8008_PB11.indd 8 1/27/11 6:08:29 PM1/27/11 6:08:29 PM
9
Welcome to the Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show!
The Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show is the largest show of its kind in the United States. UBS Financial Services Inc. is proud to be the main sponsor of this unique and notable event and we are honored to continue our eight-year partnership with the show.
Appreciating and supporting art is a deeply valued tradition at UBS, where we aim to provide the most personalized services available globally in wealth management, asset management, and investment banking. We believe that art is an individual endeavor, with each person appreciating art from their own point-of-view. Our approach to fi nancial advice and guidance works the same way, with each person's individual situation requiring different perspectives, techniques, and solutions. At UBS, we are committed to supporting cultural expression and to making the arts accessible to our clients, our employees, and to the communities in which we serve.
UBS Financial Services, Inc. is proud to be affi liated with the works exhibited at the Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show. The show brings together collectors, exhibitors, and art enthusiasts from around the world, and promises to be an enriching experience for everyone involved. Please enjoy their vast talents and enjoy the show!
Bradford W. SmithyExecutive DirectorComplex DirectorUBS Financial Services Inc.
009_PB11.indd 9009_PB11.indd 9 1/27/11 6:08:46 PM1/27/11 6:08:46 PM
PreviewEveningO F T H E
W W W. H I S T O R I C A L S O C I E T Y P B C . O RG
The funds donated from the Preview evening benefit the
educational programs of the Historical Society and the Richard
and Pat Johnson Palm Beach County History Museum, located
within the 1916 Courthouse in downtown West Palm Beach.
Following a multi-million dollar restoration, the Museum
opened in March 2008 to enrich the lives of children and
adults. The Courthouse also serves as the headquarters for the
Historical Society of Palm Beach County.
PA L M B E A C HC H C O U N T Y
R I C H A R D A N D PATPAT
JOHNSON
HISTORYMUSEUM
F R I D AY, F E B R U A RY 1 8 , 2 0 1 1
PA L M B E A C H C O U N T Y
R I C H A R D A N D PAT
JOHNSON
HISTORYMUSEUM
010_PB11.indd 10010_PB11.indd 10 1/27/11 6:09:24 PM1/27/11 6:09:24 PM
PA L M B E A C H C O U N T Y
R I C H A R D A N D PAT
JOHNSON
HISTORYMUSEUM
Historical Society of Palm Beach County exists to further
an understanding and appreciation of Palm Beach County history and
heritage by collecting, preserving, interpreting, and exhibiting cultural
resources for education and enrichment of present and future
generations. The Society maintains a large library and archive which is
an active research facility.
The Richard and Pat Johnson Palm Beach County History Museum
took six years to complete and enables the Historical Society to weave
our community history into the fabric of daily life. The Museum is
divided into two main galleries, The People Gallery and The Place
Gallery plus a temporary gallery for rotating special exhibits. The
People Gallery features a large theatrical diorama projecting images of
notable individuals from all walks of Palm Beach County life. Kiosks
and exhibits with artifacts contribute to unfolding the stories behind
these significant and colorful characters of the past, including
Pre-Columbian inhabitants, Seminole Indians, early pioneers, the
business and philanthropic community, educators, and influential
leaders in the arts, law, medicine and politics. The Place Gallery explores
Palm Beach County’s natural environment and the many communities
that have contributed to its distinct identity. The courthouse building
also houses the original 1916 courtroom with exhibits on government
and the election process.
The Historical Society provides an educational curriculum on county
history to the School District of Palm Beach County at no cost to tax
payers. In addition to education programs in the schools, we invite
adult and student tour groups to participate in the museum
experience by scheduling a visit or participating in one of our special
events or programs. We also invite you to explore Palm Beach County
history online by visiting www.pbchistoryonline.org.
For further information please call (561) 832-4164 or visit our
website at www.historicalsocietypbc.org
The Museum is open 10am – 5pm Tuesday through Saturday.
300 N. Dixie Highway, Downtown West Palm Beach, Florida 33401.
the
PPA L M B E A C HC H C O U N T Y
R I C H A R DR D A N D PATPAT
JOHNSNSON
HIHISTORYMUSEUMEUM
AUDREY AND MARTIN GRUSSFOUNDATION
ON EXHIBIT THROUGH JUNE 30 , 2011
AUDREY AND MARTIN GRUSSFOUNDATION
MUSEUM ADMISSION IS FREE
011_PB11.indd 11011_PB11.indd 11 1/27/11 6:13:21 PM1/27/11 6:13:21 PM
12
by LYNN MORGAN
REVIVALRETRO
“Retro” jewelry can be an elusive concept. First coined in the
1970s by jewelry historian Francois Curiel, the term covers a
dazzling array of styles spread across several historic eras.
“It’s become a catch-all phrase for any jewelry created
between the late 1930s and 1950s,” explains dealer Audrey
Friedman of New York’s Primavera Gallery, “even though there
are a lot of stylistic diff erences over such a long period.”
012_PB11.indd 12012_PB11.indd 12 1/28/11 4:26:26 PM1/28/11 4:26:26 PM
13
Retro jewelry can be divided into three distinct periods: Modernism, the outgrowth of Art Deco; wartime austerity; and post-war celebration. Each period vividly embodies and evokes its own historic and cultural moment.
For many collectors, the defi nitive Retro look is a bold, sinuous piece in highly pol-ished yellow or rose gold, centered with a massive colored stone: aquamarine, amethyst, or citrine. If diamonds, rubies, or sapphires were part of the design then they were gener-ally small and relegated to a supporting role as highlight stones. The design and the drama came from the sculptural settings and the monumental gemstones. “By the late thir-
ties, most of the skilled artisans in Europe were drafted into their nation’s armies, and the talent pool for fi ne jewelry makers was severely diminished,” explains Judith Price, the director of the National Jewelry Institute and author of Masterpieces of American Jewelry. She adds, “The craftspeople weren’t available to make intricate, complicated pieces, and the materials weren’t available. Platinum was being diverted to the war effort and many gems weren’t available due to the war. Jewelers had to improvise.” Price notes “The forties were about limited resources. They had to use color to create excitement: the big, bold stones, the highly polished gold. Jewelers
were very clever.” The post-war years of the late forties and into the fi fties saw a return to opulence and luxury. Once again, extrava-gance and femininity defi ned both fashion and jewelry, and joyous motifs of fl owers, butterfl ies, and ballerinas in gold, diamonds, and precious gems became popular.
Among the most recognizable styles of the late 1930s and early 1940s were the yellow gold bracelets of bold, geometric links or chain mesh, fi nished with a buckle-style clasp, inspired by Victorian garter belts. This “statement” jewelry was designed by houses like Cartier, Mauboussin, Verdura, Boivin, Boucheron, and Seaman Schepps. It was
Pair of clip-brooches in 18-karat gold, citrine, sapphires and diamonds, circa late 1930s to early 1940s, by Marchak, Paris. Courtesy, Primavera Gallery.
Feather brooch, citrine and yellow gold, 1940s, by JE Caldwell of Philadelphia. Courtesy, Pat Saling.
PREVIOUS PAGE:Aquamarine and diamond parure comprising a necklace, bracelet, and clip brooch, the necklace designed as a pink and yellow gold foliate motif bordered by rows of oval-shaped aquamarines and by additional gold leaves; the bracelet and clip of similar design formed of yellow gold leaf motifs and oval-shaped aquamarines all enhanced with rows of brilliant-cut diamond. Circa 1935, by Boucheron. Courtesy, Hancocks.
This magnifi cent suite was originally the property of Oscar winning actress Joan Crawford, who became an avid collector of fi ne jewelry. She wore this suite of necklace, bracelet, and brooch in the 1939 fi lm “The Women,” and it is often described as Crawford’s favorite piece of jewelry. The suite was acquired by Andy Warhol from a sale of Joan Crawford’s possessions on January 18th 1978 in New York. It was then sold Sotheby’s New York, December 1988, lot 2098, in “The Andy Warhol Sale.”
013_PB11.indd 13013_PB11.indd 13 1/28/11 4:26:47 PM1/28/11 4:26:47 PM
14
Cabochon turquoise and pavé diamond ring, circa 1940, by Cartier. Courtesy, Sandra Cronan, Ltd.
Platinum ring featuring invisibly set rubies and diamonds by Tiff any & Co. The center of the ring features 66 invisibly set rubies surrounded by 22 baguette cut diamonds, and 32 round cut diamonds. Circa 1940s and signed, Tiff any & Co. Courtesy, Macklowe Gallery.
A pair of diamond, ruby and gold “Sign Language” brooches, circa 1940, by Paul Flato. Courtesy, Vendome.
y,
frequently seen on some of the world’s most glamorous women, including fi lm stars like Merle Oberon and the Duchess of Windsor.
During the golden age of Hollywood in the late 1930s and 1940s, stars were among the big-gest and most visible clients for the Retro jew-elry. It was a perfect match. Actresses needed jewelry that was highly photogenic, impactful, and larger-than-life, like their studio-crafted screen personas. Stars often wore their own jewelry on screen and there was no small amount of professional competition over whose jewels was the fi nest. Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Paulette Goddard, Rita Hayworth, and Joan Crawford were all well-known for their beautiful collections of jewelry.
It wasn’t just women who wore Retro jewelry. Paul Flato (1900–1999), one of Hollywood’s most popular jewelers was known for the pieces he created for dapper
gentlemen during the heyday of his career in the late 1930s to 1943: his cuffl inks, shirt studs, and cigarette cases of impeccable ele-gance were worn and carried by some of Hollywood’s most powerful moguls and lead-ing men, including Gary Cooper, Fred Astaire, and Cary Grant. It was an era of tremendous style and glamour.
“Flato was infl uenced by Surrealism,” says Elizabeth Irvine Bray, the author of Paul Flato Jeweler to the Stars. “He designed a pair of ‘foot’ cuffl inks for the Hollywood costume designer Adrian [Adrian Adolph Greenberg], and his ‘nuts and bolts’ cuffl inks of the 1930s, originally designed for society band leader Peter Duchine, became one of his most widely copied designs; you can still see ver-sions of them today.” Bray adds, “He made ‘sign language’ brooches for women; hands, in gold, with enamel or ruby fi ngernails,
making the sign language gestures for ini-tials. They were hugely popular: Katharine Hepburn wore them in ‘Holiday.’”
Among his witty designs was a brooch Flato made for actress Marlene Dietrich. “She fell on the set of ‘The Lady is Willing’ [1942] and broke her leg,” Elizabeth Bray explains. “The cast and crew commissioned a brooch from Flato: a pair of legs, in gold, with ruby toenails, and one of them is set in a cast!”
The power of Retro jewelry was its initial visual impact rather than its use of rare mate-rials, a result of the restraints from World War II (1939–1945). Luxury industries in general, and fi ne jewelry in particular, were transformed. There was an unavailability of diamonds and exotic gemstones, and many of jewelry’s traditional raw materials like gold and platinum were diverted to a more brutal yet vital purpose.
014_PB11.indd 14014_PB11.indd 14 1/28/11 4:27:02 PM1/28/11 4:27:02 PM
15
Patriotic themes became popular—red, white, and blue were prominent colors—and military images of airplanes and medals were frequently seen. Women wore bracelets with each charm representing a husband, a son, or brother fi ghting the war. Paris-based jeweler Mauboussin created a “Jeep” brooch in gold, brilliants, and a cabochon ruby to celebrate the liberation of Paris.
After the war, a new style blossomed. In 1947, Christian Dior introduced his electrify-ing “New Look” collection and the era of wartime restraint, rationing, and self-depriva-tion was over. A new lushness and opulence entered fashion, and a new affl uence and sophistication entered society. Travel became easier and more accessible, and Europeans and Americans had more exposure to one another, with infl uences and ideas crossing the Atlantic faster than ever before. Weary of the war, there was a universal craving for comfort, luxury, and leisure. The military-infl uenced, strict, even parsimonious tailor-ing required by wartime fabric rationing was replaced by a joyous celebration of softness and femininity. Tiny waists and generous décolletage were accentuated by sweetheart necklines and billowing skirts and crinolines. Silk was no longer reserved for parachutes; it could be layered lavishly on dresses that were meant, in Christian Dior’s words “to make women look like fl owers.”
It was the era of the cocktail party, and jewelry design followed the prevailing mood in fashion and culture. It became softer, more romantic, more feminine and more hopeful than it had been during the Depression and the war years. American Retro jewelry exhib-ited playfulness in this era that is utterly charming: sea shells, birds, and hearts were
THIS PAGE, TOP:“Dauphins” brooch, 18-karat gold, the bodies set with diamonds and sapphires, circa 1957, by Rene Boivin, Paris. Courtesy of Primavera Gallery.
THIS PAGE, BOTTOM:Fantastic pair of platinum and white gold earclips each designed as a pavé-diamond and calibré-cut aquamarine scroll Suzanne Belperron, Paris circa 1945. Previously property of heiress and philanthropist Doris Duke whose life was brought to screen in the 2007 fi lm 'Bernard and Doris' staring Susan Sarandon and Ralph Fiennes. Courtesy, Hancocks.
015_PB11.indd 15015_PB11.indd 15 1/28/11 4:27:16 PM1/28/11 4:27:16 PM
16
recurring motifs: peaceful, lighthearted images meant to counter the recent horrors of the war. European designers like Rene Boivin, Verdura, and Jean Schlumberger explored mythological images like unicorns, mer-maids, phoenixes, and winged horses in gold, enamel, and precious stones, and Van Cleef & Arpels introduced their famous jeweled “ballerina” brooches. Realistic depictions of animals were also popular, and chic lapels were frequently adored with gorgeous jeweled menageries of birds and beasts.
One of the most famous of these natural-ist jewels was the Cartier “Panther” brooch, designed for the Duchess of Windsor in
THIS PAGE, UPPER LEFT:18-karat yellow gold and diamond necklace, Mauboussin, circa 1940s. Courtesy, Fred Leighton.
THIS PAGE, LOWER LEFT:Turquoise necklace in 18-karat yellow gold, diamond, and citrine, circa 1952, by Cartier, France. Courtesy, Camilla Dietz Bergeron.
THIS PAGE, INSET:Coral, emerald, diamond and gold love bird brooch by Cartier made 1950. The brooch is marked with French Assay Mark, signed and numbered. Courtesy, L'Etoile Royale.
1948. It featured a gold panther with black enamel spots, reclining, majestically on a “rock”— a 90-karat, cabochon emerald. It created a world-wide sensation, and made the
016_PB11.indd 16016_PB11.indd 16 1/28/11 4:27:25 PM1/28/11 4:27:25 PM
17
An important 18-karat yellow gold and diamond retro necklace by Cartier, circa 1950. Courtesy, Fred Leighton.
THIS PAGE, BELOW:Citrine, amethyst and diamond cuff bracelet by Trabert & Hoeff er-Mauboussin, circa 1940s. Courtesy, Fred Leighton.
“Panther” one of Cartier’s signature motifs. It joined the earlier “Pink Flamingo” brooch created by Jean Toussaint in gold, caliber emeralds, sapphires, and rubies as one of the most recognizable and widely imi-tated jewels of all time.
There was a huge demand for glamorous jeweled objects: powder compacts, cigarette lights and cases, evening bags, and lipstick cases. Cocktail parties and balls were revived and women wore sweeping gowns by Marcel Rochas, Norman Hartnell, Jacques Fath, Dior, and Balenciaga, and their low necklines—paired with the upswept hairstyles of the day—left vast expanses of lovely necks and seductive cleavage to be adorned with ornate necklaces and Seaman Schepps cluster ear clips, an innovative style that heaped together lavish mounds of cabochons of colored stones.
The late 1940s and early 1950s saw a lot of experimentation in jewelry. Artists like Salvador Dali, Max Ernst, and Tony Duquette all
explored jewelry design, with Duquette creat-ing pieces for the Duchess of Windsor.
Retro jewelry in all its manifestations fell out of favor in the 1960s and 1970s and, unfortunately, a lot of examples were broken up and melted down to recycle the metal and reclaim the stones for use in new designs. It wasn’t until the 1980s that Retro jewelry began to attract a new generation of passion-ate collectors.
Artist Andy Warhol was one of the fi rst new collectors to recognize the distinctiveness of Retro jewelry, and he built an impressive collection. “In the Eighties, I bought a Retro style bracelet: a heavy gold setting, with a huge citrine,” recalls Audrey Friedman. “One of our associates, a lovely young woman from a very good family looked at it and said, ‘that’s one of the ugliest things I have ever seen!’ A short time later, Andy came in and bought it, caus-ing no small amount of embarrassment!”
The historic sale of the Duchess of Windsor’s jewels, in 1987, and a year later, the Warhol estate sale brought Retro jewelry into the headlines and back into fashion. Today, it still attracts collectors who appreci-ate its bold and fearless designs.
“It’s coming out of the closets and the family safes,” says Judith Price. “People are taking a close look at their mother’s and grandmother’s jewelry and realizing its value and beauty.” She adds, “You can’t make jew-elry like this anymore.”
017_PB11.indd 17017_PB11.indd 17 1/28/11 4:27:36 PM1/28/11 4:27:36 PM
BY CHARLES BROCK AND NANCY ANDERSON, WITH HARRY COOPER
The early American modernists may be usefully under-stood as the generation of artists born primarily between 1875 and 1890 who promulgated the new languages of modern art—fauvism, cubism, futurism, orphism, synchromism, expressionism, Dada—both
in the United States and abroad. This remarkably small group con-stituted a true avant-garde; over the course of the twentieth century legions of artists would follow in their wake. Yet as the century unfolded, the contribution of these painters and sculptors to the history of modernism was at times illuminated and at other times obscured. A point of near total eclipse was reached after World War II, with the promotion of abstract expressionism as the ultimate “triumph” of American painting. During the last quarter of the twentieth century, a clearer vision emerged of the early American modernists’ crucial role in the development of a modernist culture both in America and Europe. The Shein Collection, consisting of twenty representative works by nineteen of the most important first-generation modernists, reflects this greater understanding.
The careers of the artists in the Shein Collection attest to a predi-lection, integral to the modernist enterprise, to break free from personal and national identity and their attendant psychological and geographical bounds to, in the American poet Ezra Pound’s epochal
phrase, “make it new.” Before the 1913 Armory Show, Gertrude and Leo Stein in Paris and Alfred Stieglitz in New York created a dynamic transatlantic forum for artists such as Patrick Henry Bruce, Marsden Hartley, Stanton Macdonald-Wright, John Marin, Alfred Maurer, and Max Weber, as well as for the great European innova-tors Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso. After the Armory Show, largely orchestrated by Arthur B. Davies and a landmark in the his-tory of modernism, Macdonald-Wright and Morgan Russell issued their synchromist manifesto on color painting and executed works of great chromatic complexity, while Hartley and Joseph Stella devel-oped their singular styles, and Weber advanced his cubist practice. In 1915 Marcel Duchamp arrived in New York, where, inspired by the commercial and technological culture of the city, undertook varia-tions on his revolutionary idea of the “readymade.” Duchamp’s brilliance soon inspired such precocious artists as Charles Demuth, Man Ray, Morton Schamberg, and Charles Sheeler, and was seminal to the formulation of American precisionism. In the 1920s, Marin, Arthur Dove, and Georgia O’Keeffe, prominent members of the Stieglitz group and well versed in the lessons of European mod-ernism, pursued a refined, nature-based abstraction that Stieglitz promoted as distinctively American. At the same time Bruce and John Storrs developed their own mature modernist styles in France.
MODERNISMAMERICAN
THE SHEIN COLLECTION
18
018_PB11.indd 18018_PB11.indd 18 1/28/11 3:46:08 PM1/28/11 3:46:08 PM
Max Weber (American, 1881–1961)The Fisherman, 1919Gouache on canvasCollection of Deborah and Ed Shein
While living in Paris from 1905 to 1909, Weber befriended Pablo Picasso and witnessed firsthand the development of cubism. When the American artist returned home he brought with him the first painting by Picasso to enter the United States. Weber's own painting, too, adopted a cubist style, as seen in the fractured planes, masklike features, and subdued palette of The Fisherman. Too abstract to bear a true likeness, the portrait nevertheless resembles the artist, an avid fish-erman, who smoked a pipe and wore vests and jackets much like those depicted here.
John Storrs (American, 1885–1956)Auto Tower, Industrial Forms, ca. 1922Cast concrete, paintedNational Gallery of Art, Washington; gift and Promised Gift of Deborah and Ed Shein
This sculpture tower, and another nearly identical example in the collection, incorporates the long body of a contemporary luxury touring car turned on its end, transforming a functional, industrial form into an architectural adornment or monument — a totem to American technology. Storrs, a Chicago native and the son of an architect, was knowledgeable about mod-ernist buildings and here embraces the hallmarks of the art deco style: elegant geometry, graphic use of black, and fascination with technology.
19
019_PB11.indd 19019_PB11.indd 19 1/28/11 3:46:58 PM1/28/11 3:46:58 PM
Marsden Hartley (American, 1877–1943)Pre-War Pageant, 1913Oil on canvas, 39½ x 31⅞ inchesCollection of Deborah and Ed Shein
Painted in 1913, Pre-War Pageant is among the first purely abstract paintings by an American artist. Hartley had sailed for Paris a year earlier and there became interested in spirituality and art theories, including those of Wassily Kandinsky, who believed in the triangle’s spiritual properties. In Berlin in 1913, Hartley began a military-inspired series to which Pre-War Pageant belongs. With its bold use of primary hues and simple geometric forms, Hartley’s canvas pulsates with energy that spills beyond the canvas onto the frame. While in Europe during the teens Hartley maintained his ties to New York, sending pictures back to Alfred Stieglitz to exhibit at his intimate 291 gallery. Recalling the effect of a Hartley exhibition in 1916, Georgia O’Keeffe remarked it was “like a brass band in a small closet.”
20
020_PB11.indd 20020_PB11.indd 20 1/28/11 3:47:10 PM1/28/11 3:47:10 PM
Georgia O’Keeffe (American, 1887–1986)Dark Iris No. 2, 1927 Oil on canvas, 32 x 21 inchesCollection of Deborah and Ed Shein
In warm weather, O’Keeffe left New York City for the more peaceful surroundings of Lake George in upstate New York, where she stayed with Alfred Stieglitz at his family’s summer home. The natural environs of the retreat provided both artists with rich subject matter. In Dark Iris No. 2, O’Keeffe plunges deep into the center of a black iris, pre-senting such an unusual and narrow focus that the painting verges on abstraction. The flower also may be seen as embodying sexual imagery, clouds, or even (turned on its side) the Lake George mountains and water. O’Keeffe alluded to the transformational power of art when she said, “When you take a flower in your hand and really look at it, it’s your world for the moment. I want to give that world to someone else.”
21
021_PB11.indd 21021_PB11.indd 21 1/28/11 3:47:22 PM1/28/11 3:47:22 PM
Charles Demuth (American, 1883–1935)End of the Parade: Coatesville, Pa., 1920 Tempera and pencil on board, 19⅞ x 15¾ inchesCollection of Deborah and Ed Shein
Demuth fused industrial style and subject matter, depicting the Lukens Steel complex with clear-cut lines and contained color—a style known as precisionism. The smokestacks and buildings are as crisply rendered as an architectural drawing, and even the billows of smoke are carefully delineated. Demuth’s painting, however, does not faithfully document the Lukens factory; one building is fancifully composed of stacked trapezoids, and rays of steely gray shoot across the sky in a decorative arrangement. Critics admired Demuth’s ability to find beauty in industrialized America. As Henry McBride noted, “He makes of it a thing that seems to glorify a subject that the rest of us have been taught to consider ugly.”
Marcel Duchamp (French-American, 1887–1968 Fresh Widow, 1964 edition (based on 1920 original) Painted wood frame and eight glass panels covered with black leather, 30½ x 1711⁄16 inchesNational Gallery of Art, Washington, Gift of Deborah and Ed Shein
Describing the manufacture of this sculpture, Duchamp said, “This small model of a French window was made by a carpenter in New York in 1920. To complete it I replaced the glass panes by panes made of leather, which I insisted should be shined everyday like shoes. French Window was called Fresh Widow, an obvious enough pun.” Indeed, the pun would have been especially pertinent in 1920, in the immediate aftermath of World War I. Signed by Duchamp’s female alter ego, Rose Sélavy (a pun on eros c’est la vie,or “eros, that’s life”), Fresh Widow offers a critique of how art tradi-tionally operates. For instance, by covering the window panes with black leather Duchamp contradicts the basic notion that a painting should operate as a window into another world—an idea broadly accepted since the Renaissance.
22
022_PB11.indd 22022_PB11.indd 22 1/28/11 3:47:38 PM1/28/11 3:47:38 PM
Charles Sheeler (American, 1883–1965)Composition around White, 1959 Oil on canvas, 30 x 33 inchesCollection of Deborah and Ed Shein
Sheeler’s works, with their particular blend of quintessentially American subjects and modern style, often were described as both familiar and abstract. That is especially true in this depiction of a New England barn—his last variation on a theme that had occupied him for decades. The composition, rendered with broad, flat application of color, is based on photomontages the artist made of barns in which he layered negatives to create complex arrangements of superimposed architectural forms.
Stuart Davis (American, 1892–1964)Unfinished Business, 1962 Oil on canvas, 36 x 45 inchesCollection of Deborah and Ed Shein
When the Philadelphia-born Davis exhibited at the Armory Show in 1913 he was one of the youngest participants. Beginning in the 1920s he brought the graphic sensibility and restricted palette of commercial advertising into his art. These qualities are evident in one of the artist’s last paintings, Unfinished Business, in which Davis engages viewers in a bit of visual wordplay. An assortment of Xs and Os suggests tic-tac-toe symbols that have slipped off their grid. In the lower right quadrant, “Edy” is rendered in script, and along the right edge “PAD” is printed. The former is likely a variation of the sequence “Ideas—Eyedas—Eyedeas” that Davis recorded in one of his sketchbooks, also known as sketchpads or “pads.” Combined with the letters “NO” at left we may surmise that Davis was referring to the American poet William Carlos Williams’ famous axiom, “No ideas but in things.”
23
In 2008 and 2009, the Gallery received three gifts from Edward and Deborah Shein: John Storrs’ Auto Tower, Industrial Forms (c. 1922), Marcel Duchamp’s Fresh Widow (1920/1964), and John Marin’s The Written Sea (1952). The Sheins intend to continue making gifts of important works from their collection with their ultimate goal of giving all 20 of their masterworks to the National Gallery of Art, Washington. Presented here are details of a selection from the twenty works that were exhibited in American Modernism: The Shein Collection, which closed on January 3, 2011, at the National Gallery of Art in Washington. American Modernism was organized by Charles Brock and Nancy Anderson, with Harry Cooper. This article is reprinted in part from the Summer 2010 issue of Antiques & Fine Art Magazine.
Charles Brock is associate curator of American and British Paintings, Nancy Anderson is curator and head of the department of American and British Paintings, and Harry Cooper is curator and head of the department of Modern and Contemporary Art at the National Gallery of Art, Washington.
023_PB11.indd 23023_PB11.indd 23 1/28/11 3:47:49 PM1/28/11 3:47:49 PM
024_PB11.indd 24024_PB11.indd 24 1/27/11 6:14:00 PM1/27/11 6:14:00 PM
025_PB11.indd 25025_PB11.indd 25 1/28/11 1:23:13 PM1/28/11 1:23:13 PM
VISIT AFAMAG.COM TO REGISTER FOR A
O N L I N E E D I T I O N S
026_PB11.indd 26026_PB11.indd 26 1/27/11 6:14:55 PM1/27/11 6:14:55 PM
FREE 2-YEAR ONLINE SUBSCRIPTION!This interactive format allows you to easily view current and past issues, zoom-in on images, share with friends and click on web links to access further resources. Register today at AFAmag.com and receive FREE access to every issue online for the next 2 years. This is a limited time off er!
027_PB11.indd 27027_PB11.indd 27 1/27/11 6:15:15 PM1/27/11 6:15:15 PM
A.�B. LEVY 211 Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, FL 33480
tel: 561.835.9139�fax: 561.832.5625 email: [email protected]�internet: www.ablevypb.com
28
An Italian marble group of a young couple embracing by Ernesto Gazzeri, (Italian, 1866), the group 40 in. high; the pedestal 37 in. high. Provenance: Private Collector, Michigan
028_PB11.indd 28028_PB11.indd 28 1/28/11 2:14:38 PM1/28/11 2:14:38 PM
AARON FABER GALLERY
29
Patek Philippe Vintage Timepieces from the Aaron Faber Collection
666 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10103tel: 212.586.8411�fax: 212.582.0205
email: [email protected]�internet: www.aaronfaber.com
029_PB11.indd 29029_PB11.indd 29 1/28/11 2:14:56 PM1/28/11 2:14:56 PM
HAND WOVEN FURNISHINGS, CIRCA 1850 TO 1930
30
A collection of rattan furnishings by the Heywood Wakefield Company of Gardner, Massachsetts, circa 1920. Natural finish with colored trim.
JAMES BUTTERWORTH • MICHAEL DONOVAN
ANTIQUE AMERICAN WICKER
131 Daniel Webster Highway, Nashua, NH 03060By appointment
tel: 603.881.9727�cell: 508.523.5189�fax: 603.598.8706email: [email protected]
internet: www.antiqueamericanwicker.com
030_PB11.indd 30030_PB11.indd 30 1/28/11 2:15:15 PM1/28/11 2:15:15 PM
ARADER GALLERIES
31
Athanasius FordOsceola
1838, wash drawingAfter a sketch from life by John Rogers Vinton
12½" x 8"Signed with monogram and dated, lower right
Inscribed below: “As sketched from life at Lake Monroe, Florida by Capt. J.R. Vinton of the United States Army.”
1016 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10075�tel: 212.628.762529 East 72nd Street, New York, NY 10021�tel: 212.628.3668
email: [email protected]�internet: www.aradergalleries.com
031_PB11.indd 31031_PB11.indd 31 1/28/11 2:15:31 PM1/28/11 2:15:31 PM
ART LINK INTERNATIONALFINE ART FROM AMERICAN & FRENCH IMPRESSIONISM THROUGH MODERNISM & POP
32
David Davidovich BurliukOil on canvas, 24 x 30 inches
Circa 1948
809 Lucerne Avenue, Lake Worth, FL 33460tel: 561.493.1162�email: [email protected]�internet: www.artlinkinternational.com
032_PB11.indd 32032_PB11.indd 32 1/28/11 2:15:44 PM1/28/11 2:15:44 PM
33
ARTWORLD INTERNATIONAL
Lucien Adrion (French, 1889–1953)Les Tuillieres, Paris, circa 1948Oil on canvas, 24 x 29 inches
tel: 754.264.6350 �cell: 954.923.2874email: [email protected]�internet: www.willemgflippo.com
033r1_PB11.indd 33033r1_PB11.indd 33 1/28/11 5:14:51 PM1/28/11 5:14:51 PM
34
Martha Walter (1875–1976)Under the Large Striped Umbrella on a Foggy Day, ca. 1916
Oil on canvasboard, 14 x 18 inchesSigned lower left: Martha Walter
ASHLEY JOHN GALLERY
410 South County Road (at the northwest corner of Worth Avenue and South County Road)Palm Beach, FL 33480
tel: 561.429.8454�email: [email protected]
SPECIALIZING IN 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN ART, SCULPTURE, ESTATE JEWELRY AND FINE WATCHES
034_PB11.indd 34034_PB11.indd 34 1/28/11 2:16:19 PM1/28/11 2:16:19 PM
35
ASIANTIQUES
Carved Chinese glass from the Qing Dynasty (1644–1911)
Winter Park, Floridatel: 407.362.1025�fax: 407.358.5161
email: [email protected]�internet: www.asiantiques.com
035r1_PB11.indd 35035r1_PB11.indd 35 1/28/11 5:16:12 PM1/28/11 5:16:12 PM
B�+�G FINE ART
36
Stanton MacDonald-Wright (1890–1973)Study For “American Synchromy No. 2”, 1919
Charcoal drawing on cream wove paper, 15⅞ x 9¼ inchesSheet size: 17 x 11⅝ inches; Frame size: 38¼ x 3113⁄16 inches
PROVENANCE:George Adams Gallery, New York, NY
EXHIBITED:North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CAThe Museum Of Fine Arts, Houston, TXArkansas Arts Center, Little Rock, AK
ILLUSTRATED:Color, Myth, And Music: Stanton MacDonald-Wright and Synchromism by Will South, page 76
201 South Estes Dr Ste D6, Chapel Hill, NC 27514tel: 919.968.8008�email: [email protected]
internet: www.bpgfineart.com / www.animationandfineart.com
036_PB11.indd 36036_PB11.indd 36 1/28/11 2:16:52 PM1/28/11 2:16:52 PM
BENCHMARKOF PALM BEACH
678 East Main Street, Blue Ridge, GA 30513tel: 706.258.3553 / 800.790.9033�fax: 706.258.3788
email: [email protected]: www.benchmarkofpalmbeach.com
37
D A V I D W E B B B A N G L E
037_PB11.indd 37037_PB11.indd 37 1/28/11 2:17:35 PM1/28/11 2:17:35 PM
BETTERIDGE JEWELERS
38
117 Greenwich Avenue, Greenwich, CT 06830tel: 203.869.0124
email: [email protected]�internet: www.betteridge.com
Art Nouveau 'spring landscape' dog collar plaque, mounted in silver-topped gold, designed as a rectangular panel, depicting a spring landscape with green enamel grass and brownish
orange foliate details, with white and brown enamel birch trees, as well as a blue enamel lake and purple enamel mountains, set against a milky-bluish opal sky, the landscape set within a
rose-cut diamond surround, circa 1900 (the gold pin stems likely added later), by Koch.
038_PB11.indd 38038_PB11.indd 38 1/28/11 2:17:50 PM1/28/11 2:17:50 PM
BETTY BRESLER INC.
39
Mikimoto collar of Akoya pearls joined by a platinum plaque set with 6.15 carats of diamonds and a natural sapphire.
ESTATE JEWELS
16781 Chagrin Boulevard, Shaker Heights, OH 44120tel: 216.751.4666�mobile: 216.780.9036�email: [email protected]
internet: www.estatejewels.com
039_PB11.indd 39039_PB11.indd 39 1/28/11 2:18:05 PM1/28/11 2:18:05 PM
BROCK & CO.
40
84A Commonwealth Avenue, Concord, MA 01742tel: 978.369.1358� fax: 978.369.1359
email: [email protected] �internet: www.brockandco.com
William Samuel Horton (1865–1936)Children on an English Beach, ca. 1918
Oil on board, 15 x 18 inches
040r1_PB11.indd 40040r1_PB11.indd 40 1/28/11 5:17:07 PM1/28/11 5:17:07 PM
BRUCE KODNER GALLERIES
41
24 South Dixie Highway, Lake Worth, FL 33460tel: 561.585.9999
email: [email protected]
J. G. Brown Oil on Canvas
041_PB11.indd 41041_PB11.indd 41 1/28/11 2:30:56 PM1/28/11 2:30:56 PM
BURLINGTON PAINTINGS
42
FINE 19TH/20TH CENTURY & CONTEMPORARY BRITISH & EUROPEAN PAINTINGS
Rafael Senet y Perez (1856–1926)The Grand Canal, Venice
Oil on canvas, 17⅛ x 30⅜ inchesSigned
10 & 12 Burlington Gardens, London W1S 3EY�United Kingdomtel: 011.44.20.7734.9984�email: [email protected]�internet: www.burlington.co.uk
042_PB11.indd 42042_PB11.indd 42 1/28/11 2:31:18 PM1/28/11 2:31:18 PM
CALLAGHAN FINE PAINTINGS & CONTEMPORARY BRONZE
43
22, St Mary’s Street, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, SY1 1ED UKtel: +44 (0) 1743 343452�UK mobile: +44 (0) 7810 714545�US mobile: 615 870 7639email: art@callaghan-fi nepaintings.com �internet: www.callaghan-fi nepaintings.com
Claude Venard (1913–1999)Modele assis sur fond Rouge
Oil on canvas, 22 x 18¼ inchesSigned
043_PB11.indd 43043_PB11.indd 43 1/28/11 2:31:46 PM1/28/11 2:31:46 PM
CALLAN FINE ART
44
240 Chartres Street, New Orleans, LA 70130tel: 504.524.0025
email: info@callanfi neart.com�internet: www.callanfi neart.com
William Adolphe Bouguereau (1825–1905)Pandore
Oil on canvas, 36½ x 26 inchesSigned & dated W. Bouguereau 1890 lower left
LITERATURE:Bouguereau's Accounts, (as Pandore)
D. Bartoli with F. Ross, William Bouguereau Catalogue Raisonné, no. 1890/15, p. 270, illustrated (color)Franqueville, William Bouguereau, Paris, 1895, p. 149, (as Pandore)
M. Vachon, W. Bouguereau, 1900, p. 157 (as Psyché)M. S. Walker, William-Adolphe Bouguereau, A Summary Catalogue of the Paintings in William-Adolphe Bouguereau,
L'art Pompier, exhibition catalogue, 1992, p. 73
This work is accompanied by a certifi cate of authenticity by Damien Bartoli.
044_PB11.indd 44044_PB11.indd 44 1/28/11 2:32:18 PM1/28/11 2:32:18 PM
CAMILLA DIETZ BERGERON LTD 818 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10065
tel: 212.794.9100�fax: 212.794.7012�email: [email protected]�internet: www.cdbltd.com
45
Retro Gold Bracelet, Diamond Fireworks Brooch, Diamond and Gold Bombe Ring, Aldo Cipullo Green Onyx and Lapis Necklace, Van Cleef & Arpels White Coral Earrings, Buccellati Gold and Diamond Cuff, Enamel and Gold Ring, Gold and Diamond Door Knocker Style Earrings
045_PB11.indd 45045_PB11.indd 45 1/28/11 2:32:40 PM1/28/11 2:32:40 PM
46
Clarice Cliff "Diamonds" 12 inch Lotus Vase, ca. 1929–1930
CARA ANTIQUESENGLISH AND FRENCH MAJOLICA • ENGLISH CLARICE CLIFF AND MOORCROFT
DUTCH GOUDA AND BELGIAN BOCH FRERES KERAMIS
PMB313 13 Summit Square Center, Langhorne, PA 19047tel: 215.579.7971�mobile: 215.499.5604
email: [email protected]�internet: www.caraantiques.com
046_PB11.indd 46046_PB11.indd 46 1/28/11 2:32:55 PM1/28/11 2:32:55 PM
CARLSON AND STEVENSON ANTIQUES
47
Basket of Flowers. English watercolor 1835. Presented in 19th Century Lemon-gold frame.
PO Box 1113, Manchester Center, VT 05255tel: 802.236.2342 / 802.236.4945
email: [email protected]�internet: www.carlsonandstevenson.com
047_PB11.indd 47047_PB11.indd 47 1/28/11 2:33:12 PM1/28/11 2:33:12 PM
CAVALIER GALLERIES, INC.
48
405 Greenwich Avenue, Greenwich, CT 06830�tel: 203.869.366434 Main Street, Nantucket, MA 02554�tel: 508.325.4405
email: [email protected]�internet: www.cavaliergalleries.com
Peregrine HeathcoteWhere Next, 2010
Oil on canvas, 30 x 36 inches
048_PB11.indd 48048_PB11.indd 48 1/28/11 2:33:30 PM1/28/11 2:33:30 PM
CHARAMONDE JEWELRY
49
500 North Dixie HighwayLake Worth, FL 33460
tel: 561.451.8330email: [email protected]
Exquisite collection of Bvlgari’s classic “Alveare Style” bracelets and earrings.
049r2_PB11.indd 49049r2_PB11.indd 49 1/31/11 12:00:50 PM1/31/11 12:00:50 PM
CHARLES EDWIN PUCKETT
50
MEDIEVAL ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS, ANTIQUE MAPS & PRINTS, AND CLASSICAL ANTIQUITIES
3867 West Market Street, #253, Akron, OH 44333tel: 330.668.0032�mobile tel: 330.730.3053�fax: 330.668.0037
email: [email protected]�internet: www.cepuckett.com
member: Antiques Council
“The Nativity” from A Book of Hours, France, c. 1490.Tempera and gold on vellum.
050_PB11.indd 50050_PB11.indd 50 1/28/11 2:34:01 PM1/28/11 2:34:01 PM
CHARLES L. WASHBURNE ANTIQUES
51
VICTORIAN MAJOLICA POTTERY
George Jones Majolica Underwater Stilton Cheese Keeper, England, circa 1870.
P.O. Box 486, Solebury, PA 18963tel: 215.794.7584�fax: 215.794.0990
email: [email protected]�internet: www.majolica.net
051_PB11.indd 51051_PB11.indd 51 1/28/11 2:34:46 PM1/28/11 2:34:46 PM
CHILDS GALLERY
52
Richard Baiano, Stephanie Bond
169 Newbury Street, Boston, MA 02116tel: 617-266-1108�fax: 617-266-2381�email: [email protected]: www.childsgallery.com�www.facebook.com/childsgallery
member: IFPDA
Paul Cadmus (American, 1904–1999)Shore Leave, 1935
Etching, 10½ x 11¾ inchesIn this scathing caricature of sailors on shore leave, Cadmus revels in the suggestive, satirical and controversial.
Ex-collection Paul Cadmus.
052_PB11.indd 52052_PB11.indd 52 1/28/11 2:35:05 PM1/28/11 2:35:05 PM
53
CHINA SQUARE
HORST vs DEGAS2010
Chromogenic Print with Dibond Plexiglass60 x 40 in. / 152.4 x 101.6 cm
108 x 72 in. / 274.3 x 182.9 cm.
102 Allen Street, New York, NY 10002tel: 212.255.8886�email: [email protected]�internet: www.chinasquareny.com
CONTEMPORARY CHINESE ART
053r1_PB11.indd 53053r1_PB11.indd 53 1/28/11 5:18:20 PM1/28/11 5:18:20 PM
54
Harry Roseland (American, 1867–1950)To baby Florence, 1907
Oil on canvas , 13 x 11 inchesSigned and personally dedicated on blackboard slate to one of his most used models
Also signed on wainscotingExcellent condition
UNUSUAL TAXIDERMY, ART AND CURIOSITIES
CHRISTOPHER ENGLISHFINE ANTIQUES
West Palm Beach, Florida tel: 561.310.0319�email: [email protected]
054_PB11.indd 54054_PB11.indd 54 1/28/11 2:36:46 PM1/28/11 2:36:46 PM
CIRCA ANTIQUES & DECORATIONS
55
P.O. Box 28, Rockport, MA 01966Contacts: Herb & Deb Meiselman�tel: 978.546.1045�cell: 508.654.1060; 508.654.0056
email: [email protected]�internet: www.circaofrockport.com
Two exceptional frames from our extensive collection of antique frames in French gilt bronze, English brass, and other materials. Pictured is an
ebonized wood frame with fi ne enamel on gilt, and a horseshoe-shaped bronze frame with gilt metal and cobalt blue enamel.
055_PB11.indd 55055_PB11.indd 55 1/28/11 2:37:03 PM1/28/11 2:37:03 PM
CLASSIC ANTIQUES & INTERIORS
56
65 West Schiller Street, Chicago, IL 60610tel: 312-961-6494�email: [email protected]
Chinese Dignitaries, Western Han, 206BC–8AD, Shaanxi Province, Grey Pottery, 37" Height. Fashioned In a Silhouette Poise.Extremely Rare in Form and Size, Pair, (TL)Thermoluminescence Testing Included.
Sancai Glazed Lokapalas,Tang Dynasty, 618–907 AD, 16" Height. Modeled in a Rich Blue Glaze, Reserved for Nobility, Charming Pair, (TL)Thermoluminescence Testing Included.
Chinese Horse Tang Dynasty, 618–907 AD, 28" Height. Extremely Rare Horse With Cut Fur Saddle, (TL) Thermoluminescence Testing Included.
056_PB11.indd 56056_PB11.indd 56 1/28/11 2:37:54 PM1/28/11 2:37:54 PM
CLAYTON ANTIQUES
57
P.O. Box 5665, Williamsburg, VA 23188tel: 314.422.4622
email: [email protected]: www.claytonantiques.com
Magnificent Gubelin 18k and Diamond Necklace.
Undulating textured links join a centerpiece studded with G/VVS diamonds. An original 2 inch adapter converts the necklace from 16 to 18 inches.
A matching 7 inch bracelet is not shown. Circa: 1970
Makers mark: Gubelin, 750
057_PB11.indd 57057_PB11.indd 57 1/28/11 2:38:11 PM1/28/11 2:38:11 PM
58
1960s one-of-a-kind Italian cabinet in colored and black murano glass with a pair of 1960s Venitian Aureliano Toso Design lamps and murano glass vases.
COUSLICH INTERIORS & ANTIQUES
39 East 67th Street, 5th fl oor, New York, NY 10065 tel: 212.249.0021�mobile: 321.282.7681
email: [email protected]�internet: www.couslichinteriors.com
058_PB11.indd 58058_PB11.indd 58 1/28/11 2:38:28 PM1/28/11 2:38:28 PM
CRAWFORDCONTEMPORARY, LLC
59
Sterling Lighthouse Candlestick12½" tall�Approx 44ozs
Reminiscent of the fabulous silver pieces Asprey or Faberge made over 100 years ago.Hand made in London to an exacting Crawford design.
The candle fits in a spring loaded cylinder inside and is pushed up as it burns.The wick burns reliably at the top of the lighthouse giving off a radiant glow against the silver.
Fairfi eld, CTtel: 203.292.6762�mobile: 646.284.1785email: [email protected]
internet: www.crawfordcontemporary.com
059_PB11.indd 59059_PB11.indd 59 1/28/11 2:38:44 PM1/28/11 2:38:44 PM
DANIELS ANTIQUES
60
Miami / Aspentel: 954.454.1395
email: [email protected] internet: www.danielsantiques.com
Japanese World War II Binoculars
060_PB11.indd 60060_PB11.indd 60 1/28/11 2:39:01 PM1/28/11 2:39:01 PM
DANISH SILVER
61
Rare Georg Jensen Sterling Silver Champagne CoolerDesign #87
Circa 1915–1919Made in Copenhagen, Denmark
Denmark: Bredgade 12, 1260 Copenhagen K�tel: +45 33 11 52 52�email: [email protected]: 251 Post Street, San Francisco, CA 94108�tel: 415.984.1907�email: [email protected]
internet: www.danishsilver.com
061_PB11.indd 61061_PB11.indd 61 1/28/11 2:39:48 PM1/28/11 2:39:48 PM
DAVID & COMPANY
62
232 Boylston Street, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467tel: 1.800.DAVIDCO�email: [email protected]
internet: www.davidandcompany.com
TIFFANY & CO. SCHUMBERGER BRACELET COLLECTION
18k yellow gold wide brilliant green paillone enamel
18k yellow gold wide brilliant red paillone enamel
18k yellow gold thin brilliant blue paillone enamel
18k yellow gold wide dark green paillone enamel
18k yellow gold wide brilliant gold paillone enamel
062_PB11.indd 62062_PB11.indd 62 1/28/11 2:40:23 PM1/28/11 2:40:23 PM
DAWN HILL ANTIQUES
11 Main Street, New Preston, CT 06777tel: 860.868.0066�fax: 860.868.6035
email: [email protected]�internet: www.dawnhillantiques.com
63
A fi ne pair of Swedish Rococo period armchairs with traces of original blue paint and intricate carving on the back of the apron and legs, circa 1750.
SPECIALIZING IN SWEDISH ANTIQUES OF THE ROCOCO AND GUSTAVIAN PERIODS AS WELL AS 18TH AND 19TH CENTURY ANTIQUES AND DECORATIVE OBJECTS FROM FRANCE
063_PB11.indd 63063_PB11.indd 63 1/28/11 2:40:42 PM1/28/11 2:40:42 PM
DEAN BORGHI FINE ART
64
52 East 76th Street, New York, NY 10021tel: 201.784.5490�email: dean@dbfi neart.com�internet: www.dbfi neart.com
Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902)Oil on canvas, 19¾ x 27¾ inches
Signed lower right: Albert Bierstadt
Provenance: Purchased from the estate from the artistPrivate collection by descent in one family
Richard York Gallery 1999 to the present owner
064_PB11.indd 64064_PB11.indd 64 1/28/11 2:40:57 PM1/28/11 2:40:57 PM
DINAN & CHIGHINE
65
P.O. Box 266, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 3QR United KingdomLondon offi ce: 011.44.208.948.1939�London mobile: 011.44.783.133.9408�US mobile: 646.546.2579
email: [email protected]
Chinese Export Painting: Flowers in a Basket, ca. 1850.
Gouache on pith paper.
065_PB11.indd 65065_PB11.indd 65 1/28/11 2:41:11 PM1/28/11 2:41:11 PM
DOMONT JEWELRY
66
Iradj MoiniFaceted Citrines, Amethyst and Carnelian
8661 Sunset Boulevard, West Hollywood, CA 90069tel: 310.289.9500
email: [email protected]�internet: www.domontjewelry.com
066_PB11.indd 66066_PB11.indd 66 1/28/11 2:42:17 PM1/28/11 2:42:17 PM
DRUCKER ANTIQUES
67
487 East Main Street, Suite 197, Mount Kisco, New York 10549tel: 914.923.4560 / 212.794.8536
email: [email protected] / [email protected]: www.druckerantiques.com
Centerpiece Bowl No. 252, designed by Johan Rohde in 1917 for Georg Jensen.
067_PB11.indd 67067_PB11.indd 67 1/28/11 2:42:33 PM1/28/11 2:42:33 PM
EOSTONE 2190 NW 87th Avenue, Doral, FL 33172
tel: 786.888.3333�email: [email protected]�internet: www.eostone.com
68
Natural Stone Fossil MuralStone Layer: Fossil Lake Classic
This mural contains a 16" Helieobatis (Stingray), a 13½" Mioplosus, a 9" Diplomystus dentatus, a 6" Priscacara liops and three Knightia eocaena.
Size: 36"H x 72"W x 3"DWeight: 200 lbs.
068r1_PB11.indd 68068r1_PB11.indd 68 1/28/11 5:19:11 PM1/28/11 5:19:11 PM
ERIK THOMSEN ASIAN ART23 East 67th Street, New York, NY 10065
tel: 212.288.2588www.erikthomsen.com
69
Madake Bamboo by Bamboo Fence Edo Period (1615 – 1868), 18th C, Japan Detail from a six-panel folding screen
Ink, mineral colors, gofun and gold wash on paper with gold leaf Size: H 70" × 144" (178 × 366 cm)
069_PB11.indd 69069_PB11.indd 69 1/28/11 2:43:03 PM1/28/11 2:43:03 PM
EVE STONE ANTIQUES, LTD.
70
by appointmentPost Offi ce Box 3535, Woodbridge, CT 06525
tel: 203.466.6665 / 800.833.1665�email: [email protected]: www.evestoneantiques.com
070_PB11.indd 70070_PB11.indd 70 1/28/11 2:43:16 PM1/28/11 2:43:16 PM
FAERBER NEW YORK INC.
71
Provenance: HRH King Farouk 1st of Egypt
589 Fifth Avenue, Suite 803, New York, NY 10017tel: 212.752.4200�fax: 212.659.0099�email: [email protected]
internet: www.faerber-collection.com
071_PB11.indd 71071_PB11.indd 71 1/28/11 2:44:36 PM1/28/11 2:44:36 PM
THE FINE ARTS CONSERVANCY West Palm Beach, FL�Miami, FLtel: 561.684.6133/305.444.6282
email: [email protected]�internet: www.art-conservation.org
72
Before restoration. After restoration.
Antonio Jacobsen (1850–1921) The Ship James Foster, oil on board, 1915. Delamination (fl aking) of the paint layers.
072_PB11.indd 72072_PB11.indd 72 1/28/11 2:44:56 PM1/28/11 2:44:56 PM
FLOATING WORLD GALLERYChicago, IL
tel: 312.587.7800email: [email protected]: www.floatingworld.com
73
Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849)The Great Wave, ca. 1830
Woodblock print10¼ x 15 inches
073_PB11.indd 73073_PB11.indd 73 1/28/11 2:45:12 PM1/28/11 2:45:12 PM
FLORENCE & JERRY BERMAN
74
18k yellow gold and enamel bracelet by the artist Jaclyn Davidson.
ANTIQUE & ESTATE JEWELRY
P.O. Box 813597, Hollywood, FL 33081-3597tel: 954.962.4950�fax: 964.963.5413�mobile: 954.328.6985 �email: [email protected]
074_PB11.indd 74074_PB11.indd 74 1/28/11 2:45:28 PM1/28/11 2:45:28 PM
FRAMONT
75
Jean Deyrolle (1911–1967)Opus 535, 1957
Oil on canvas, 22 x 26 inches
Literature: ref. 58-02 in Catalogue Raisonné
P.O. Box 4051, Greenwich, CT 06831tel: 917.562.6262�fax: 203.661.9675
email: [email protected]�internet: ww.artnet.com/framont.html
075_PB11.indd 75075_PB11.indd 75 1/28/11 2:45:44 PM1/28/11 2:45:44 PM
FRANKLIN RIEHLMAN FINE ART24 East 73rd Street, #4F, New York, NY 10021
tel: 212.879.2545email: [email protected]: www.nycpaintings.com
76
Alson Clark (1876–1949)Day at the Beach
Oil on canvas, 21¼ x 28¾ inchesSigned at lower right: Alson Clark
076_PB11.indd 76076_PB11.indd 76 1/28/11 2:45:57 PM1/28/11 2:45:57 PM
FRED LEIGHTON773 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10065�tel: 212.288.1872
The Bellagio, Las Vegas, NV 89109�tel: 702.693.7050email: [email protected]�internet: www.fredleighton.com
77
A magnificent French Art Deco diamond and platinum bracelet.
077_PB11.indd 77077_PB11.indd 77 1/28/11 2:46:13 PM1/28/11 2:46:13 PM
FREDERIC GOT GALLERY
78
Béatrice Bissara (French Artist)Constellation
2009Bronze (limited edition)
Paris – Barbizon – Saint Paul de Vencetel: +33 143261033�email: [email protected]
internet: www.artchic.com
078_PB11.indd 78078_PB11.indd 78 1/28/11 2:46:31 PM1/28/11 2:46:31 PM
FRENCH COUNTRYLIVING UK LTD
79
An Exceptional Swedish Eighteenth Century Carved Wooden Canape with Lion's heads and the Original Painted Decoration attributed to Ephraim Stahl circa 1790
French Country UK Ltd 7c Penywern Road London SW5 9TT EnglandFrench cell 01133613237084�UK cell 011447770520371
email: [email protected]�website: www.frenchcountrylivingantiques.com
079_PB11.indd 79079_PB11.indd 79 1/28/11 2:46:47 PM1/28/11 2:46:47 PM
FRIMAN AND STEIN INC.
80
Exquisite yellow and white diamond rose brooch by Van Cleef and Arpels. Comprised of diamond set leaves and stem mounted
in gold and platinum. Signed Van Cleef and Arpels NY, 1975
589 Fifth Avenue, Suite 709, New York, NY 10017by appointment
tel: 212.308.6200�email: [email protected]
080_PB11.indd 80080_PB11.indd 80 1/28/11 2:47:07 PM1/28/11 2:47:07 PM
GALERIE PETER HARDT
81
Robert-Bosch-Strasse 12, 42477 Radevormwald, Germanytel: +49 (0) 2195-8059�mobile: +49 (0) 171 413-4413�fax: +49 (0) 2195-40774
email: [email protected]�internet: www.hardt.de
BuddhaBronze gilded
Thailand, 1850 centuryH: 190 cm / W: 102 cm / D: 64 cm
Reg. No.: 114610
081_PB11.indd 81081_PB11.indd 81 1/28/11 2:48:36 PM1/28/11 2:48:36 PM
GALERIE VIVENDI
82
28 Place des Vosges 75003 Paris, Francetel: +33 (0) 142 76 9076
email: [email protected]�internet: www.vivendi-gallery.com
Fernando PorrasWater and Fire, 2010
Acrylic on canvas, 72 x 72 inches
082_PB11.indd 82082_PB11.indd 82 1/28/11 2:49:14 PM1/28/11 2:49:14 PM
GALLERY 47
83
1050 2nd Avenue, New York , NY 10022tel: 212.888.0165 / 800.942.0550
email: [email protected]�internet: www.PerfumeBottlesAuction.com
HIGH QUALITY PERFUME BOTTLES AND FINE JEWELRY
UPPER LEFT: Fred-Paris bracelet, 18k gold.UPPER RIGHT: Tiff any pillbox, enameled 18k gold set with diamonds and sapphires.
LOWER LEFT: Kiju earrings, 14k gold set with peridots.LOWER RIGHT: Tiff any pair of bracelets, 18k gold set with rubies.
083_PB11.indd 83083_PB11.indd 83 1/28/11 2:50:23 PM1/28/11 2:50:23 PM
GALLERY AFRODIT
84
ORIENTAL CARPETS, KILIMS & CENTRAL ASIAN TEXTILE ART SPECIALIST
BAGCILAR MAH. 5. SK. NO: 23/1 GOP – Ankara 06700�Turkeytel: 90 (312) 436 21 29�US CELL: 917 855 13 55�fax: 90 (312) 447 59 48
email: [email protected]�internet: www.galleryafrodit.comcontact: Mustafa Bulguroglu
Antique Persian Serapi Rug, 9 feet, 5 inches x 10 feet, 5 inches. Perfect condition.
084_PB11.indd 84084_PB11.indd 84 1/28/11 2:51:48 PM1/28/11 2:51:48 PM
GAVIN SPANIERMAN, LTD.
85
1044 Madison Avenue, Suite 4F, New York NY 10075tel: 212.249.0619�email: [email protected]
internet: www.gspanierman.com
Thomas Wilmer Dewing (1851–1938)Pastel #119, ca. 1922
Pastel on paper, 14¼ x 11 inchesSigned lower right: TW Dewing
Numbered by artist lower right and circled in chalk: 119
085_PB11.indd 85085_PB11.indd 85 1/28/11 2:52:06 PM1/28/11 2:52:06 PM
GEROLD WUNDERLICH & CO.
8 North Water Street, Ossining, NY 10562tel: 914.923.1184�mobile: 914.954.1905�fax: 914.923.1390
email: [email protected], [email protected]: www.wunderlichandco.com
86
Edward H. Potthast (1857–1927)The Swimming Lesson, ca. 1915
Oil on panel, 12 x 16 inchesSigned lower right: E. Potthast
AMERICAN ART OF THE NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURIES, WITH AN EMPHASIS ON TWENTIETH CENTURY REALISM
086_PB11.indd 86086_PB11.indd 86 1/28/11 2:52:22 PM1/28/11 2:52:22 PM
GLADWELL & COMPANY 68 Queen Victoria Street, London, UK EC4N 4SJ
tel: +44 207.248.3824�US cell: 215.200.7022�fax: +44 207.248.6899email: [email protected]�internet: www.gladwells.com; www.whpatterson.com
87
Paul S. Brown, American (contemporary), Crystal, oil on canvas, 50cm x 100cm
Paul S. Brown, American (contemporary), Silver, oil on canvas, 50cm x 100cm
087_PB11.indd 87087_PB11.indd 87 1/28/11 2:52:37 PM1/28/11 2:52:37 PM
GODEL & CO. FINE ART, INC.
88
39�A East 72nd Street, New York, NY 10021tel: 212.288.7272�fax: 212.772.0304
email: info@godelfi neart.com�internet: www.godelfi neart.commember: FADA, AADLA
Charles Caryl Coleman (1840–1928)Capri, 1897
Oil on canvas, 21½ x 33½ inchesSigned and dated lower left with monogrammed initials: CCC Capri / 1897
SPECIALIZING IN 19TH AND EARLY 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN PAINTINGS
088_PB11.indd 88088_PB11.indd 88 1/28/11 2:52:52 PM1/28/11 2:52:52 PM
GUARISCO GALLERY
89
Frederick Morgan (British, 1847–1927)A Tug-of-War
Oil on canvas, 37¼ x 49½ InchesSigned lower left
1120 22nd Street, N.W. (at the Ritz-Carlton), Washington, DC 20037tel: 202.333.8533�800.426.3747�fax: 202.625.0834
email: [email protected]�internet: www.guariscogallery.com
089_PB11.indd 89089_PB11.indd 89 1/28/11 2:53:06 PM1/28/11 2:53:06 PM
HABATAT GALLERIES
539 Clematis Street, West Palm Beach, FL 33401tel: 561.832.8787�email: [email protected]
8020 Towers Crescent Drive, Tysons Corner, VA 22182tel: 703.989.7110�email: [email protected]
internet: www.habatatgalleries.com
90
Jon KuhnMoonlight Reverie, 2010H. 17½" x W. 21" x D. 12½"
CONTEMPORARY ART AND GLASS SCULPTURE
090_PB11.indd 90090_PB11.indd 90 1/28/11 2:53:21 PM1/28/11 2:53:21 PM
HANCOCKS
91
OUTSTANDING RARE JEWELS
52 & 53 Burlington Arcade, London W1J 0HH, Englandtel: 011.44.207.493.8904�fax: 011.44.207.493.8905
email: [email protected]�internet: www.hancocks-london.com
Magnifi cent Art Deco bracelet comprised of two straps each set with buff -top sapphires and diamonds with a central diamond set buckle motif and clasp. By Mauboussin, Paris, circa 1935.
091_PB11.indd 91091_PB11.indd 91 1/28/11 2:57:27 PM1/28/11 2:57:27 PM
HAYNES FINE ARTOF BROADWAY
92
John Atkinson Grimshaw (British, 1836–1893)Late Autumn
Oil on canvas, 30¼ x 24½ inchesProvenance: Richard Green Galleries, London
Private Collection
Picton House Galleries42 High Street, Broadway, Worcestershire WR12 7DT�UK
tel: 011.44.138.685.2649�fax: 011.44.138.685.8187�email: email@haynesfi neart.com�internet: www.haynesfi neart.com
092_PB11.indd 92092_PB11.indd 92 1/28/11 2:57:43 PM1/28/11 2:57:43 PM
HOLLIS REH & SHARIFF2 Jobs Lane, Southampton, NY 11968tel: 631.283.6653�fax: 631.283.3189
email: [email protected]�internet: www.hollisrehandshariff.com
93
Mauboussin, Paris rock crystal and diamond brooch
093_PB11.indd 93093_PB11.indd 93 1/28/11 2:57:59 PM1/28/11 2:57:59 PM
HUMPHREY BUTLER LTD.40/41 Pall Mall, London, SW1Y 5JG United Kingdom
tel: +44 (0) 207.839.3193email: [email protected] / [email protected]
internet: www.humphreybutler.com
94
CLOCKWISE FROM UPPER LEFT:Art Deco diamond cocktail ring of hammerhead design, stamped by Wolfers and mounted in platinum
Pair of emerald and diamond scroll earclips mounted by Cartier
Fancy Intense yellow navette-cut diamond and emerald crossover ring, the diamond weighing 1.36ct
Pair of diamond three-leaf clover earclips by Oscar Heyman, mounted in platinum
094_PB11.indd 94094_PB11.indd 94 1/28/11 2:58:15 PM1/28/11 2:58:15 PM
HYLAND GRANBY ANTIQUES
95
P.O. Box 457, Hyannis Port, MA 02647tel: 508.771.3070�fax: 508.778.4842
email: [email protected]�internet: www.hylandgranby.com
Carved and gold finished eagle, signed on the reverse of the body with deep etched lettering “W Seward”, and dated behind the olive branch with crisp incise numerals by Seward “1895”.
Dimensions: Length 71⅜ inches; Height 29¾ inches; Depth 5 inches
Exotic wood baleen and ivory prisoner-of-war model with retracting cannons, English/
French, circa 1810. This medium size model is of the highest
quality and is made of a wonderful blend of materials.
Dimensions of model: Length 19½ inches; Width 7¾ inches; Height 17 inches
Exceptionally rare and important scrimshaw whale tooth,
attributed to “William A. Gilpin”, who shrimshawed on board
the American whaleship, Ceres, Wilmington,
Delaware, circa 1835.
Dimensions: Height 7 inches; Width 3 inches
095_PB11.indd 95095_PB11.indd 95 1/28/11 2:58:39 PM1/28/11 2:58:39 PM
J. CHRISTOPHER MITCHELL ANTIQUES
96
The finest Civil War Confederate officer’s sword extant. It was made in Mobile, Alabama, and presented in Pensacola, Florida, in 1861.
P.O. Box 1186, Point Clear, AL 36564tel: 770.329.4984�email: [email protected]
internet: www.jcamericana.com
096_PB11.indd 96096_PB11.indd 96 1/28/11 2:58:59 PM1/28/11 2:58:59 PM
J. S. FEARNLEY
97
FINE & ESTATE JEWELERY SINCE 1986
“Pavot” flower pin set with “mystery set” ruby petals, round diamond pistil center, three pavé set leaves and stem with round and baguette diamonds, mounted in platinum and
18k gold, signed Van Cleef & Arpels and numbered with French assay marks, circa 1960s.
87 West Paces Ferry Road, Suite 2, Atlanta, GA 30305
tel: 404.812.6464�fax: 404.812.6463 internet: www.jsfearnley.com
097_PB11.indd 97097_PB11.indd 97 1/28/11 2:59:14 PM1/28/11 2:59:14 PM
98
ESTABLISHED IN 1984, WE SPECIALIZE IN BETTER QUALITY ESTATE JEWELRY, ART DECO, EDWARDIAN, RETRO, VICTORIAN, SIGNED PIECES & VINTAGE ENGAGEMENT RINGS
A late Victorian enamel, moonstone and diamond ring.Mounted in 14 karat gold.
JACOB’S DIAMOND & ESTATE JEWELRY
607 S. Hill Street, #304, Los Angeles, CA 90014email: [email protected]
internet: www.jacobsestatejewelry.com / www.facebook.com/JacobsDEJ
098_PB11.indd 98098_PB11.indd 98 1/28/11 2:59:34 PM1/28/11 2:59:34 PM
JAY CHATELLIER FINE ART
99
59 Whitenack Road , Basking Ridge, NJ 07920tel: 908.420.5668�fax: 866.847.7959�email: info@jaychatellierfi neart.com
internet: www.jaychatellierfi neart.com
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PAINTINGS, WORKS ON PAPER AND SCULPTURE FROM THE 19TH, 20TH AND 21ST CENTURIES
Alfred De Breanski, Jr. (British, 1877-1957)Evening, Fishing Boats off San Giorgio, Venice
Oil on canvas, 18 x 26 inchesSigned lower right
099_PB11.indd 99099_PB11.indd 99 1/28/11 2:59:49 PM1/28/11 2:59:49 PM
JEFF R. BRIDGMAN AMERICAN ANTIQUES, LLC.
100
EARLY AMERICAN FLAGS • PAINTED AMERICAN FURNITURE • FOLK ART
York County, Pennsylvania�tel: 717.676.0545/717.502.1281email: info@jeff bridgman.com�internet: www.jeff bridgman.com
member: Antiques Council, ADA, Antiques & Arts Dealers' League, CINOA
The personal headquarters flag of Philip Henry Sheridan, one of the most extraordinary Civil War generals. Made of merino wool and entirely hand-sewn, this was Sheridan's colors from the 1863-64 period, when he led the 2nd Michigan Cavalry with great effect and rose from captain to Major General in just six months. Although Sheridan began his service with no previous cavalry experience, his rapid success with the mounted regiment
caused Ulysses S. Grant to transfer his leadership to the entire cavalry of the Army of the Potomac. Among his many accomplishments, Sheridan went on to crush Confederate forces in the Shenandoah Valley and was
instrumental in forcing General Lee's surrender at Appomattox Courthouse.
The flag is accompanied by a textile analysis from leading expert Fonda Thomsen and measures approximately 35" x 44". It was conserved by our staff and placed in the best, mid-19th century, water-gilded,
ripple-profile frame (47" x 58") that I have ever encountered.
100_PB11.indd 100100_PB11.indd 100 1/28/11 3:00:03 PM1/28/11 3:00:03 PM
JEFF SHORE�/�ANCIENT OBJECTS
Narragansett, Rhode Islandtel: 401.789.5214�mobile: 401.952.6045
email: [email protected]�internet: www.ancientobjects.net
101
Master of the Fiesole Epiphany (Florence, active 1475–1496)Mary Magdalen and Saint Margaret
A pair, both oil on panelEach: 16 x 5½ inches (41 x 14 cm)
Provenance: With Thos. Agnew & Sons, Ltd., London, ca. 1956
CLASSICAL AND MEDIEVAL ANTIQUITIES, HINDU AND BUDDHIST WORKS OF ART
101_PB11.indd 101101_PB11.indd 101 1/28/11 3:00:17 PM1/28/11 3:00:17 PM
JERALD MELBERG GALLERY625 South Sharon Amity Road, Charlotte, NC 28211
tel: 704.365.3000�fax: 704.365.3016email: [email protected]�internet: www.jeraldmelberg.com
102
Wolf KahnUpper Potomac III, 2010
Oil on Canvas, 52 x 60 inches
102_PB11.indd 102102_PB11.indd 102 1/28/11 3:00:30 PM1/28/11 3:00:30 PM
JEWELS IN TIME
103
4400 N. Federal Highway, Boca Raton, FL 33431tel: 1.888.755.TIME, 561.368.1454�fax: 561.368.1727
email: [email protected]�internet: www.jewelsintime.com
103_PB11.indd 103103_PB11.indd 103 1/28/11 3:01:15 PM1/28/11 3:01:15 PM
JOHANNA ANTIQUES
104
ANTIQUE AND ESTATE JEWELRY
A diamond bee brooch.
P.O. Box 418, Kingsville, MD 21087tel: 410.937.3444
104_PB11.indd 104104_PB11.indd 104 1/28/11 3:01:30 PM1/28/11 3:01:30 PM
JOHN ATZBACH ANTIQUES
105
A large and impressive Faberge silver, parcel gilt and enamel tea caddy, Moscow, 1908–1917. Height 7⅞".
15127 NE 24th Street, Suite 118, Redmond, WA 98052tel: 425.271.8950�mobile: 206.618.2684�fax: 425.271.8940
email: [email protected]�internet: www.atzbach.com
105_PB11.indd 105105_PB11.indd 105 1/28/11 3:01:45 PM1/28/11 3:01:45 PM
JOYCE GROUSSMAN
7201 East Camelback Road, Suite #285, Scottsdale, AZ 85251tel: 610.331.3279
email: [email protected]�internet: www.jgroussmanjewelry.com
106
A beautifully crafted and truly unique brooch depicting an octopus made of 18K gold encrusted with yellow and white diamonds, rubies, all colors of sapphires, South Sea and Tahitian pearls.
This piece is fabulous; it was sculpted and textured with amazing attention to detail.
ESTATE AND FINE JEWELRY
106_PB11.indd 106106_PB11.indd 106 1/28/11 3:01:59 PM1/28/11 3:01:59 PM
THE KENDALL COLLECTION
107
SPECIALIZING IN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PAINTINGS, DRAWINGS AND WATERCOLORS
Edward Potthast (1857–1927)At the Beach
Oil on panel, 9 x 12 inches
4460 Garmon Road, Atlanta, GA 30327tel: 404.538.9035�email: [email protected]�internet: www.kendallcollection.com
107_PB11.indd 107107_PB11.indd 107 1/28/11 3:02:13 PM1/28/11 3:02:13 PM
KOMAN FINE ART3225 Cardinal Drive, Vero Beach, FL 32963
tel: 772.231.4500�mobile: 772.473.1646email: [email protected]�internet: www.komanfineart.com
108
Jay Hall Connaway, N.A. (1893–1970)Will of the Wind, 1946
Oil on canvas, 24 x 36 inchesSigned at lower right
Koman Fine Art has the largest selection of work by Jay Hall Connaway. We have excellent examples of his paintings from Monhegan Island and from the Dorset, Vermont area — a variety of sizes and prices.
108r1_PB11.indd 108108r1_PB11.indd 108 1/28/11 5:20:00 PM1/28/11 5:20:00 PM
L’ETOILE ROYALE
109
Exclusive Art Deco CARTIER Necklace Totaling 90cts. of Diamonds.
329 Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, FL 33480�tel: 561.655.3025�fax: 561.655.6242
784 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10065�tel: 212.752.1706�fax: 212.752.1758
Grand Bazaar, 38 Sandalbedesteni Street, Istanbul, Turkey�tel: 011.90.212.527.7865�fax: 011.90.212.512.7423
email: [email protected]�internet: www.letoileroyale.com
109_PB11.indd 109109_PB11.indd 109 1/28/11 3:02:40 PM1/28/11 3:02:40 PM
LARRY DALTON
110
ANTIQUE TIMEPIECES
A Rare French Gilt-Bronze Father Time Clock with Revolving Dials
“Cupid foils Father Time by taking away his hour glass.” This magnifi cent clock has a blue enamel globe. Within the globe are two dials, one has minutes, the other has hours. The dials rotate and the cherub points to the time with his arrow.
Father Time has a dark bronze patina and the rest of the clock is gold. The base is made of porphyry which came from a quarry in Egypt. The bronze is signed by Millet, a famous French sculptor in Paris. This clock is 27" tall. Circa 1860.
14 Bretton Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583tel: 914.472.0945�fax: 914.722.0830�email: [email protected]
110_PB11.indd 110110_PB11.indd 110 1/28/11 3:02:50 PM1/28/11 3:02:50 PM
LAWRENCE FINE ARTLawrence, New York
tel: 516.547.8965email: [email protected]
internet: www.lawrence-fine-arts.com
111
Sameul Halpert (American, 1884–1930)The Juggler, ca. 1924
Oil on canvas, 59 x 39 inchesSigned lower right and dated 24.
Halpert was an American Modernist pioneer and was affiliated with Alfred Stieglitz’s historic gallery. This painting has excellent provenance
and exhibition history. Both available upon request.
111_PB11.indd 111111_PB11.indd 111 1/28/11 3:03:03 PM1/28/11 3:03:03 PM
LILLIAN NASSAU LLC
112
Tiff any Studios Lamps, circa 1900–1915.
220 East 57th Street, New York, NY 10022tel: 212.759.6062�fax: 212.832.9493
email: [email protected]�internet: www.lilliannassau.com
112r1_PB11.indd 112112r1_PB11.indd 112 1/28/11 5:21:22 PM1/28/11 5:21:22 PM
LINEN MERCHANT
113
Russian Bobbin Lace and Panné Velvet Table CoverMonogram of Nicholas II Alexandrovich and Alexandria, ca. 1890
Tsarskoe Selo, near St. Petersburg, 101 x 82 inches
Walnut Creek, Californiatel: 925.352.3863 / 925.937.5833
email: [email protected]
113_PB11.indd 113113_PB11.indd 113 1/28/11 3:03:36 PM1/28/11 3:03:36 PM
LION HEART AUTOGRAPHS
114
470 Park Avenue South, Penthouse, New York, NY 10016tel: 212.779.7050�fax: 212.779.7066
email: [email protected]�internet: www.lionheartautographs.com
Stunning inscribed photograph of Eleanor Roosevelt wearing an elegant formal gown, and quoting a speech she gave June 1, 1933, upon receiving an honorary degree from the
Washington College of Law: “You will never get the greatest joy out of living until you feel you are with a great many people — a whole country perhaps. Eleanor Roosevelt.”
114_PB11.indd 114114_PB11.indd 114 1/28/11 3:03:51 PM1/28/11 3:03:51 PM
LR ANTIQUES
2230 Bissonnet, Houston, TX 77005tel: 713.524.3272�fax: 713.935.0117
email: [email protected]�internet: www.lrantiques.com
115
A Tiffany Favrile Floriform Lamp With Pulled Feather Design Favrile Glass
Tiffany patented Favrile glass in 1880. The trade name Favrile was derived from the French word, fabrile, meaning handcrafted. Favrile glass often has a distinctive characteristic that is common in some glass from Classical antiquity: it possesses a superficial iridescence. This iridescence causes the surface
to shimmer, but also causes a degree of opacity. This iridescent effect of the glass was obtained by mixing different colors of glass together while hot.
According to Tiffany: “Favrile glass is distinguished by brilliant or deeply toned colors, usually iridescent like the wings of certain American butterflies, the necks of pigeons and peacocks, the wing covers of various beetles.” The lamp is designed by J.A. Steward, ca. 1926, de verre Favrile.
Illustrated: Louis C. Tiffany's Glass by Robert Koch (p. 82, pl. 96). Excellent condition with original cord. 17" tall; 10" shade diam.
FINE PORCELAIN, ART GLASS, PERIOD FURNITURE AND WORKS OF ART
115_PB11.indd 115115_PB11.indd 115 1/28/11 3:04:09 PM1/28/11 3:04:09 PM
LYNDA WILLAUER ANTIQUES
116
A collection of Chinese Export Porcelain, including Famille Rose and Underglaze Blue, below a Swedish oil on canvas by Carl Mikael Gunne (1893–1979)
Mid April to Mid December2 India Street, Nantucket MA 02554
tel: 508.228.3631�Connecticut Winter offi ce: 203.661.8022email: [email protected]�internet: www.LyndaWillauerAntiques.com
116_PB11.indd 116116_PB11.indd 116 1/28/11 3:04:27 PM1/28/11 3:04:27 PM
M. BYWORTH
117
Gold jewellery and so much more for your jewellery wish list.
Suites 46 47, 88-90 Hatton Garden, London EC1N 8PN United Kingdomtel: +44 (0) 207 242 0918
email: [email protected]�internet: www.byworth.com
117_PB11.indd 117117_PB11.indd 117 1/28/11 3:04:42 PM1/28/11 3:04:42 PM
M.S. RAU ANTIQUES
118
Paysage vers Cagnes-sur-Mer, circa 1899Oil on canvas
Canvas: 8 x 12½ inchesFrame: 16½ x 21 inches
Signed lower right: Renoir
Legendary French Impressionist master Pierre-Auguste Renoir captures the beauty of natural light in this uplifting landscape. Entitled Paysage vers Cagnes-sur-Mer, this oil depicts the village
where Renoir spent the last years of his life with vibrancy and sensuality. M.S. Rau Antiques is pleased to offer this magnificent work, which is such a testament to Renoir’s unmatched genius.
630 Royal Street, New Orleans, LA 70130toll free: 800.544.9440�tel: 504.523.5660�fax: 504.566.0057 email: [email protected]�internet: www.rauantiques.com
Pierre-Auguste Renoir(French, 1841–1919)
118_PB11.indd 118118_PB11.indd 118 1/28/11 3:04:58 PM1/28/11 3:04:58 PM
MACKLOWE GALLERY LTD
119
667 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10065tel: 212.644.6400�fax: 212.755.6143
email: [email protected]�internet: www.macklowegallery.com
Tiff any Studios New York "Wisteria" table lamp. A fi ne and rare examplecomposed of vibrant glass in shades of blue, purple, green, pink and white.The lattice work shade portrays the branches and vines of a wisteria tree.
The multicolored glass forms a fl oral pattern, ending in an irregular border.
119_PB11.indd 119119_PB11.indd 119 1/28/11 3:05:14 PM1/28/11 3:05:14 PM
MADE IN RUSSIA
120
Russian Icon of Christ Pantacator. The piece is late 19th century painted on wood with tempera over gesso. The Icon is covered
with a silver and enamel oklad. The icon measures 12 x 10 inches.
PO Box 3075, Palm Beach FL 33480Dennis Easter
tel: 561.723.3131�email: [email protected]
120_PB11.indd 120120_PB11.indd 120 1/28/11 3:05:31 PM1/28/11 3:05:31 PM
MALCOLM MAGRUDER
P.O. Box 124, Millwood, VA 22646tel: 540.837.2438�email: [email protected]
121
AMERICAN FURNITURE; EARLY ENGLISH POTTERY; 18TH AND EARLY 19TH CENTURY DECORATIVE OBJECTS AND PAINTINGS; 18TH CENTURY AND GEORGIAN JEWELRY
Carved wooden pilothouse eagle, New England, Circa 1880, retaining original painted finish throughout.
121_PB11.indd 121121_PB11.indd 121 1/28/11 3:05:49 PM1/28/11 3:05:49 PM
THE MANHATTANRARE BOOK COMPANY
122
1050 Second Avenue, Gallery 50E, New York, NY 10022tel: 212.326.8907�email: [email protected]�internet: www.manhattanrarebooks.com
Charles Darwin, ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIESFirst edition, in original condition without restoration
122_PB11.indd 122122_PB11.indd 122 1/28/11 3:06:12 PM1/28/11 3:06:12 PM
MARK J. WEST
123
18TH, 19TH AND EARLY 20TH. CENTURY ENGLISH AND CONTINENTAL TABLE GLASS
P.O. Box 595, Redhill, Surrey RH1 3XB�United Kingdomtel/fax: 011.44.173.764.3646�email: [email protected]�internet: www.markwest-glass.com
A wonderful three layer glass bowl with ornately cut rim designed by Leon Ledru for Val St. Lambert, Belgium, circa 1900.
123_PB11.indd 123123_PB11.indd 123 1/28/11 3:06:26 PM1/28/11 3:06:26 PM
MCCARTY GALLERY7733 Winston Road, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, PA 19118
tel: 215.247.5220�fax: 215.247.4114email: [email protected]�internet: www.mccartygallery.com
124
Paolo Sala (Italian, 1859–1924)First Dance of Spring
Watercolor, 39 x 27 inches
124_PB11.indd 124124_PB11.indd 124 1/28/11 3:06:44 PM1/28/11 3:06:44 PM
MCCOLL FINE ART
125
Jean-Baptiste Armand Guillaumin (1814–1927) Les Rochers Embrasés.Oil on canvas, 30 x 25 inches. Signed lower right: Guillaumin.
Jean-Baptiste Armand Guillaumin, one of the founding members of the Impressionists, is highly regarded for his brightly colored views of Paris, the countryside of central France and the French coastline. Together with close friends Paul Cezanne and Camille Pissarro,
Guillaumin exhibited at the infamous Salon des Refuses in 1863, as well as the first Impressionist group show in 1874 and at five more of the eight shows. The oldest surviving Impressionist, Armand Guillaumin died in 1927, a few months after Claude Monet.
208 East Boulevard, Charlotte, NC 28203tel: 704.333.5983�email: info@mccollfi neart.com�internet: www.mccollfi neart.com
125_PB11.indd 125125_PB11.indd 125 1/28/11 3:07:00 PM1/28/11 3:07:00 PM
MICHAEL A. LATRAGNAFINE ART
126
Louis Aston Knight ( American, 1873–1948)Diane’s Cottage
Oil on canvas, 26 x 32 inches
8229 Southwind Bay Circle, Fort Myers, FL 33908tel: 239.590.0210 / 585.230.4522�fax: 239.590.0210
email: [email protected] / [email protected]: www.michaellatragnafi neart.com / www.artnet.com
SPECIALIZING IN 19TH & EARLY 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN ART
126_PB11.indd 126126_PB11.indd 126 1/28/11 2:09:36 PM1/28/11 2:09:36 PM
MICHAEL BORGHI FINE ART
127
Tenafl y, NJ and 2 East Palisade Avenue, Englewood, NJ 07631tel: 201.248.4732�fax: 201.569.0928
email: [email protected] �internet: www.borghifi neart.com
Hans Hofmann (1880–1966)Blue Symphony, 1945
Mixed media on paper, 29 x 32 inchesSigned and dated lower right: hans hofmann VII.6.45
127_PB11.indd 127127_PB11.indd 127 1/28/11 2:10:08 PM1/28/11 2:10:08 PM
MICHAEL PASHBY ANTIQUES
128
180 Duane Street, New York, NY 10013 and by appointmenttel: 917.414.1827 fax: 212.410.4777
email: [email protected]�internet: www.michaelpashbyantiques.com
important Charles II Lacewood Oyster, Fruitwood Inlaid and Walnut Cabinet on Stand with Silvered Feet, circa 1680. Probably from the same workshop as the ‘Princes Wood Scriptor’ at Ham House.
FINE ENGLISH FURNITURE
128_PB11.indd 128128_PB11.indd 128 1/28/11 2:10:26 PM1/28/11 2:10:26 PM
MICHAEL S. HABER LIMITED
129
23 E. Wynnewood Road, Wynnewood, PA 19096tel: 610.896.4800
Barry Kieselstein-Cord 18 Ct. Gold Necklace c. 1980
DISTINCTIVE ANTIQUE & ESTATE JEWELRY
129_PB11.indd 129129_PB11.indd 129 1/28/11 2:10:47 PM1/28/11 2:10:47 PM
MIDORI GALLERY3168 Commodore Plaza, Miami, FL 33133
tel: 305.443.3399email: [email protected]�internet: www.midorigallery.com
130
Takenouchi No Sukuné
This great samurai, to whom legend ascribes an amazing life span of over 160 years, was a statesman and minister. He accompanied the expectant Empress Jingo Kogo on her conquest of Korea and was guardian of her newborn
son. This rare satsuma masterfully captures his wise and kindly persona. Circa 1880, 12" high.
130_PB11.indd 130130_PB11.indd 130 1/28/11 2:10:59 PM1/28/11 2:10:59 PM
MONTANA JEWELRY
131
Diamond earrings, platinum, circa 1950s, by Van Cleff and Arpels.
76 West 47th Street, Suite 600, New York, NY 10036tel: 212.719.5009�fax: 212.719.1424�email: [email protected]
Exceptionally rare, antique, salt water natural pearls multi-strand necklace, with rose cut and old cut diamonds, star ruby. Burmese origin, no indication of heating with GIA certificate for pearls and rubies.
131_PB11.indd 131131_PB11.indd 131 1/28/11 2:11:11 PM1/28/11 2:11:11 PM
MOYLAN-SMELKINSON�/ THE SPARE ROOM
132
Worcester Barr Period soft paste porcelain oval dessert dish, "Pavilion" pattern, circa 1805.
P.O. Box 4684, Baltimore, MD 21212tel: 410.435.3738, 410.243.7688� mobile: 410.963.3195�fax: 410.435.3744
email: [email protected]�internet: www.spareroomantiques.com
GEORGIAN & VICTORIAN JEWELRY, 18TH & 19TH CENTURY ENGLISH CERAMICS IN JAPAN PATTERNS, WHIMSICAL FIGURAL COLLECTIBLES AND DECORATIVE OBJECTS
132_PB11.indd 132132_PB11.indd 132 1/28/11 2:11:24 PM1/28/11 2:11:24 PM
NEIL MARRS
133
Verdura 18kt gold and multi-colored zircon “maple leaf” brooch
New York CityBy Appointment Only
tel: 917.603.7402�email: [email protected]�internet: www.neilmarrs.com
133_PB11.indd 133133_PB11.indd 133 1/28/11 2:11:39 PM1/28/11 2:11:39 PM
NELSON RARITIES, INC.
134
2 Monument Square, Portland, ME 04101tel: 207.775.3150�fax: 207.775.4345
email: [email protected]�internet: www.nelsonrarities.com
Art Deco diamond, ruby, emerald, onyx, enamel, and platinum plant pot brooch. Kohn
Art Deco sapphire, ruby, diamond, gold and platinum earrings. Raymond Yard.
Pearl, carved chalcedony, diamond and platinum ring. Madame Belperon.
Art Deco turquoise, coral, lapis lazuli, diamond and platinum brooch. Mauboussin, France.
Aquamarine, pavé diamond, baguette diamond and platinum earrings. Cartier.
Calibré sapphire, diamond and platinum earrings. Van Cleef & Arpels.
134_PB11.indd 134134_PB11.indd 134 1/28/11 2:11:53 PM1/28/11 2:11:53 PM
NULA THANHAUSER
135
ANTIQUE AND SIGNATURE PURSES
Embroidered Indian purse depicting Shiva, an auspicious Hindu deity, encased in a jade surround, ca. 1900.
P.O. Box 5106, East Hampton, NY 11937tel: 631.329.1953�cell: 215.266.2888
email: [email protected]�internet: www.nulathanhauser.com
135_PB11.indd 135135_PB11.indd 135 1/28/11 2:12:04 PM1/28/11 2:12:04 PM
ONESSIMO FINE ART
136
Alan Wolton (South Africa, b. 1934)Lily Fire, 2010
Oil on canvas linen, 60 x 50 inches
4530 PGA Boulevard, Suite 101, Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33418tel: 561.355.8061 / 866.810.2787
email: contact@onessimofi neart.com�internet: www.onessimofi neart.com
136_PB11.indd 136136_PB11.indd 136 1/28/11 4:42:30 PM1/28/11 4:42:30 PM
137
Hermes Birkin 35cm
ONLY AUTHENTICS
New York, NYtel: 917.685.6115
email: [email protected]
FINE LUXURY ACCESSORIES, SPECIALIZING IN VINTAGE, RUNWAY, LIMITED EDITION, HERMÉS, CHANEL, AND LOUIS VUITTON
137_PB11.indd 137137_PB11.indd 137 1/28/11 2:23:29 PM1/28/11 2:23:29 PM
OWL’S ROOST ANTIQUES
138
FINE ANTIQUE & ESTATE JEWELRY — OBJECTS D' ART
Collection of Mid-Century Modern Jewelry
Featuring an interwoven 18k gold evening bag, a fl oral inspired diamond double clip brooch, a pair of pave set diamond asymmetrical hoop earrings, a ladies Hamilton platinum
and diamond covered watch, as well as a green tourmaline and diamond cocktail ring.
767 41st Street, Miami Beach, FL 33140�By Appointment Onlytel: 305.864.5905�fax: 305.868.4604�internet: www.owlsroost.com
138_PB11.indd 138138_PB11.indd 138 1/28/11 3:20:04 PM1/28/11 3:20:04 PM
PAPILLON GALLERY
139
Gerda WegenerPrimavera
Oil on canvas, 47¼ x 31½ inchesDanish, signed and dated 1938
8272 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90046tel: 323.655.2205�mobile: 323.365.1577
email: [email protected]�internet: www.papillongallery.com
139_PB11.indd 139139_PB11.indd 139 1/28/11 3:20:22 PM1/28/11 3:20:22 PM
PAT SALING
140
SPECIALIZING IN ANTIQUE, ESTATE AND PRECIOUS JEWELRY
By appointment only608 Fifth Avenue, Suite 801, New York, NY 10020
tel: 212.582.3355�fax: 212.582.6684�email: [email protected]
140_PB11.indd 140140_PB11.indd 140 1/28/11 3:20:41 PM1/28/11 3:20:41 PM
PATTI ESBIA ANTIQUE & ESTATE JEWELRY
141
326 Peruvian Avenue, Palm Beach, FL 33480tel: 561.833.9448�email: [email protected]�internet: www.esbiajewelry.com
18k Gucci fi gural necklace with matching earrings. This set features Diamond skulls with ruby eyes.
141_PB11.indd 141141_PB11.indd 141 1/28/11 3:20:57 PM1/28/11 3:20:57 PM
PEARL MASTERS (USA) INC.
142
Two strands of South Sea Baroque Pearls measuring from 16–18.1 millimeters. They are their natural color.
576 Fifth Avenue, Suite 701, New York, NY 10036tel: 212.869.8433�fax: 212.869.8434�email: [email protected]
142_PB11.indd 142142_PB11.indd 142 1/28/11 3:21:14 PM1/28/11 3:21:14 PM
PERCY’S SILVER
143
A fine and rare Shibayama JugLondon 1887
The London Silver Vaults, Chancery Lane, London, WC2 A1QS EnglandContact: David & Paul Simons
tel: 011.44.7887.716797�us cell: 312.841.2424email: [email protected]�internet: www.percys-silver.com
143_PB11.indd 143143_PB11.indd 143 1/28/11 3:21:34 PM1/28/11 3:21:34 PM
PERRISUE SILVER& JEWELRY
144
1940s 14k yellow gold and ruby brooch and earrings.
P.O. Box 2353, Princeton, NJ 08540tel: 609.924.2141/908.415.0415�email: [email protected]
144_PB11.indd 144144_PB11.indd 144 1/28/11 3:21:48 PM1/28/11 3:21:48 PM
PHILIP CHASEN ANTIQUESEast Norwich, NY 11732
tel: 516.922.2090�fax: 516.922.2029email: [email protected]�internet: chasenantiques.com
145
A selection of Tiff any Studios lamps and glass and French Cameo Glass by Gallé and Daum Nancy.
145_PB11.indd 145145_PB11.indd 145 1/28/11 3:23:01 PM1/28/11 3:23:01 PM
PIERRE FAMILLE
146
Invisibly set diamond and platinum bracelet. Oscar Heyman & Bros., 92 cts. In the twentieth century, one of the most signifi cant developments was “invisible
setting” in which the stones were held by notches on their underside. Invented by Cartier in 1930, nd oddly made popular by Van Cleef & Arpels shortly thereafter,
nearly all of this work was actually produced by Oscar Heyman & Bros.
600 East Cooper, Aspen, CO 81611tel: 888.925.9161�internet: www.pierrefamille.com
146_PB11.indd 146146_PB11.indd 146 1/28/11 3:23:17 PM1/28/11 3:23:17 PM
PRIMAVERA GALLERY 210 11th Avenue at 25th Street, Suite 800, New York, NY 10001
tel: 212.924.6600�fax: 212.924.6602email: [email protected]�internet: www.primaveragallery.com
147
Spectacular and glorious, a great and impressive ring by Cartier Paris from the 1960s, with 8 carats of brilliant diamonds set in platinum that go all around the shank, and 6 carats of luscious Burma rubies set in 18k gold.
147_PB11.indd 147147_PB11.indd 147 1/28/11 3:23:38 PM1/28/11 3:23:38 PM
PROVIDENT JEWELRY
148
Provident West Palm Beach�tel: 561.833.7755Provident Jupiter�tel: 561.747.4449
Provident Boca Raton�tel: 561.488.7737 Provident Naples�tel: 239.649.7737Provident Naples�tel: 239.649.7200
Provident Ft. Myers�tel: 239.274.7777
www.providentjewelry.com
Antique & Estate Jewelry and Watches
148_PB11.indd 148148_PB11.indd 148 1/28/11 3:23:53 PM1/28/11 3:23:53 PM
JEFFREY F. PURTELL
149
SPECIALIZING IN THE PURCHASE AND SALE OF STEUBEN GLASS
#0032 The Crown of Oberon — Limited to a Single Example.Elaborate copper wheel engraving with themes of enchantment from Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream. This crystal dreamworld is
adorned with elves and sprites, animals and insects, hearts and fl owers and is jeweled with diamonds, emeralds, pearls and tourmaline.
31 Pleasant Point Drive, Portsmouth, NH 03801tel: 800.973.4331�email: [email protected]
internet: www.steubenpurtell.com
149_PB11.indd 149149_PB11.indd 149 1/28/11 3:24:08 PM1/28/11 3:24:08 PM
RAYMOND LEE JEWELERS
150
A beautiful platinum and diamond bracelet in the art deco style consisting of a mix of beautifully cut stones in various shapes. Round Brilliant, Marquise, and Baguette cut stones come together to make this beautiful bracelet. There are
approximately 23.85ctw. The diamonds are VS in clarity and G/H in color. The weight of the bracelet is 44dwt. of platinum.
BOCA RATON�–�PALM BEACH GARDENS
150_PB11.indd 150150_PB11.indd 150 1/28/11 3:24:24 PM1/28/11 3:24:24 PM
RED FOX FINE ART
151
Henry Weekes, Jr. (British, fl. 1849–1888, died ca. 1910)Feeding Time, 1853
Oil on canvas, 28¼ x 36 inchesSigned and dated HWeekes 1853
FINE 19TH & 20TH CENTURY PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE, EST. 1970
2 East Washington Street, P.O. Box 385, at the Red Fox Inn, Middleburg, VA 20118tel: 540.687.5780�mobile: 703.851.5160
email: info@redfoxfi neart.com�internet: www.redfoxfi neart.com member: FADA
151_PB11.indd 151151_PB11.indd 151 1/28/11 3:24:38 PM1/28/11 3:24:38 PM
REHS CO., INC. — DIAMONDS
152
579 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1160, New York, New York 10017tel: 212.750.6163�fax: 212.688.5883�email: [email protected]
internet: www.rehsdiamonds.com
Shape: Round BrilliantWeight: 702 d
Color: GClarity: Internally flawless
Cut Grade: ExcellentCertificate: GIA
152_PB11.indd 152152_PB11.indd 152 1/28/11 3:24:58 PM1/28/11 3:24:58 PM
REHS GALLERIES, INC.
153
5 East 57th Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10022tel: 212.355.5710�fax: 212.355.5742
email: [email protected]�internet: www.rehs.com
Emile Munier (1840–1895)Feeding the Rabbits
Oil on canvas, 30⅛ x 16¾ inchesSigned and dated 1888
PROVENANCE:Lutheran Seminary, St. Paul
Private collector, Minneapolis, ca. 1940By descent, ca. 1959
LITERATURE:Included in Emile Munier: The Virtual Checklist, www.emilemunier.org, catalogue #1888.05
153_PB11.indd 153153_PB11.indd 153 1/28/11 3:25:15 PM1/28/11 3:25:15 PM
RICHTERS
154
224 Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, FL 33480tel: 561.655.0774�fax: 561.655.1334�email: [email protected]
From our vintage collection of David Webb enamel, gold, platinum, and diamond bracelets.
154_PB11.indd 154154_PB11.indd 154 1/28/11 3:25:28 PM1/28/11 3:25:28 PM
ROBERT LLOYD
155
THE ROCHESTER CUP A Highly Important Queen Anne Period Silver Gilt Cup and Cover
by William Gamble London 1707Presented by The City of Rochester, Kent
Engraved with The Rochester City Coat of Arms as well as a second Coat of Arms on the opposite side
AMERICAN SILVER OF THE 18TH & EARLY 19TH CENTURIESENGLISH, IRISH, & SCOTTISH SILVER OF THE 16TH–19TH CENTURIES
Gallery 63, 1050 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10022tel: 212.750.8752
email: [email protected]�internet: www.robertlloydinc.com
155_PB11.indd 155155_PB11.indd 155 1/28/11 3:25:43 PM1/28/11 3:25:43 PM
ROSENBERG DIAMONDS & CO.
156
SPECIALIZING IN IMPORTANT WHITE AND NATURAL FANCY COLOR DIAMONDS
233 South Federal Highway, Boca Raton, FL 33432tel: 561.477.5444�fax: 561.477.5222�email: [email protected]
internet: www.RosenbergDiamonds.com
Shown is a selection of GIA certifi ed diamond rings ranging in size from 14ct to 45ct, color from D to H and clarity from Flawless to VS2. Matching Necklace and earrings have
a combined total weight of approximately 127ct and are of collection quality.
156_PB11.indd 156156_PB11.indd 156 1/28/11 3:25:59 PM1/28/11 3:25:59 PM
S & J STODEL
157
Vault 24, The Silver Vaults, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1ESTel: 011.44.207.405.7009�email: [email protected]
internet: www.chinesesilver.com
An English Sterling Silver Jardiniere decorated each side with images of various aquatic scenes and supported by sea-horses.
157_PB11.indd 157157_PB11.indd 157 1/28/11 3:26:12 PM1/28/11 3:26:12 PM
SALLEA ANTIQUES
158
Boxes Are Our Business�…�All Sizes, Shapes and Styles
66 Elm Street, New Canaan, CT 06840tel: 203.972.1050�fax: 203.972.1567
email: [email protected]�internet: www.salleaantiques.com
158_PB11.indd 158158_PB11.indd 158 1/28/11 3:26:26 PM1/28/11 3:26:26 PM
SANDRA CRONAN LTD
159
Cartier. Cabochon Turquoise and Pavé Diamond ring, Circa 1940.Art Deco Fancy Vivid Yellow Diamond ring . Circa 1920. 2.87ct, VS1. GIA Certifi cate
Art Deco Padparadscha Sapphire and Diamond ring, Circa 1925. 3.19ct.
FINE ANTIQUE AND PERIOD JEWELS
First Floor, 16 Albemarle Street, London W1S 4HW, UKtel: 011.44.207.491.4851
email: [email protected]�internet: www.sandracronan.com
159_PB11.indd 159159_PB11.indd 159 1/28/11 3:26:41 PM1/28/11 3:26:41 PM
SANTOS�–�London
160
Very rare Chinese export porcelain teapot decorated in famille rose opaque enamels with the arms of General Estates of the Dutch Republic over the VOC monogram surrounded by the inscription
CONCORDIA RES PARVAE CRESCUNT 1728, ca. 1730, Yongzheng reign, Qing dynasty.
The decoration was copied from a Dutch silver ducat minted for the use of VOC in Asia.
21 Old Court House, London W8 4PD UKtel: +44 207 937 6000
email: [email protected] / [email protected]: www.santoslondon.com
160_PB11.indd 160160_PB11.indd 160 1/28/11 3:27:01 PM1/28/11 3:27:01 PM
SHERRY SHEAF & CO. INC
161
PURVEYOR OF EXQUISITE JEWELRY & FINE PEARLS
VHERNIER “VAGUE” EARRING ROSE GOLD
VHERNIER “ABBRACCIO” RING ROSE GOLD
VHERNIER “CALLA” NECKLACE ROSE GOLD AND KOGOLONG
Florida and New YorkBy Appointment
tel: 954.568.5808 / 917.740.5803�fax: 954.568.2334email: [email protected]�internet: www. sherrysheaf.com
161_PB11.indd 161161_PB11.indd 161 1/28/11 3:27:18 PM1/28/11 3:27:18 PM
18k yellow gold J.E. Caldwell sparrow pin, 3.00ct TW, old European-cut diamonds and a cabochon ruby eye.
Platinum on 18k yellow gold vintage swallow pin, 1.50ct old European-cut diamonds.
Platinum flower motif necklace, approximately 35ct TW diamonds, 19" long.
Silver and gold Victorian sparrow pin with approximately 4.50ct TW diamonds, circa 1860.
SHREVE, CRUMP & LOW
162
Flagship: 440 Bolyston Street, Boston, MA 02116�tel: 800.225.70880 Main Street, Nantucket, MA 02554�tel: 508.228.6246
email: [email protected]�internet: www. shrevecrumpandlow.com
162_PB11.indd 162162_PB11.indd 162 1/28/11 3:27:33 PM1/28/11 3:27:33 PM
SPENCER MARKS
163
FINE ANTIQUE AND 20TH CENTURY SILVER
Exceptional Tiff any Sterling Silver and Mixed Metal Aesthetic Movement Water Pitcher in the Japanese Taste, c. 1878.
P.O. Box 330, Southampton, MA 01073tel: 413.527.7344�email: [email protected]�internet: www.spencermarks.com
163_PB11.indd 163163_PB11.indd 163 1/28/11 3:27:47 PM1/28/11 3:27:47 PM
SPENCER WEISZ GALLERIES LTD
164
Chicago�•�West Palm BeachTel: 312.527.9420�email: [email protected]
internet: www.antiqueposters.com
When Toulouse-Lautrec chose to advertise the art and literary magazine La Revue Blanche by using a portrait of Misia Natanson, wife of the co-editor, it was because the red-headed
beauty was thought to be the real mover behind the magazine. Misia coaxed the major celebrities of the time to contribute to the publication's success, including Lautrec himself.
164_PB11.indd 164164_PB11.indd 164 1/28/11 3:28:03 PM1/28/11 3:28:03 PM
STEPHEN KALMS ANTIQUES
165
Superb Sterling Silver centre piece with gilt interiorMade in London in 1909 by Ackroyd Rhodes
FINE ANTIQUE SILVER
Vault 13/15 and 31/32 London Silver Vaults, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1QStel: +44 207 430 1254�fax: +44 207 405 6206�mobile: +44 7831 604001�US cell: 305 298 0382
email: [email protected]�internet: www.kalmsantiques.com
165_PB11.indd 165165_PB11.indd 165 1/28/11 3:28:19 PM1/28/11 3:28:19 PM
STEVEN NECKMAN, INC.
166
36 NE 1st Street, Suite 1046, Miami, FL 33132tel: 305.755.9030
email: [email protected]�internet: www.StevenNeckman.com
Mauboussin, Paris 18k Rose and Yellow Gold, Citrine and Diamond Clip Brooch.
DIAMOND AND ESTATE JEWELRY
166_PB11.indd 166166_PB11.indd 166 1/28/11 3:29:09 PM1/28/11 3:29:09 PM
SUE BROWN
167
Italian Micro Mosaic of Bacchus, circa 1780In later gold pendant mount
1-7 Davies Mews, Mayfair, London WIK 5 AB, UKtel: +44 (0) 20 7491 4287�UK mobile: +44 7774 940 767�US cell: 917.216.9128
email: [email protected]�internet: www.antique-rings.co.uk
167_PB11.indd 167167_PB11.indd 167 1/28/11 3:29:35 PM1/28/11 3:29:35 PM
SYMBOLIC & CHASE
168
JEWELLERY AND OBJECT D’ART
30 Old Bond Street, London, UK W1S 4QQtel: +44.20.7499.9902�fax: +44.20.7499.9903
email: [email protected]�internet: www.symbolicchase.com
CARTIER. A Natural Pearl and Diamond 'Cravate' necklace, circa 1910Accompanied by Cartier certifi cate of authenticity
168_PB11.indd 168168_PB11.indd 168 1/28/11 3:29:47 PM1/28/11 3:29:47 PM
TK ASIAN ANTIQUITIES
169
1654 Jamestown Road, Williamsburg, VA 23185�tel: 757.253.076941 East 57th Street, Suite 1125, New York, NY 10022�tel: 212.644.1103
email: [email protected]�internet: www.tkasianantiquities.com
Date: 5th–3rd Century BCEMedium: Gold
Size: 5⅜" High, 315⁄16" Diameter
Exceptionally high relief decoration brings to life the fi ve fi gures arranged on this hammered gold tapered cup. Cups of similar shape were found at Marlik (Northern Iran). The bodies are worked into the vessel wall by repoussé, while the heads are made
from separate worked sheets of gold, carefully soldered into openings of the cup. The immense cultural exchange, of both physical goods and artistic styles, which occurred throughout much of Central Asia and Northwestern China can make it diffi cult to identify
the culture which crafted an artifact. Preliminary research on this cup suggests that the one seated fi gure may represent the goddess Hera, depicted under similar circumstances on a rhyton from the Thracian treasure at Panagyurishte, dated to the turn of the 4th–3rd century BCE. Hera is pulling a fl owing veil away from the sides of her head, in the same manner as depicted here.
169_PB11.indd 169169_PB11.indd 169 1/28/11 3:30:02 PM1/28/11 3:30:02 PM
TOJ GALLERY
170
420 Adams Street, Annapolis, MD 21403tel: 410.626.0770 / 443.995.5377
email: [email protected]�internet: www.tojgallery.com
A very rare vase designed by Charles Catteau for Boch Freres Keramis, circa 1930 with a wonderful small edition Japanese woodblock print, “Tsukubasan Shrine" by Ray Morimura.
170_PB11.indd 170170_PB11.indd 170 1/28/11 3:30:18 PM1/28/11 3:30:18 PM
TOM VEILLEUX GALLERY
171
75 Market Street, Suite 104, Portland, ME 04101tel: 207.828.0784�email: [email protected]�internet: www.tomveilleux.com
Maxfield Parrish (1870–1966)New Hampshire Landscape, 1942
Oil on board, 11 x 9 inches
171_PB11.indd 171171_PB11.indd 171 1/28/11 3:30:33 PM1/28/11 3:30:33 PM
TOP ART GALLERY
172
Daniel Ridgway Knight (Philadelphia 1839–1924 Paris)A Pause from the Day’s ChoresOil on canvas, 32 x 26 inches
Signed and inscribed lower left: Ridgway Knight/ParisProvenance: Colonel and Mrs. Harry E. Stewart, Dallas
SPECIALIZING IN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN PAINTINGS, OLD MASTER, IMPRESSIONIST, POST-IMPRESSIONIST, MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY
19201 Collins Avenue (in the Ramada Marco Polo Hotel), Sunny Isles, FL 33160tel: 305.937.3751 / 786.344.3420
email: [email protected]�internet: www.topartgallerymiami.com
172_PB11.indd 172172_PB11.indd 172 1/28/11 3:30:47 PM1/28/11 3:30:47 PM
TOULOUSE ANTIQUEGALLERY
173
Rare Fontaine De ParfumsLouix XV, circa 1765
Chinese, Celadon Porcelain and two Samson Swans
4210 The Strand, Manhattan Beach, CA 90266tel: 310.503.0152�fax: 310.372.0422
email: [email protected]�internet: www.toulouseantiques.com
173_PB11.indd 173173_PB11.indd 173 1/28/11 3:31:03 PM1/28/11 3:31:03 PM
TRINITY HOUSE PAINTINGS
174
INTERNATIONAL DEALERS IN BRITISH AND EUROPEAN FINE ART SPECIALIZING IN IMPRESSIONIST AND MODERN BRITISH PAINTINGS
Montague Dawson (British, 1895–1973)Idle Sails
Oil on canvas, 28 x 36 inchesSigned lower left
50 Maddox Street, London, Mayfair, W1S 1AY United Kingdom
67 High Street, Broadway, Worcestershire, WR12 7DP United Kingdom
Gallery tel: 01144 1386 859 329�US cell: 347 827 5132Simon Shore Cell: 01144 7866 419 666�Steven Beale Cell: 01144 7958 679 762
email: [email protected]�internet: www.trinityhousepaintings.com
174_PB11.indd 174174_PB11.indd 174 1/28/11 3:31:21 PM1/28/11 3:31:21 PM
VALERIO ANTIQUES
175
250 Valencia Avenue, Coral Gables, FL 33134tel: 305.448.6779
email: [email protected]�internet: www.valerioartdeco.com
A cold patinated and hand carved ivory sculpture by DH Chiparus entitled Kamorna. Made in France, circa: 1930. Dimensions: H. 20", W. 2¼", D. 4½".
Mahogany cabinet veneered in Makassar ebony and marquetery in Ebony and Sycamore with inlaid and handles in ivory designed by Joubert et Petit (DIM). Portoro marble top. Made in France, circa 1930. Dimensions: H. 35½", W. 47", D. 21".
A rosewood side table with two tears of pebble glass that lights from the interior by Dominique. Decorations in nickel platted metal.Made in France, circa 1930. Dimensions: Diam. 35", H. 25" to fi rst level, H. 36" to second level
175_PB11.indd 175175_PB11.indd 175 1/28/11 3:31:40 PM1/28/11 3:31:40 PM
VALLEJO GALLERY
176
18TH, 19TH & 20TH CENTURY MARITIME & MARINE THEME PAINTINGS & ANTIQUES SINCE 1972
Edward Moran (American, 1829–1901)The Winning Yacht, 1876
Oil on canvas, 10 x 17¼ inchesSigned lower left and titled verso
A moment in yacht racing history which we believe depicts the Racing Schooner IDLER, winner of the Brenton’s Reef Challenge Cup, July 1876,
off New York’s Buoy #15 ahead of the Schooner WANDERER.
1610 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach, CA 92663tel: 949.642.7945�fax: 949.631.3161
email: [email protected]�internet: www.vallejogallery.com
Member: FADA
176_PB11.indd 176176_PB11.indd 176 1/28/11 3:32:01 PM1/28/11 3:32:01 PM
VENDOME INC.
177
1187 Coast Village Rd. I-496, Santa Barbara, CA 93108tel: 805.969.5997
internet: www.vendomeinc.com
A pair of Diamond, Ruby and Gold "Sign Language" Brooches, by Paul Flato, circa 1940.
177_PB11.indd 177177_PB11.indd 177 1/28/11 3:32:19 PM1/28/11 3:32:19 PM
VÉRONIQUE BAMPS
178
“Le Patio Palace” #626, 41 Avenue Hector Otto, 98000 MonacoBy appointment only
tel: + 33 643 91 74 65�fax: + 377 97 97 37 57email: [email protected]
Rare orchid brooch in enamelled gold and diamond.Tiff any & Co., circa 1890.
178_PB11.indd 178178_PB11.indd 178 1/28/11 3:35:45 PM1/28/11 3:35:45 PM
VILLA DEL ARTE GALLERIES
179
Calle Tapineria 39, 08002 Barcelona, Spaintel: +34 93 268 0673
email: [email protected]: ww.villadelarte.com
Mundos Paralelos by Claudio Napolitano, 80x150cmLimited Edition Photography
179_PB11.indd 179179_PB11.indd 179 1/28/11 3:32:53 PM1/28/11 3:32:53 PM
VINCENT VALLARINO FINE ART
180
Franz Kline (1910–1962)Untitled, 1948
Ink and gouache on paper, 23 x 30 inchesSigned and dated: Kline '48 lower right
Provenance: D.C. Holland Gallery, ChicagoCollection of George L. and Dorothy A. Sturman, acquired from above in 1963.
120 East 65th Street, New York, NY 10065tel: 212.628.0722
email: info@vallarinofi neart.com�internet: www.vallarinofi neart.com
180_PB11.indd 180180_PB11.indd 180 1/28/11 3:33:08 PM1/28/11 3:33:08 PM
WEINREB DIAMOND & ESTATE JEWELERS
181
A magnificent diamond necklace with over 50 carats of VS clarity, F/G color diamonds.
1312 Reisterstown Road, Baltimore, MD 21208tel: 410.340.5537�fax: 410.653.7515
email: [email protected]�internet: www.adiamond.com
181_PB11.indd 181181_PB11.indd 181 1/28/11 3:33:25 PM1/28/11 3:33:25 PM
WELLESLEY HOUSE LTD.
182
A small selection of our collection of Extraordinary 18th & 19th Century English Tea Caddies.
Lake Forest, IL�60045tel: 847.735.9773
email: [email protected] / [email protected]: www.wellesleyhouse.com
182_PB11.indd 182182_PB11.indd 182 1/28/11 3:33:40 PM1/28/11 3:33:40 PM
WHITLEY COLLECTION
183
2190 NW 87th Avenue, Doral, FL 33172 tel: 786.464.1818�fax: 786.464.1950
email: [email protected]�internet: www.whitleycollection.com
Rose Cabat is an American potter known for her “feelies”— small, fi ne, narrow-necked porcelain pots with soft glazes that feel feathery to the touch. These unique and colorful pieces are highly sought after by collectors around the world and have been exhibited in
some of the nation’s leading museums.
183_PB11.indd 183183_PB11.indd 183 1/28/11 3:33:55 PM1/28/11 3:33:55 PM
WILLIAM COOK
184
FINE ENGLISH & EUROPEAN 18TH AND EARLY 19TH CENTURY FURNITURE AND OBJECTS
A Superb George I Walnut Tallboy. Veneered in walnut and with fi ne herringbone inlaid bandings, this tallboy dates from the end of the English walnut period. It is of an unusual design with two deep base drawers replacing the more commonly seen three. This allows the tallboy to be low waisted and this is balanced by the use of a deep banded cornice, which is unusual for this
period in furniture making. The handles, which have developed a wonderful bronzed patination, are all original as are the unusual splay bracket feet. This tallboy is a superb mellow colour and a great example of an early 18th century piece of walnut.
Height 73"�Width 38½"�Depth 20"�Circa 1720
15 Bridge Street, Hungerford, Berkshire RG17 OEGtel: +44 (0)1488 681254 / +44 (0)7885 031 301�US mobile: 773 469 1458
email: [email protected]�internet: www.williamcookantiques.com
184_PB11.indd 184184_PB11.indd 184 1/28/11 3:34:08 PM1/28/11 3:34:08 PM
WINICK RUNSDORF
185
34 West 47th Street, New York, NY 10036tel: 212.302.9555�toll free: 800.866.1248�fax: 212.575.1991
email: [email protected]�internet: www.winickdiamonds.com
A handmade Diamonds by the yard necklace containing 192 full-cut Diamonds weighing a total of 58.71cts continuously set in platinum measuring 66 inches.
One opera-legth Diamond necklace of 150 Diamonds weighing a total of 45.61cts prong-set in platinum.
One Riviera Diamond necklace consisting of 82 Diamonds weighing a total of 35.39 set in platinum.
One pair of earrings featuring two rose-cut Diamonds weighing a total of 4.55cts and decorated by Diamonds weighing a total of 6.50cts set in platinum.
A handmade platinum, Bezel-set necklace featuring 37 Diamonds weighing a total of 19.03cts.
One Oval Diamond wedding band featuring a total of 13 oval brilliant-cut diamonds weighing a total of 9.34cts. set in a handmade platinum mounting.
One Sapphire and Diamond ring centering upon one emerald-cut diamond weighing 2.00 cts fl ankedby a total of 6 baguette-cut diamonds weighing a total of .76ct, further enhanced by a total of 96 full-cut
diamonds weighing a total of 1.04cts all set in a handmade platinum mounting
185r1_PB11.indd 185185r1_PB11.indd 185 1/31/11 9:52:35 AM1/31/11 9:52:35 AM
YAFA
186
Van Cleef and Arpels yellow gold diamond snow flakes necklace.
SIGNED JEWELS
580 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10036tel: 212.719.9828�mobile: 516.652.2085
email: [email protected]�internet: www.yafajewelry.comcontacts: Yafa Moradof and Maurice Moradof
186_PB11.indd 186186_PB11.indd 186 1/28/11 3:34:39 PM1/28/11 3:34:39 PM
YVEL
187
654 Madison Avenue, Suite 701, New York, NY 10065�tel: 212.755.06881 Yechiel Steinberg Street, Ramat Moza, Israel�tel: 972.2.6735811
email: [email protected] / [email protected]�internet: www.yvel.com
18 k yellow gold fl ower brooch combining 235.00 ct. natural multi color Sapphires set with 7.00 ct. diamonds from the Yvel Rainbow Collection.
187_PB11.indd 187187_PB11.indd 187 1/28/11 3:34:53 PM1/28/11 3:34:53 PM
Private Beach 5 Oceanside Pools 4 Whirlpool Spas20 Daytime Beach Bungalows The Beach Club & Spa
9 Restaurants 5 Bars 11 Shopping Boutiques10 Tennis Courts Family Entertainment Center and Kids’ Camp
36 Holes of Golf Including The Breakers Rees Jones® Course
Only One Palm Beach. Only One Resort. Only The Breakers.
Once you stay, you’ll understand.
Reserve online at www.thebreakers.com or call 1-888-BREAKERS (273-2537). Owned and operated by Flagler System, Inc.
For a memorable vacation at a magnificent destination, one resort rises above the rest.
188_PB11.indd 188188_PB11.indd 188 1/28/11 4:14:35 PM1/28/11 4:14:35 PM
DISCOVERSUNDAY BRUNCH
& POLOFor Further Information and ReservationsOnline: internationalpoloclub.comReservation line: (561) 282-5296Reservations Strongly Recommended
2011 Palm Beach Polo Season January 2nd–April 17th
189_PB11.indd 189189_PB11.indd 189 1/28/11 4:15:05 PM1/28/11 4:15:05 PM
LM BEACHM BEACHwpbgo.com
“SEE YOU DOWNTOWN AFTER THE SHOW!”
Always Original
THE CLEMATIS DISTRICT IS A GEM THAT WILL MAKE YOUR EYES SPARKLE.
190r1_PB11.indd 190190r1_PB11.indd 190 1/28/11 5:11:43 PM1/28/11 5:11:43 PM
191r1_PB11.indd 191191r1_PB11.indd 191 1/28/11 5:11:54 PM1/28/11 5:11:54 PM
BiCE Ristorante • 313 Worth Avenue • Palm Beach, Florida 33480 • (561) 835-16001/2
192r1_PB11.indd 192192r1_PB11.indd 192 1/28/11 5:12:05 PM1/28/11 5:12:05 PM
WORTH AVENUEPALM BEACH
WWW.150WORTH.COM
AAAAAAA LLLLLUUUUUUUXXXXXXXUUUUUUUURRRRRIIIOOOOOUUUUUSSSSSSSSSHHHHHHOOOOOOPPPPPPPPPPPPIIINNNNNGGGGG
EEEEEEXXXXXPPPPPEEEEERRRRRIIIIEEENNNNCCCCCEEEE
NAME FAMEALEALEAALEL X &X &X &X & AN ANAAANANII
AAAAALLLLTOTOTOTOOTLLLLL NANANNA BOBO BOOUTUTUTUTUTIIIIQUQQQUUQUUEEEAMIAMIAAMIMINA NA NAN RRRRRUUUUBINBINBINNNACCACCACACCACCACCIIII
CCCCANANANDDDDII C CCCIIISSSSSCCCCCCOOOOOCHCHCCHHAAAATTTTAAAAAA EAEAEAE U DU DU DDEEE PU PUPUPUUPPPPPPPPP YYYYYY
CHCCHCHHCHRIRIR STOSTOSTOSTOSTOOFFFFFLELELELLECOCOUCOUCOUOUC UUC TUTUTUUUREREEERE OPOPOPOPOPTTTTTTIIIIQUQUQUUUQQUEEEE
EEEEMILMILMILLIIIIO PO PO PO PPO UUUUUUCCICCCCCCICCFRAFRAFRFRAFRAANCENCNCENCEN S BS S BS BBS REREREREEEWSTWSWSTWSTWSTWSTEERERERER
GEGEGEGGEEG OOOOOOOORGERGRGEGRGEG SHSHSHHSHSHARARARARARA OUOUOOUOOUOGGGGGGUUUUUUCCICCICCICCCCCC
JAJAJACJACJACCKIEKIEKIEEKIKIK RRR RRROOOOOOGERGERGERGGGERRSSJOHJOHJOHJOHJOHOHHHNNNNN D D DDDDEEEEEEMMMMMMMEEEEEDDDDDEIREIREIREIRIIEIRE OS OS OSOS OS BOUBOUBOUBOUBOUO TTTTTTIIIIQUQUQUQUUQUEEEEE
KANKAKANKANKANANARARIARIARIRARA SSSS JEJEJEJEEEWWWWWWELREELRELRLRE YYYYYLACLACLACACACACOSTOSTOSOOSTSTEEE
L’EL’EL’EL’EL’ESSSSSCACALCALCALALC E SE SE SSSSSWWWWWIMIMIMIMMMWWWWWWWEEEAREAREAARELLLLLOUOUOUOUUOUIISSSSS VV VVVVUUUUUIIIIIITTOTTOTTOTOTOTTONN
NEINEINENEIIIIMANMANMANANAANA MA MA MA MAMAMARCRCRCRCCUSUSUUUSRRRRRRAAAAAAYYYYYAAAAAAAA MMMMMOOOOOONNNNNNDDDDDDEEEEE G. G.GG.GGG
SSSSSSAKAKAKAKAKAAA SSSS FFFFIIIIIFTHFTHFTHTHFTHTFT AV AV AVAV AVAVENENENENNEENNNUUUUUUEEESAKSAKSAKSAKSAKSSAKAKS FS FS FS FS FFOOOOOORRRRRR M M M MMMMMENENENEEN
SASALSALSALSALSALSALLS OOOOOONNNNNNN WWWWWWW & & & && & &&& SPASPAPAPASPAPASPAS ES ES ESESESE SSSSSSENENENENENENE TTTTTTIALIALIAIALALI SSSSSSSSSAMAMAM AM AMAAM EEEEEDDDDDDELMELMELMLMELMELMANANANNANAAN
STSTSTSTSTARBARBARBARBARBARBBBBTTTTTTTT UUUUUUUUUCKCKCCKCKCKKKSSSSSTOTOTOTOTOTORRRRRYYYYY B B BBBBUUUUUUUURCRCRCCRR HHHH
TRTRETRETREEERT VINVINVINVINVINVV III RRRRRIIIISTOSTOSTOSTOSTOTORARANRANRANANRAAA TTTTEEEEVVVVVVICICICICICOOOOOMMMMMTTTTEEE A.A.A
VVVVVVILEILEILELILEBREBREBREB QUQUININNNNVIVVIVVIVVIVVIVVIVVVVI GI GI GGI GGG. S. SSHOHOHOHOH EEEEESSSSS
193r1_PB11.indd 193193r1_PB11.indd 193 1/28/11 5:12:19 PM1/28/11 5:12:19 PM
194r1_PB11.indd 194194r1_PB11.indd 194 1/28/11 5:12:34 PM1/28/11 5:12:34 PM
195r1_PB11.indd 195195r1_PB11.indd 195 1/28/11 5:12:45 PM1/28/11 5:12:45 PM
BE OUR GUEST, DINE WITH US AT CABANA FOR A TRULY LEGENDARY EXPERIENCE
533 CLEMATIS ST6 BLOCKS FROM THE CONVENTION CENTER
“A South Beach vibe prevails at these stylish,high-energy chain spots that invite young,
good-looking crowds.” -Zagat
“Enjoy killer caipirinhas and mojitos at the groovy bars and dine on the fab fusion of Nuevo Latino flare. A meal at Cabana transports diners to an island vacation.” -Zagat
WEST PALM BEACH(561) 833-4773WWW.CABANARESTAURANT.COM
CLEMATIS
JUST GOTMORE
STREET
FLAVOR
196_PB11.indd 196196_PB11.indd 196 1/28/11 4:17:13 PM1/28/11 4:17:13 PM
NEW YORK ITALIAN MEETS PALM BEACH
GOURMET PIZZA & PASTA118 CLEMATIS ST
WEST PALM BEACH561.833.4456WWW.LUIGISWPB.COM
LUIGI’S
LUIGI’S
R
E
S
T
A
UR
A
N
T
I
T
A
L
I
A
N
I
‧
197_PB11.indd 197197_PB11.indd 197 1/28/11 4:17:26 PM1/28/11 4:17:26 PM
198_PB11.indd 198198_PB11.indd 198 1/28/11 4:17:41 PM1/28/11 4:17:41 PM
Café L ’ EuropeWelcomes
Palm Beach Jewelry, Art & Antique Show
Café L ’ EuropeThe award-winning dining jewel in Palm Beach
warmly welcomes you to experience fine culinary artistry
with timeless European ambience.
331 South County Road | Palm Beach, FL 33480 | Reservations: 561.655.8272
199_PB11.indd 199199_PB11.indd 199 1/28/11 4:17:58 PM1/28/11 4:17:58 PM
©2010
RandiMuster/Mustphoto,Inc.
For ticketing and box seating options, please contact Annette Goyette 561-779-1660.WWW.EQUESTRIANSPORT.COM
Palm Beach International Equestrian CenterWELLINGTON, FLORIDA
The FTI Winter Equestrian Festival hosts Palm Beach County’s most unique entertainmentoption every Saturday at 6pm from January 22 to April 3.
Enjoy an evening of fine dining, shopping, and entertainment for the whole family,while watching world class show jumping competition. Take part in the action from a box seat or
from the upscale International Club. Several VIP seating options are available.
200_PB11.indd 200200_PB11.indd 200 1/28/11 4:18:11 PM1/28/11 4:18:11 PM
Hen
ry M
orr
iso
n F
lag
ler
Mu
seu
mK
ravi
s C
ente
r fo
r th
e P
erfo
rmin
g A
rts
Soci
ety
of
the
Fou
r A
rts
We invite you to step out from the show and experience
Palm Beach County’s exceptional cultural gems: world-
class museums and galleries, historic landmarks, natural
treasures and glittering performing arts venues.
The Palm Beach County Cultural Council is proud to
support the growth and development of arts and culture
in Palm Beach County since 1978.
Membership in the Cultural Council provides you
with valuable bene ts that include complimentary
admission to prestigious art fairs, our award-winning
art&culture magazine and valuable member discounts
with CultureCard.
Begin your cultural journey now and discover why Palm
Beach County is Florida’s Cultural Capital:
PalmBeachCulture.com
Culture has found its place in the sun.
No
rto
n M
use
um
of
Art
2011 Palm Beach Jewelry Art Show Catalog Ad.indd 1 1/24/11 4:25:45 PM201_PB11.indd 201201_PB11.indd 201 1/28/11 4:18:26 PM1/28/11 4:18:26 PM
Relax...Enjoy the Water
2010 NW 1st St.Delray Beach, FL [email protected]
Urdl’s manufactures andinstalls precast and customwaterfalls. We construct caves,grottos, edge rocks, slides andother rock features.
Our manmade hollowmolded rocks can transform yourexisting or new pool into atropical paradise.
We also supply and installall forms of fountains from theclassical architectural type tothe modern day interactivefountains.
Urdl’s works withresidential, commercial, and HOAclients. Plus we have projectsthroughout the US andCaribbean.
Call us for a free quote.
Pool Lic. # CPC 1456506
WATERFALL CREATIONS, INC.
Since 1961
Our 50thAnniversary1961 - 2011
202_PB11.indd 202202_PB11.indd 202 1/28/11 4:18:40 PM1/28/11 4:18:40 PM
Unparalleled local coverage.
The Palm Beach Daily News off ers unparalleled local coverage in print and online.
We’re known for our signature fashion reports from Palm Beach, New York, Paris and Milan, and our society coverage from Palm Beach, Newport and New York.Th e arts, business, real estate, dining — you’ll fi nd all you need to know from your experts in local coverage.
Devoted to artful living, the Palm Beach Daily News, aff ectionately known as “Th e Shiny Sheet” because of its high-quality newsprint, has been serving Palm Beach since 1897.
Advertising: (561) 820-3815 | Subscribe Today: (561) 820-4663
www.PalmBeachDailyNews.com
203_PB11.indd 203203_PB11.indd 203 1/28/11 4:19:13 PM1/28/11 4:19:13 PM
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL: (561) 472 - 7000 (800) 527 - 1133
ALL-INCLUSIVE AMENITIES:
FULL HOT BREAKFAST BUFFET
DAILY NEWSPAPER
HIGH SPEED INTERNET
24H FRONT DESK SERVICE
WEEKLY SOCIAL HOUR
24H ACCESS TO FITNESS ROOM
BUSINESS CENTER
FREE OVERNIGHT PARKING
301 LAMBERTON DRIVE, WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA 33401
FEATURING 112 BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED ONE
AND TWO BEDROOM SUITES WITH SEPARATE
LIVING ROOM/KITCHEN AND A WELL LIT
WORK AREA WITH FREE WIRELESS HIGH-SPEED
INTERNET AND A 32” FLAT PANEL TV. ENJOY
A LUXURIOUS BEDDING EXPERIENCE WITH
PLUSH PILLOW TOP MATTRESSES AND CRISP,
HIGH THREAD COUNT LINENS.
WEST PALM BEACH
204_PB11.indd 204204_PB11.indd 204 1/28/11 4:19:39 PM1/28/11 4:19:39 PM
Bringing you the best
TOWN-CRIERServing Wellington, Royal Palm Beach, Loxahatchee & The Acreage Since 1980
www.wellingtonthemagazine.comwww.gotowncrier.com
fi
of Wellington
205_PB11.indd 205205_PB11.indd 205 1/28/11 4:20:02 PM1/28/11 4:20:02 PM
Visit our website to book a table at the
Cellini restaurant within the Fair and for
the latest information including
recommended luxury hotels.
bada-antiques-fair.co.uk
23–29 March 2011The 19th Annual British Antique
Dealers’ Association Fair
at The Duke of York Square,
off Sloane Square, LONDON SW3
Tel: +44 (0)20 7589 6108
Freefone USA: 1 877 872 0778
THE F INEST ART & ANTIQUES FOR SALE
206_PB11.indd 206206_PB11.indd 206 1/28/11 4:20:17 PM1/28/11 4:20:17 PM
75 INTERNATIONAL ANTIQUES& ASIAN ART DEALERSEXHIBITING FOR SALE
FURNITURE, ANTIQUES& CONTEMPORARY ART
IN A MUSEUM-LIKE SETTING
N E W Y O R K
MARCH 24 – 27, 2011 7WNewYork® 7 WEST 34TH STREET AT 5TH AVENUE
INFORMATION
CASKEY LEES, INC.PO Box 1409
Topanga, CA 90290310.455.2886
www.newyorkartsofpacificasiashow.comwww.caskeylees.com
PHOTO COURTESY: ORIENTATIONS GALLERY
ARTS OFPACIFIC ASIA
SHOWPREVIEW OPENING
WEDNESDAY MARCH 23, 6–10PMTICKETS $100 PER PERSON
includes wine and hors d'oeuvres,
an illustrated catalogue
and repeat admission.
CELEBRATING THE 20TH
SHOW HOURS
THURS – SAT 11AM – 7:30PMSUN 11AM – 5PM
ADMISSION $20Includes catalogue
“Largest and most International Asian art fair in the city”–Antiques & The Arts Weekly
207_PB11.indd 207207_PB11.indd 207 1/28/11 4:20:30 PM1/28/11 4:20:30 PM
Brussels Expowww.eurantica.be
fine art antiques fair
25 March – 3 April 2011
208_PB11.indd 208208_PB11.indd 208 1/28/11 4:20:44 PM1/28/11 4:20:44 PM
51st Annual
ANT IQUAR IAN BOOKSEL LERS ’ ASSOC IAT ION OF AMER ICA
APRIL 8 - 10FRIDAY NOON � 8PM SATURDAY NOON � 7PM SUNDAY NOON � 5PM
DAILY ADMISSION $20 RUN�OF�SHOW $40 CATALOG INFO: 212.777.5218
PREVIEW THURSDAY APRIL 7, 6PM � 9PM$50 INCLUDES ONE READMISSION
DISCOVERY DAY SUNDAY APRIL 10, NOON � 3PM INFO: AT ABAA.ORG
PARK AVENUE ARMORY @ 67th Street, NYC
200 INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITORS
VISIT WWW.SANFORDSMITH.COM FOR EXHIBITORS LIST
209_PB11.indd 209209_PB11.indd 209 1/28/11 4:20:56 PM1/28/11 4:20:56 PM
50 Distinguished Dealers and Galleries offering the Finest Antiques and Decorative Arts
Free Parking Daily Guided Show Tours and Special Events Complimentary Shuttle Service from 30th Street Station
CelebrationsAntiques that Mark the Moment2 0 1 1 L o a n E x h i b i t
The Navy Yard | Philadelphia Cruise Terminal at Pier One
5100 South Broad Street | Philadelphia, PA
Show managed by Keeling Wainwright Associates
Preview Part y – April 8
Presenting Sponsor
PhilaAntiques.com
Image Courtesy of Germantown Historical Society
210_PB11.indd 210210_PB11.indd 210 1/28/11 4:21:08 PM1/28/11 4:21:08 PM
While visiting The Mart, also enjoy Art Chicago® and Next.
More than 100 top dealers. Treasures from antiquity to modern. Speakers that inspire your passion. All in one renowned building.
THE MERCHANDISE MART, CHICAGO
Preview Night April 28, 2011View a list of dealers and events at merchandisemartantiques.com.
SAVE THE DATE
211_PB11.indd 211211_PB11.indd 211 1/28/11 4:21:21 PM1/28/11 4:21:21 PM
Art Antiques LondonIncorporating the renowned
International Ceramics Fair & Seminar
9-15 June, 2011Preview: 8 June, 2011
a HAUGHTON FAIRSM
Albert Memorial West Lawn, Kensington Gardens, London SW7The West Lawn is next to the The Albert Memorial and directly opposite The Royal Albert Hall.
Tel: 44 (0)20 7389 6555 www.haughton.comSM
212_PB11.indd 212212_PB11.indd 212 1/28/11 4:21:32 PM1/28/11 4:21:32 PM
The best of the best from around the world
30 june–5 july 2011 preview: 29 juneInformation
Welcoming the visitor to an enhanced and expanded arena in which to explore a myriad of delights, from fine and decorative art to classic cars, contemporary design and fine dining. More to find, more to enjoy. Reinvent with us the art and entertainment of collecting at Masterpiece London.
213_PB11.indd 213213_PB11.indd 213 1/28/11 4:21:54 PM1/28/11 4:21:54 PM
214_PB11.indd 214214_PB11.indd 214 1/28/11 4:22:08 PM1/28/11 4:22:08 PM
SAVE TH E DATE FO R TH E 2011
FRIDAY-SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23-25, 2011Preview Gala: Thursday, September 22
Samuel M. V. Hamilton Building of thePennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
All proceeds directly benefit student scholarships at PAFA.
1 2 8 N . B R OA D ST R E E T | P H I L A D E LP H I A | 2 1 5 . 972 . 0 5 5 0 | www.usartists.org
PRESENTED BY THE WOMEN’S BOARD
215_PB11.indd 215215_PB11.indd 215 1/28/11 4:22:20 PM1/28/11 4:22:20 PM
SAVE THE DATES!
OCTOBER 13-16, 2011
Gala Preview to Benefit
Thursday, October 13, 2011
At The CycloramaBoston Center for the Arts
539 Tremont Street in the South End
Everything Old Is New Again!
Visit www.EllisBoston.com
or call 617-363-0405
Fusco & Four/Ventures, LLC, also produces
AD 20/21: Art & Design of the 20th & 21st Centuries & The 12th Annual Boston Print FairApril 7-10, 2011 Preview to benefit Boston Architectural College www.AD2021.com
The 15th Annual Boston International Fine Art ShowNovember 17-20, 2011 Preview to benefit Boston Symphony Orchestra www.FineArtBoston.com
216_PB11.indd 216216_PB11.indd 216 1/28/11 4:22:32 PM1/28/11 4:22:32 PM
Benefiting Enterprise for High School Students
PREVIEW PARTY BENEFIT GALA
SAVE THE DATE
October 27 - 30, 2011PREVIEW PARTY BENEFIT GALA
October 26
Festival Pavilion, Fort Mason CenterSan Francisco
FOR INFORMATION
Tel: (415) 989-9019Fax: (415) 392-7611Email: [email protected]: www.sffas.org
FOR INFORMATION
217_PB11.indd 217217_PB11.indd 217 1/28/11 4:22:43 PM1/28/11 4:22:43 PM
November 30 - December 4
Art Miami PavilionMidtown Miami I Wynwood3101 NE 1st AvenueMiami, FL 33137 USAwww.art-miami.com
218_PB11.indd 218218_PB11.indd 218 1/28/11 4:22:59 PM1/28/11 4:22:59 PM
300 years of great American design: folk art, furniture, fine and decorative arts, jewelry, ceramics, silver, American arts and crafts, and American Indian art
GALA PREVIEW JANUARY 18, 2012
SHOW OPEN TO THE PUBLICJANUARY 19–22, 2012For more information e–mail [email protected] or call 212. 265. 1040, ext 319.
LOCATIONMetropolitan Pavilion125 West 18th Street(between 6th and 7th Avenues)New York City
WWW.THEAMERICANANTIQUESSHOW.ORG
THE AMERICAN FOLK ART MUSEUM PRESENTS
THE AMERICAN ANTIQUES SHOWA BENEFIT FOR THE AMERICAN FOLK ART MUSEUM
219_PB11.indd 219219_PB11.indd 219 1/28/11 4:23:13 PM1/28/11 4:23:13 PM
220_PB11.indd 220220_PB11.indd 220 1/28/11 4:23:28 PM1/28/11 4:23:28 PM
miami | February 2-12 | 2012
WWW.FIFAFMIAMI .COM | INFO@FIFAFMIAMI .COM
AMERICA’S NEW PREMIERE FINE ART FAIRCOMING FEBRUARY 2012
For more information visit:www.FIFAFMIAMI.com
The Florida International Fine Art Fair (FIFAF) is a new premier destination art fair that will take place from February 2 – 12, 2012, in Miami’s burgeon-ing Midtown Arts District. FIFAF will present the most prestigious American and International Fine Art Dealers in a contemporary environment, showcas-ing rare European and American paintings, sculpture, contemporary and modern art, photography, 20th century design and decorative arts. FIFAF will be fully vetted by leading experts from the international fine art field
221_PB11.indd 221221_PB11.indd 221 1/28/11 4:23:44 PM1/28/11 4:23:44 PM
SPONSORED BY THE FINE ART DEALERS ASSOCIATION
222_PB11.indd 222222_PB11.indd 222 1/28/11 4:24:10 PM1/28/11 4:24:10 PM
223
A.B. LEVY211 Worth Avenue
Palm Beach, FL 33480
Albert Levy, Juliana Tamayo
Tel: 561-835-9139
Fax: 561-832-5625
Email: [email protected]
www.ablevypb.com
19th and 20th Century French Furniture and
Decorative Arts, Meiji Period Asian Art
AARON FABER666 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10103
Edward Faber, Tamara Lealock
Tel: 212-586-8411
Fax: 212-582-0205
Email: [email protected]
www.aaronfaber.com
NAWCC, IWJG, SNAG
Vintage and Collectible Timepieces, Estate and Period
Jewelry, Artist Studio Jewelry
ANTIQUE AMERICAN WICKER�/MICHAEL DONOVAN131 Daniel Webster Highway
Nashua, NH 03060
Michael Donovan, James Butterworth
Tel: 603-881-9727, 508-523-5189
Fax: 603-598-8706
Email: [email protected]
American Wicker Furniture, Hand Woven Furnishings
from 1850 to 1930. 19th and 20th Century Porch and
Garden Accessories
ARADER GALLERIES1016 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10075
Graham Arader III, Caleb Kiffer
Tel: 212-628-3668
Fax: 212-879-8714
Email: [email protected]
www.aradergalleries.com
Antique Works on Paper—Maps, Natural History
Engravings and Watercolors
ART LINK INTERNATIONAL809 Lucerne Avenue
Lake Worth, FL 33460
Howard Brassner
Tel: 561-493-1162
Fax: 561-493-2931
Email: [email protected]
www.artlinkinternational.com
French and American Impressionist,
Modern Masters and Florida Masters
ARTWORLD INTERNATIONAL1323 Pierce Street
Hollywood, FL 33019
Willem G. Flippo
Tel: 945-923-2874
Fax: 954-923-2874
Cell: 754-264-6350
Email: [email protected]
www.willemgflippo.com
19th and 20th Century Paintings
Represent Artist: Niek Van Der Plas
ASHLEY JOHN GALLERY410 South County Road
Palm Beach, FL 33480
Jim Alterman
Tel: 561-429-8454
Email: [email protected]
ASIANTIQUESP.O. Box 1707
Winter Park, FL 32790
Susie & Francois Lorin
Tel: 407-362-1025
Fax: 407-358-5161
Email: [email protected]
www.asiantiques.com
Antiques Council
Chinese and Japanese Art
B & G FINE ART201 S Estes Drive, Suite D6
Chapel Hill, NC
Bryan Guarnieri, Greg Lacks
Tel: 919-968-8008
Fax: 919-968-8064
Email: [email protected]
www.bpgfineart.com
IFAA
20th Century Art, Paintings, Watercolors,
Drawings, Editions, Sculpture, Prints
BENCHMARK OF PALM BEACH678 East Main Street
Blue Ridge, GA 30513
Ken & Sara Burns
Tel: 706-258 3553, 800-790-9033
Fax: 706-258-3788
Email: [email protected]
www.benchmarkofpalmbeach.com
Exquisite Estate Jewelry including many
Signed Pieces
BETTERIDGE JEWELERS117 Greenwich Avenue
Greenwich, CT 06830
Simon Teakle, Max Farber
Tel: 203-869-0124
Fax: 203-869-3920
Email: [email protected]
www.betteridge.com
Fine Jewels, Estate Jewels, Watches�—
New and Estate
BETTY BRESLER, INC.16781 Chagrin Boulevard
Shaker Heights, OH 44120
Jerry & Betty Bresler
Tel: 216-751-4666
Fax: 216-751-0248
Cell: 216-780-9036
Email: [email protected]
www.estatejewels.com
Estate and Signed Jewelry
BROCK & CO.84A Commonwealth Avenue
Concord, MA 01742
Mark Brock, Peter M. Johnston
Tel: 978-369-1358
Fax: 978-369-1359
Email: [email protected]
www.brockandco.com
AADLA,CINOA,NHADA
19th and 20th Century Paintings, Watercolors,
Drawings and Sculpture
BRUCE KODNER GALLERIES24 South Dixie Highway
Lake Worth, FL 33460
Bruce Kodner, Jacob Kodner
Tel: 561-585-9999
Fax: 561-585-9937
Email: [email protected]
www.brucekodner.com
Antiques, Fine Art and Jewelry
BURLINGTON PAINTINGS10+12 Burlington GardensLondon, W1S 3EY United KingdomMichael Day & Paul HardyTel: 44-20-7734-9984 Fax: 44-20-7494-3770Email: [email protected] 19th/20th Century and Contemporary
British and European Paintings
CALLAGHAN FINE PAINTING & CONTEMPORARY BRONZE22 St. Mary’s StreetShrewsbury, Shropshire, SY1 1EDUnited KingdomDaniel CallaghanTel: 44-1743-343452, 44-7810-714545USA: 615-870-7639Email: art@callaghan-finepaintings.comwww.callaghan-finepaintings.comLAPADAFine 19th and 20th Century European Paintings
and Contemporary Bronze
CALLAN FINE ART240 Chartres StreetNew Orleans, LA 70130Steven Callan, Nikki SzalwinskiTel: 504-524-0025 Fax: 504-524-0205Email: [email protected]
19th and 20th Century European and American Art
CAMILLA DIETZ BERGERON, LTD.818 Madison Avenue, 4th Floor
New York, NY 10065
Gus Davis
Tel: 212-794-9100
Fax: 212-794-7012
Email: [email protected]
www.cdbltd.com
BBB, JVC, AGTA, JA
Fine Antique and Period Jewelry
CARA ANTIQUESPMB 313
13 Summit Square Center
Langhorne, PA 19047
Constance & Richard Aranosian
Tel: 215-579-7971, 215-499-5604
Fax: 215-579-7971
Email: [email protected]
www.caraantiques.com
NHADA, MAJOLICA International Society,
Clarice Cliff Club
English and Continental Pottery
CARLSON & STEVENSON ANTIQUESP.O. Box 1113
Manchester Center, VT 05255
Phyllis Carlson, Timothy Stevenson
Tel: 802-236-4955, 802-236-2342
Email: [email protected]
www.carlsonandstevenson.com
BADA, SLAD, FPDA, AADLA & Antique Council
Schoolgirl Watercolors of the 19th Century
and Sterling Silver
CAVALIER GALLERIES, INC. 405 Greenwich Avenue
Greenwich, CT 06830
Ron Cavalier, Lindsay Ebanks
Tel: 203 869-3664
Fax: 203-869-3204
Cell: 503-325-4405
Email: [email protected]
www.cavaliergalleries.com
Contemporary Art, Painting, Sculpture, and Photography
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF EXHIBITORS
223_PB11.indd 223223_PB11.indd 223 1/28/11 4:56:48 PM1/28/11 4:56:48 PM
224
CHARAMONDE JEWELRY 500 North Dixie Highway
Lake Worth, FL 33460
Kris Charamonde
Tel: 561-451-8330
Email: [email protected]
Fine Estate Jewelry
CHARLES EDWIN PUCKETT3867 West Market Street, #253
Akron, OH 44333
Charles Puckett, Teresa Puckett
Tel: 330-668-0032
Cell: 330-730-3202, 330-730-3053
Fax: 330-668-0037
Email: [email protected]
www.cepuckett.com
Antiques Council
Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts, Antique Maps
and Prints, Classical Antiques
CHARLES L. WASHBURNE ANTIQUES P.O. Box 486
Solebury, PA 18963
Charles Washburne
Tel: 215-794-7584
Fax: 215-794-0990
Email: [email protected]
www.majolica.net
Antiques Council, Majolical Society
Victorian Majolica Pottery
CHILDS GALLERY169 Newbury Street
Boston, MA 02116
Richard Baiano, Stephanie Bond
Tel: 617-266-1108
Fax: 617-266-2381
Email: [email protected]
www.childsgallery.com
www.facebook.com/childsgallery
IFPDA
Established 1937 for Fine American and European
Paintings, Prints, Drawings and Sculptures
CHINA SQUARE GALLERY102 Allen Street
New York, NY 10002
Jen Davis
Tel: 212-255-8886
Email: [email protected]
www.chinasquareny.com
Contemporary Chinese Art
CHRISTOPHER ENGLISH FINE ANTIQUESWest Palm Beach, FL 33401
Christopher English, Stephen Dori Shin
Tel: 561-310-0319, 561-818-2952
Email: [email protected]
Unusual Taxidermy, Art and Curiosities
CIRCA ANTIQUES & DECORATIONSP.O. Box 28
Rockport, MA 01966
Deb & Herb Meiselman
Tel: 978-546-1045
Fax: 978-546-6233
Email: [email protected]
www.circaofrockport.com
Antique Photo Frames, English Furniture including
19th Century Butler’s Trolleys, Buffets Lighting
and an Eclectic Group of Accessories Boxes, Porcelain
and Glass
CLASSIC ANTIQUES65 West Schiller Street
Chicago, IL 60610
Lana & Michael Bock
Tel: 312-961-6494
Fax: 312-255-1967
Email: [email protected]
European Art Bronzes, Chinese Antiquities,
18th Century Chinese Export Porcelain,
Vintage Couture Clothing
CLAYTON ANTIQUESP.O. Box 5665
Williamsburg, VA 23185
Beverly Markland
Tel: 757-229-7720
Fax: 757-220-2636
COUSLICH INTERIORS & ANTIQUES39 East 67th Street, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10065
Franco & Fabienne Couslich
Tel: 212-214-0021
Fax: 212-214-0021
Cell: 312-282-7681
Email: [email protected]
20th Century Italian Design Furniture and Murano
Glass Lighting and Decorative pieces, Complemented
with one of a kind Antiques
CRAWFORD CONTEMPORARY, LLC 4334 Black Rock Turnpike
Fairfield, CT 06824
Alastair Crawford, Caroline Owens Crawford
Tel: 203-292-6762
Fax: 203-292-8613
Email: [email protected]
www.crawfordcontemporary.com
Contemporary Silver and Jewelry, Unique Designs
with Uncompromising Quality
DANIELS ANTIQUES2520 S.W. 30th Avenue
Hallandale, FL 33009
Jonathan Daniels
Tel: 954-454-1395
Fax: 954-454-6452
Email: [email protected]
www.danielsantiques.com
DANISH SILVERCopenhagen, San Fransico
Gregory Pepin, Rachel Prater
Tel: 877-984-1907, 415-984-1907
Copenhagen: 011-45-3311-5252
Email: [email protected]
www.danishsilver.com
Georg Jenson Antique, Vintage Sterling Silver
Hollowware, Flatware, Jewelry, and 18k Gold Jewelry
DAVID & COMPANY232 Boylston Street
Chestnut Hill, MA 02467
David Walker
Tel: 617-969-6262
Fax: 617-969-3434
Email: [email protected]
www.davidandcompany.com
Rare Antique and Estate Jewelry. Fine Colorless and
Fancy Colored Diamonds, Precious Colored
Gemstones such as Columbian Emeralds, Burma
Rubies and Sapphires
DAWN HILL ANTIQUES11 Main Street
New Preston, CT 06777
Paulette Peden, Jane Fredrikson
Tel: 917-767-6384, 860-868-0066
Fax: 212-255-7429
Email: [email protected]
www.dawnhillantiques.com
Antiques Council
Swedish 18th and 19th Century Antiques, Garden
Antiques, English Transferware and Ironstone
DEAN BORGHI FINE ART52 East 76th Street
New York, NY 10021
Dean Borghi, Robert Garrett
Tel: 201-232-7938
Fax: 201-784-5498
Email: [email protected]
www.dbfineart.com
19th Century American, European and Post War Art
DINAN & CHIGHINE, LTD.P.O. Box 266
Kew, Surrey TW9 3QR
United Kingdom
John F. Dinan
Tel: 44 20 8948 1939, 646-546-2579
Fax: 44 20 8255 6986
Email: [email protected]
LAPADA
Framed Engravings and Watercolors, English
and Continental Furniture
DOMONT JEWELRY 8661 Sunset Boulevard
Hollywood, CA 90069
Maria Domont
Tel: 310-289-9500
Fax: 310-564-7600
Email: [email protected]
www.domontjewelry.com
Domont is in the Business of Acquiring and
Selling Vintage and Couture Jewelry, Perfume
Bottles, Porcelain Fairies, and Other Small
Beautiful Objects of Art
DRUCKER ANTIQUES487 East Main Street, #197
Mount Kisco, NY 10549
Janet Drucker & William Drucker
Tel: 914-923-4560
Cell: 212-794-8536
Fax: 914-206-9623
Email: [email protected]
www.druckerantiques.com
Palm Beach Appraisers Association, Appraisers
Association of America
George Jensen Hollowware, Flatware, and Jewelry,
20th Century Decorative Art
EOSTONE2190 NW 87th Avenue
Doral , FL 33172
Arron Rimpley, Gregg Whittecar
Tel: 786-888-3333
Fax: 786-464-1950
Email: [email protected]
www.eostone.com
ASID
Natural History artifacts from the United Sates
and around the World
ERIK THOMSEN ASIAN ART23 East 67th Street
New York, NY 10065
Erik Thomsen
Tel: 212-288-2588
Fax: 212-535-6787
Email: [email protected]
www.erikthomsen.com
JADA
Japanese Screens, Scrolls, Gold Lacquer Works,
Paintings, Bamboo Baskets and Ceramics
EVE STONE ANTIQUES, LTD.P.O. Box 3535
Woodbridge, CT 06525
Susan Stone, Eve Stone
Tel: 203-389-6665, 800-833-1665
Fax: 203-389-6103
Email: [email protected]
www.evestoneantiques.com
LAPADA, CINOA, CADA
18th and 19th Century Brass and Copper Metal Ware
FAERBER NEW YORK589 Fifth Avenue, Suite 803
New York, NY 10017
Tel: 212-752-4200
Fax: 212-659-0099
Email: [email protected]
www.faerber-collection.com
Fine Period and Antique Estate Jewelry
224_PB11.indd 224224_PB11.indd 224 1/28/11 4:37:36 PM1/28/11 4:37:36 PM
225
THE FINE ARTS CONSERVANCY5840 Corporate Way, Suite #110
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
Gordon Lewis
Tel: 561-684-6133
Fax: 561-684-8508
Email: [email protected]
www.art-conservation.org
FLOATING WORLD GALLERY1925 North Halsted Street
Chicago, IL 60614
Elias Martin, Bill Stein
Tel: 312-587-7800
Email: [email protected]
www.floatingworld.com
Fine Japanese Art
FLORENCE & JERRY BERMANP.O. Box 813597
Hollywood, FL 33081-3597
Florence Berman
Tel: 954-962-4950, 954-328-6985
Fax: 954-963-5413
Email: [email protected]
Antique and Estate Jewelry
FRAMONT66 Saw Mill Lane
Greenwich, CT 06830
Tel: 203-661-9675, 917-562-6262
Fax: 203-661-9675
Email: [email protected]
www.artnet.com/framont.html
FRANKLIN RIEHLMAN FINE ART24 East 73rd Street, #4F
New York, NY 10021
Franklin Riehlman, Glenn C. Peck
Tel: 212-879-2545
Email: [email protected]
www.nycpaintings.com
PADA
19th and 20th Century American Art, Paintings,
Drawings and Sculpture
FRED LEIGHTON773 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10065
Greg Kwiat
Tel: 212-288-1872
Fax: 212-288-6167
www.fredleighton.com
Fine Period, Antique Jewelry and Gemstones
FREDERIC GOT GALLERY64 Rue Saint Louis En Lile
Paris 75004
Gabriel Eid & Frederic Got
Tel: +33-1432-61033
Email: [email protected]
www.artchic.com
Contemporary Original Art
FRENCH COUNTRY LIVING ANTIQUES LTD7C Penywern Road
London, SW5 9TT
United Kingdom
Douglas Hill
Tel: 011-44-7770520371
Email: [email protected]
www.frenchcountrylivingantiques.com
French, Italian and Swedish 18th Century Furniture
with Original Painted Decoration
FRIMAN & STEIN589 Fifth Avenue, Suite 709
New York, NY 10017
Catherine Arsala, Elliot Friman
Tel: 212-308-6200
Fax: 212-308-2992
Email: [email protected]
Fine Period and Estate Jewelry, Diamonds and
Colored Stones
GALLERIE PETER HARDTRobert-Bosch-Str. 12
42477 Radevormwald, Germany
Tobias Hardt
Tel: +49-2195-78059
Fax: +49-2195-40774
Cell: +49-171-413-4413
Email: [email protected]
www.hardt.de
Asian Arts
GALLERY VIVENDI28 Place des Vosges
75003 Paris, France
Tel: 33-142-769076
Fax: 33-142-76954
Email: [email protected]
www.vivendi-gallery.com
GALLERY 471050 Second Avenue
New York, NY 10022
Ken Leach
Tel: 800-942-0550
Fax: 917-591-6645
Email: [email protected]
www.perfumebottlesauction.com
IPBA, Perfume Bottle Association
Fine Jewelry, Objectives and Perfume Bottles
GALLERY AFRODITBagcilar Mahallesi 5 Sokak 23 / 1 Gazi Osman Pasa
Ankara, Turkey
Tel: 917-855-1355, +90-312-436-2129
Fax: +90-312-447-5948
Email: [email protected]
www.galleryafrodit.com
GAVIN SPANIERMAN22 East 82nd Street
New York, NY 10028
Gavin Spanierman
Tel: 212-249-0619
Fax: 212-249-0648
Email: [email protected]
www.gspanierman.com
19th and 20th Century American Impressionism
GEROLD WUNDERLICH & CO.8 North Water Street
Ossining, NY 10562
Gerold M. Wunderlich
Tel: 914-923-1184, 914-954-1905
Fax: 914-923-1390
Email: [email protected]
www.wunderlichandco.com
American Art of the 19th and 20th Centuries
GLADWELL & COMPANY68 Queen Victoria Street
London, EC4N 4SJ
United Kingdom
Anthony Fuller, Cory Briston
Tel: 44-207-248-3824, 215-200-7022
Fax: 44-207-248-6899
Email: [email protected]
www.gladwells.com
BADA, SLAD, LAPADA
Fine Traditional Oil Paintings, Watercolors and
Etchings of 19th and 20th Centuries. Gallery
Established 1752
GODEL & CO. FINE ART INC.39A East 72nd Street
New York, NY 11021
Howard Godel, President; Ellery Kurtz, Director
Tel: 212-288-7272
Fax: 212-772-0304
Email: [email protected]
www.godelfineart.com
AADLA
Specializing in 19th and Early 20th Century
American Paintings
GUARISCO GALLERY1120 22nd Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20037
Laura Guarisco, Randall McLean
Tel: 202-333-8533, 800-426-3747
Fax: 202-625-0834
Email: [email protected]
www.guariscogallery.com
Important 19th and Early 20th Century European and
American Paintings and Sculpture
HABATAT GALLERIES539 Clematis Street
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
Linda Boone
Tel: 561-832-8787
Email: [email protected]
www.habatatgalleries.com
Contemporary Glass Sculpture from Both National
and International Artists
HANCOCKS52 & 53 Burlington Arcade
London, W1J 0HH
United Kingdom
Stephen Burton
Tel: 44 (0)207-493-8904
Fax: 44 (0)207-493-8905
Email: [email protected]
www.hancocks-london.com
BADA, LAPADA
Fine Period Jewelry and Collectors Jewels including
Art Nouveau, Edwardian and Art Deco Jewelry
HAYNES FINE ART OF BROADWAYPicton House Galleries, 42 High Street
Broadway, Worcestershire WR127DT
United Kingdom
Tel: 44-1386-852649
Fax: 44-1386-858187
Email: [email protected]
www.haynesfineart.com
HOLLIS REH & SHARIFF2 Jobs Lane
Southampton, NY 11968
Hollis Reh, Sal Shariff
Tel: 631-283-6653
Fax: 631-283-3189
Email: [email protected]
www.hollisrehandshariff.com
20th Century Signed Jewelry
HUMPHREY BUTLER LTD40/41 Pall Mall
London SW1Y 5JG UK
Humphrey Butler/Lily Heit
Tel: 44-207-839-3193
Fax: 44-207-930-5943
Email: [email protected]
www.humphreybutler.com
Fine Period and Antique Jewelry including Edwardian
and Art Deco Jewelry
HYLAND GRANBY ANTIQUESP.O. Box 457
Hyannisport, MA 02647
Alan Granby
Tel: 508-771-3070
Fax: 212-794-4393
Email: [email protected]
Maritime Antiques
J. CHRISTOPHER MITCHELL ANTIQUESP.O. Box 1186
Point Clear, AL 36564
Chris Mitchell
Tel: 251-213-8162
Fax: 561-828-7725
Email: [email protected]
www.jcamericana.com
Fine Military Objects, Flags and Antique Arms
225_PB11.indd 225225_PB11.indd 225 1/28/11 4:37:47 PM1/28/11 4:37:47 PM
226
J.S. FEARNLEY87 West Paces Ferry Road, Suite 2
Atlanta, GA 30305
J. Steven Fearnley
Tel: 404-812-6464
Fax: 404-812-6463
Email: [email protected]
www.jsfearnley.com
Fine Antique and Estate Jewelry, Signed Pieces, Van
Cleef & Arpels, Cartier Buccelati, Tiffany and Co.
JACOB’S DIAMOND & ESTATE JEWELRY607 S. Hill Street, #304
Los Angeles, CA 90014
Jacob Gipsman, Rigoberto Rodriguez
Tel: 213-627-0072
Email: [email protected]
www.jacobsestatejewelry.com
Better Quality Estate Jewelry, Art Deco, Edwardian,
Retro, Victorian and Vintage Engagement Rings
JAY CHATELLIER FINE ART59 Whitenack Road
Basking Ridge, NJ
Jay Chatellier
Tel: 908-420-5668
Fax: 866-847-7959
Email: [email protected]
www.jaychatellierfineart.com
American and European Paintings, Works on Paper &
Sculpture from the 19th–21st Centuries
JEFF R. BRIDGMAN AMERICAN ANTIQUESHistoric York County, PA
Jeff Bridgman
Tel: 717-502-1281
Fax: 717-502-1283
Email: [email protected]
www.jeffbridgman.com
Antiques Council, ADA, AADLA
Antique American Flags and Folk Art
JEFF SHORE�/�ANCIENT OBJECTSNarragnsett, RI
Jeff Shore
Tel: 401-789-5214, 401-952-6045
Email: [email protected]
www.ancientobjects.net
Classical and Medieval Antiques,
Hindu and Buddhist Works of Art
JERALD MELBERG GALLERY625 South Sharon Amity Road
Charlotte, NC
Jerald Melberg
Tel: 704-365-3000
Fax: 704-365-3016
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.jeraldmelberg.com
FADA
Classic Contemporary Fine Art
JEWELS IN TIME4400 North Federal Highway, #116
Boca Raton, FL 33431
Peter Dosik & David Cohen
Tel: 561-368-1454
Fax: 561-368-1727
Email: [email protected]
www.jewelsintime.com
New & Pre-Owned Time Pieces, Diamonds, Fashion
and Estate Jewelry
JOHANNA ANTIQUESP.O. Box 418
Kingsville, MD 21087
Johanna Wilson
Tel: 410-937-3444
Email: [email protected]
Antiques Sporting Jewelry and American Art
JOHN ATZBACH15127 NE 24th Street, Suite 118
Redmond, WA 98052
John Atzbach
Tel: 425-271-8950, 206-618-2684
Fax: 425-271-8940
Email: [email protected]
www.atzbach.com
Specializing in Imperial Russian Objects including
Faberge, Silver, Enamels and Porcelains
JOHN M. ULLMAN INC.589 5th Avenue, Suite 802
New York, NY 11017
Tel: 917-412-7477
Fax: 212-245-0220
Email: [email protected]
JOYCE GROUSSMAN ESTATE & FINE JEWELRY7201 East Camelback Road, Suite 285
Scottsdale, AZ 85251
Joyce & Steve Groussman
Tel: 610-331-3279
Fax: 480-699-5199
Email: [email protected]
www.jgroussmanjewelry.com
Antique and Fine Jewelry
THE KENDALL COLLECTION4460 Garmon Road NW
Atlanta, GA 30327
Matt Kendall
Tel: 404-538-9035
Email: [email protected]
www.kendallcollection.com
Important American and European Paintings 1850–1950
KOMAN FINE ART3225 Cardinal Drive
Vero Beach, FL 32963
Steve Koman
Tel: 772-231-4500
Email: [email protected]
www.komanfineart.com
Fine American Paintings & Furniture
L’ETOILE ROYALE784 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10065
Tel: 212-752-1706
Fax: 212-752-1758
Email: [email protected]
www.letoileroyale.com
The Most Exquisite Jewels and Antiques
LARRY DALTON14 Bretton Road
Scarsdale, NY 10583
Larry & Bella Dalton
Tel: 914-472-0945
Cell: 914-329-7913
Fax: 914-722-0830
Email: [email protected]
NAWCC, ATCA, MBCA
Fine Antique Clocks, French Industry,
Vienna Regulators, Miniatures, Carriage Clocks,
Singing Bird Boxes and Porcelain Plaques
LAWRENCE FINE ARTLawrence, New York
Howard Shapiro
Tel: 516-547-8965
Email: [email protected]
www.lawrence-fine-arts.com
American Paintings and Sculpture from
Impressionism to Modernism
LILLIAN NASSAU, LLC220 East 57th Street
New York, NY 10022
Arlie Sulka
Tel: 212-759-6062
Fax: 212-832-9493
Email: [email protected]
www.lilliannassau.com
NADAA, CINOA
Tiffany Lamps, Glass, Metalwork, Mosaics, Paintings and
19th & 20th Century Decorative Arts and Sculpture
LINEN MERCHANT1080 Scots Lane
Walnut Creek, CA 94596
Jim Thomas
Tel: 925-937-5833
Email: [email protected]
LION HEART AUTOGRAPHS470 Park Avenue South, Penthouse
New York, NY 10016
David Lowenherz
Tel: 212-779-7050, 800-969-1310
Fax: 212-779-7066
Email: [email protected]
www.lionheartautographs.com
PADA, Manuscript Society, Grolier Club
Lion Heart Autographs is one of the world’s leading
sources for Rare and Important Letters, Manuscripts
and Inscribed Photographs in Art, History, Literature,
Music, & Science from around the world
LR ANTIQUES2230 Bissonnet
Houston TX 77005
Lora Levin, Rachel Bley
Tel: 713-857-3427
Fax: 713-935-0117
Email: [email protected]
www.lrantiques.com
HADA, ACNA
Fine Porcelain, Art Glass, Period Furniture,
and Works of Art
LYNDA WILLAUER ANTIQUES2 India Street
Nantucket, MA 02554
Tel: 508-228-3631, 203-913-3363
Lynda Willauer, Emily Willauer
Email: [email protected]
www.lyndawillauerantiques.com
English & Continental Furniture, Paintings, Chinese
Export Porcelain, Inlaid Boxes, Majolica and
Staffordshire Pottery
M. BYWORTH88-90 Hatton Gardens, Suite 46/47
London EC1N 8PN
Peter Byworth
Tel: 44-207-2420918
Fax: 44-207-2421257
Email: [email protected]
www.byworth.com
F.G.A, G.I.A.
Antique and Contemporary Jewels
M. S. RAU ANTIQUES630 Royal Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Caroline Bozier & Rachel Fousdr
Tel: 800-544-9440
Fax: 504-566-0057
Email: [email protected]
www.rauantiques.com
NAWCC, ACGA, ASA, Musical Box
Society,Wedgewood Society of NY, Wedgewood
Society of Boston, Better Business Bureau
18th and 19th Century Antiques, Fine Art,
Exquisite Jewelry
MACKLOWE GALLERY, LTD.667 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10065
Benjamin Macklowe, Lary Matlick
Tel: 212-644-6400
Fax: 212-755-6143
Email: [email protected]
www.macklowegallery.com
AADLA, FADA, CINOA
Premier Dealer of Museum-Quality Twentieth Century
Decorative Arts and Estate Jewelry Since 1971
226_PB11.indd 226226_PB11.indd 226 1/28/11 4:37:57 PM1/28/11 4:37:57 PM
227
MADE IN RUSSIAP.O. Box 3075
Palm Beach, FL 33480
Denis Easter, Pene Caham
Tel: 561-832-1500
Fax: 561-655-9495
Email: [email protected]
www.russianstore.com
Russian Icons and Related Eastern European Religious
Art
MALCOLM MAGRUDERP.O. Box 2038
Milllwood, VA 22646
Malcolm Magruder
Tel: 540-630-1750
Email: [email protected]
THE MANHATTAN RARE BOOK CO.1050 Second Avenue, Gallery 50E
New York, NY 10022
Jeremy O’Connor
Tel: 212-326-8907
Fax:212-355-4403
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.manhattanrarebooks.com
BADA,SLAD,IFPDA,AADLA,ABAA.ILAB
First Edition of Important Books in All Fields from
1500 to The Present
MARK J. WESTP.O. Box 595
Redhill, Surrey RH1 3XB
United Kingdom
Mark West
Tel: 44-17-3764-3646
Fax: 44-17-3764-3646
Email: [email protected]
www.markwest-glass.com
BADA, CINOA
18th, 19th and 20th Century English and
Continental Table Glass
MCCARTY GALLERY7733 Winston Road
Philadelphia, PA 19118
Mark McCarty
Tel: 215-247-5220
Fax: 215-247-4114
Email: [email protected]
www.mccartygallery.com
American and European Paintings
MCCOLL FINE ART208 East Boulevard
Charlotte, NC 28203
Joseph A. Panarelli
Tel: 704-333-5983
Fax: 704-333-5816
Email: [email protected]
www.mccollfineart.com
FADA
19th and Early 20th Century American and European
Paintings
MICHAEL A. LATRAGNA FINE ART8229 South Wind Bay Circle
Fort Myers, FL 33908
Michael Latragna
Tel: 239-590-0210, 585-230-4522
Fax: 239-590-0210
Email: [email protected]
www.michaelalatragnafineart.com
American and European 19th and 20th Century
Paintings
MICHAEL BORGHI FINE ART523 Knickerbocker Road
Tenafly, NJ 07670
Michael Borghi
Tel: 201-248-4732
Fax: 201-560-0928
Email: [email protected]
www.borghifineart.com
American 19th and 20th Century Paintings
MICHAEL PASHBY ANTIQUES By Appointment
1235 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10128
Michael Pashby
Tel: 917-414-1827
Fax: 212-410-4777
Email: [email protected]
www.michaelpashbyantiques.com
AADLA, CINOA
Fine English Furniture from the 17th until the
Early 19th Century
MICHAEL S. HABER, LTD.23 East Wynnewood Road
Wynnewood, PA 19096
Michael Haber
Tel: 610-896-4800
Fax: 610-896-5859
Email: [email protected]
Jewelers Board of Trade
Exquisite Antique and Estate Jewelry
MIDORI GALLERY3168 Commodore Plaza
Miami, FL 33133
Sachi Wagner
Tel: 305-443-3399
Fax: 305-569-0911
Email: [email protected]
www.midorigallery.com
Fine Antique Far Eastern Art and Collectibles,
such as: Netsuke and Sagemono, Furniture and Tansu,
Screens and Textiles, Sculpture, Folk Art
and Baskets
MONTANA JEWELRY INC.76 West 47th Street, Suite 600
New York, NY 10086
Galina & Michael Zass
Tel: 212-719-5009
Fax: 212-719-1424
Email: [email protected]
Fine Antiques and Sign Jewelry
MOYLAN-SMELKINSON�/THE SPARE ROOMP.O. Box 4684
Baltimore, MD 21212
Jacqueline Smelkinson, Marcia Moylan
Tel: 410-435-3738, 410-963-3195
Fax: 410-435-3744
Email: [email protected]
www.spareroomantiques.com
Antiques Council
Georgian and Victorian Jewelry, 18th and 19th Century
English Ceramics and Decorative Objects
NEIL MARRS10 West 47th Street, Booth 31
New York, NY 10036
Neil Marrs
Tel: 917-603-7402
Email: [email protected]
www.neilmarrs.com
Signed 20th Century Fine Jewelry
NELSON RARITIES, INC.2 Monument Square
Portland, ME 04101
Andrew Nelson, Malcom Logan
Tel: 207-775-3150
Fax: 207-775-4345
Email: [email protected]
www.nelsonrarities.com
Fine Antiques and Estate Jewelry including Art
Nouveau, Edwardian and Art Deco Jewelry
NULA THANHAUSER, LLCP.O. Box 5106
East Hampton, NY 11937
Nula & Roger Thanhauser
Tel: 631-329-1953, 215-266-2888
Email: [email protected]
www.nulathanhauser.com
Antique and Signature Purses and Accessories
ONESSIMO FINE ART4530 PGA Boulevard, Suite 101
Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33418
Debra Onessimo, Craig Vitti
Tel: 561-355-8061, 866-810-2787
Fax: 561-355-8062
Email: [email protected]
www.onessimofineart.com
Specializing in world Renowned Contemporary Artists,
Modern Masters, and European Impressionists
ONLY AUTHENTICSNew York, NY
Charles Rogers
Tel: 917-685-6115
Email: [email protected]
www.onlyauthentics.net
Finest in Branded Luxury Accessories,
Specializing in Vintage, Runway Limited Edition,
Hermès, Chanel and Louis Vuitton
OWL’S ROOST ANTIQUESAppointments only
767 41st Street
Miami Beach, FL 33140
Sandy & Lisa Steinberg
Tel: 305-864-5905
Fax: 305-868-4604
Email: [email protected]
www.owlsroost.com
ISA
Fine Antique and Estate Jewelry, Objet d'Art
PAPILLON GALLERY8272 Melrose Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90046
Martin Wolpert, Emily Mullins
Tel: 323-655-2205, 323-365-1577
Fax: 323-655-2207
Email: [email protected]
www.papillongallery.com
European and American Paintings, Sculptures
from the Period 1850–1950 with Emphasis
on The School of Paris
PAT SALING608 Fifth Avenue, Suite 801
New York, NY 10020
Pat Saling
Tel: 212-582-3355
Fax: 212-582-6684
Email: [email protected]
www.patsaling.com
Antique, Estate and Precious Jewelry
PATTI ESBIA ANTIQUE & ESTATE JEWELRY326 Peruvian Avenue, #1
Palm Beach, FL 33480
Patti Esbia
Tel: 561-833-9448
Fax: 561-833-9428
Email: [email protected]
www.esbiajewelry.com
The Unusual in Every Period
PEARL MASTERS, INC.576 5th Avenue, #701
New York, NY 10036
Saeed Haroonian
Tel: 212-869-8433
Fax: 212-869-8434
Email: [email protected]
Diamond Dealers Club (DDC)
South Sea Pearls
PERCY’S SILVER, LONDONThe London Silver Vaults
Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1QS
United Kingdom
David Simons, Paul Simons
Tel: 312-841-2424
Email: [email protected]
www.percys-silver.com
Fine Antique and Decorative Silver and Rare
English Claset Jugs
227_PB11.indd 227227_PB11.indd 227 1/28/11 4:38:13 PM1/28/11 4:38:13 PM
228
PERRISUE SILVERP.O. Box 2353
Princeton, NJ 08540
Perrisue Silverstein
Tel: 609-924-2141
Fax: 609-924-7608
Email: [email protected]
Jewelry 1920–Present
PHILIP CHASEN ANTIQUES10 Sugar Tome Ridge
East Norwich, NY 11732
Philip Chasen
Tel: 516-922-2090
Fax: 516-922-2029
Email: [email protected]
www.chasenantiques.com
Art Nouveau and Art Deco Glass, Louis Icart
Etchings, American Pottery
PIERRE/FAMILLE600 East Cooper Avenue
Aspen, CO 81611
Donald Stone, Judith Family
Tel: 970-925-9161
Fax: 970-925-1038
Email: [email protected]
www.pierrefamille.com
Exceptional Period Jewels and Rare
Natural Stones
PRIMAVERA GALLERY210 11th Avenue at 25th Street, Suite 800
New York, NY 10001
Audrey Friedman, Haim Manishevitz
Tel: 212-924-6600
Fax: 212-924-6602
Email: [email protected]
www.primaveragallery.com
Fine Signed Period Jewelry and Decorative Arts from
20th Century Design Movements
PROVIDENT JEWELRY331 Clematis Street
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
Rob Samuels
Tel: 561-833-7755
Fax: 561-833-8763
Email: [email protected]
www.providentjewelry.com
JEFFREY PURTELL�/STEUBEN GLASS31 Pleasant Point Drive
Portsmouth, NH 03801
Jeffrey F. Purtell
Tel: 800-973-4331
Fax: 603-422-0464
Email: [email protected]
www.steubenpurtell.com
Specializing in the Purchase and Sale
of Post-Carder Steuben Glass
RAYMOND LEE JEWELERS 22191 Powerline Road
Boca Raton, FL
Jeff Josephson
Tel: 561-750-7808
Fax: 561-750-8005
Email: [email protected]
www.webuybigdiamonds.com
IWJG, NAWCC
Antique, Estate Jewelry, Watches, GIA Diamonds
RED FOX FINE ARTP.O. Box 385
Middleburg, VA 20118
Turner Reuter, Jr.
Tel: 540-687-5780
Fax: 540-687-3338
Email: [email protected]
www.redfoxfineart.com
FADA
Fine 19th and 20th Century Paintings
and Sculpture, est. 1970
REHS DIAMONDS579 5th Avenue, #1160
New York NY 10017
Alan Rehs
Tel: 212-750-6163
Fax: 212-688-5883
Email: [email protected]
www.rehsdiamonds.com
DDE, DMIA
Diamonds, Diamond Jewelry, Estate Jewelry
REHS GALLERIES, INC.5 East 57th Street
New York, NY 10022
Howard L. Rehs
Tel: 212-355-5710
Fax: 212-355-5742
Email: [email protected]
www.rehs.com
FADA, AADLA, CINOA
Important 19th–21st Century Works of Art
RICHTERS JEWELS224 Worth Avenue
Palm Beach, FL 33480
Stefan Richter
Tel: 561-655-0774
Fax: 561-655-1334
Email: [email protected]
ROBERT LLOYDManhattan Antiques Center, Gallery #63
1050 Second Avenue
New York, NY 10022
Robert Lloyd
Tel: 212-750-8752
Email: [email protected]
www.robertlloydinc.com
American Silver of the 18th & Early 19th Centuries, English,
Irish and Scottish Silver of the 16th–19th Centuries
ROSENBERG DIAMONDS & CO. 233 South Federal Highway, Suite 107
Boca Raton, FL 33432
David Rosenberg
Tel: 561-477-5444
Fax: 561-477-5222
Email: [email protected]
www.rosenbergdiamonds.com
WFDB, DBSEUS
Rare and Important White and Natural Fancy Color
Diamonds & High Jewels
S & J STODEL Vault 24, The Silver Vaults, Chancery Lane
London, WC2A 1QS
United Kingdom
Stephen Stodel, Jeremy Stodel
Tel: 44-207-405-7009
Fax: 44-207-262-6366
Email: [email protected]
www.chinesesilver.com
BADA, CINOA
English Silver from the 18th–20th Century,
Chinese Export Silver
SALLEA ANTIQUES66 Elm Street
New Canaan, CT 06840
Sally Kaltman, Jan Kach
Tel: 203-972-1050
Fax: 203-972-1567
Email: [email protected]
www.salleaantiques.com
CINOA, AADLA
English 18th Century Tea Caddies, French Boxes,
Chinese Export Porcelain — 18th and 19th Century,
Japanese Imari Porcelain and Anglo Indian Boxes
SANDRA CRONAN, LTD.16 Albemarle Street, First Floor
London, W1S 4HW
United Kingdom
Catherine Edwards
Tel: 44-207-491-4851
Fax: 44-207-293-2758
Email: [email protected]
www.sandracronan.com
BADA
Fine Antique and Period Jewels
SANTOS�—�LONDON 21 Old Court House
London W8 4PD
United Kingdom
Alberto Santos
Tel: 44-207-937-6000
Fax: 44-207-937-3351
Email: [email protected]
www.santoslondon.com
BADA, CINOA
Chinese Export Porcelain, 16th to 19th Centuries
SCHNEIBLE FINE ART837 Bay Road
Shelburne, VT 05482
Douglas Schneible
Tel: 802-279-7601
Email: [email protected]
www.artscraftsgal.com
Asian Art including Chinese Neolithic Art,
Buddhist Art, Jade, Stone, Wood, and Pottery,
Japanese Antique Stone Garden Sculpture
including Lanterns, Tsukabai, and Early
Architectural Landscaping Stones, Chinese
Contemporary Extraordinary Natural Stone Paintings,
“Dreamstones”
SHERRY SHEAF & CO. INC135 San Lorenzo Avenue, Suite 790
Miami, FL 33146
Sherry Sheaf, Anette Rizzi
Tel: 954-568-5808, 305-445-9356
Fax: 954-568-2334
Email: [email protected]
www.sherrysheaf.com
Purveyor of Exquisite Jewelry and Fine South
Sea Pearls
SHREVE, CRUMP & LOW440 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02116
David Walker
Tel: 800-275-7088
Fax: 617-527-7244
Email: [email protected]
www.shrevecrumpandlow.com
Rare Antique and Estate Jewelry. Fine Colorless and
Fancy Colored Diamonds, Precious Gemstones
SPENCER MARKS, LTD.P.O. Box 330
Southampton, MA 01073
Spencer Gordon, III, Mark F. McHugh
Tel: 413-527-7344
Email: [email protected]
www.spencermarks.com
AADLA, ADA, Antiques Council, CINOA
Fine Antique and 20th Century Silver
SPENCER WEISZ GALLERIES, LTD. 843 West Chicago Avenue
Chicago, IL 60642
Spencer Weisz
Tel: 312-527-9420, 312-923-0910
Email: [email protected]
www.antiqueposters.com
IVPDA, International Poster Dealers Association
Original Vintage Advertisings & Lithographs
228_PB11.indd 228228_PB11.indd 228 1/28/11 4:38:21 PM1/28/11 4:38:21 PM
229
STEPHEN KALMS ANTIQUESVaults 13/15 and 31/32
London Silver Vault, Chancery Lane
London, WC2A 1QS
United Kingdom
Stephen Kalms
Tel: 44-207-430-1254
Fax: 44-207-405-6206
Email: [email protected]
www.kalmsantiques.com
LAPADA
Victorian and Georgian Silver and
Contemporary pieces
STEVEN NECKMAN, INC.36 NE 1st Street, #1046
Miami, FL 33132
Steven Neckman, Wendie Gold
Tel: 305-755-9030
Fax: 305-755-9136
Email: [email protected]
www.stevenneckman.com
Mid-Late 20th Century Bold Yellow Gold Jewelry,
Plus Diamond Jewelry
SUE BROWN 1-7 Davies Mews
Mayfair, London W1K 5AB
United Kingdom
Sue Brown, John Weysom
Tel: 917-216-9128, +44 207-491 4287
Email: [email protected]
www.antique-rings.co.uk
LAPADA, CINOA, Society of Jewelry Historians
Quirky Jewelry from the Past
SYMBOLIC & CHASE30 Old Bond Street
London, W1S 4QJ
England
Martin Travis, Anna Dieslel
Tel: 02074999902
Fax: 02074999903
Email: [email protected]
www.symbolicchase.com
BADA
Fine Jewelry and Objects D’Art
TK ASIAN ANTIQUITIES1654 Jamestown Road
Williamsburg, VA 23185
Fuller Building, 41 East 57th Street, Suite 1125
New York, NY 10022
Michael C. Teller
Tel: 757-253-0769, NY Tel: 212-644-1103
Fax: 757-220-2636, NY Fax: 212-644-3928
Email: [email protected]
NY Email: [email protected]
www.tkasianantiquities.com
The world's premier dealer in scientifically
documented Asian Antiquities. Specializing
in Ancient Eurasian Gold and Silver, Unique
and Extraordinary Ancient Chinese Ceramic
Sculpture. While still having one of the finest
and largest collections of Antique Chinese
Furniture and Contemporary Masterpieces
of Dali Dreamstones
TOJ GALLERY420 Adam’s Street
Tel: 410-626-0770, 443-995-5377
Fax:410-626-0770
Susan L. Tillipman
Email: [email protected]
www.tojgallery.com
AAPA, American Art Pottery Association
Vintage and Contemporary European and American
Art Pottery and Japanese Woodblock Prints
TOM VEILLEUX GALLERY75 Market Street, Suite 104
Portland, ME 04101
Tom Veilleux
Tel: 207-828-0784
Email: [email protected]
www.tomveilleux.com
Specializing in American Art from the first half
of the 20th Century
TOP ART GALLERY 19201 Collins Avenue Sunny Isle, FL 33160Avram SabanTel: 305-937-3751Email: [email protected] European Paintings, Old Masters, Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, Modern, and Contemporary
TOULOUSE ANTIQUE GALLERY3701 Highland AvenueManhattan Beach, CA 90266John and Aurora DuganTel: 310-503-0152 Fax: 310-372-0422Email: [email protected] www.toulouseantiques.com LAPADA, ISA
19th Century Furniture and Decorative Arts
TRINITY HOUSE PAINTINGS50 Maddox StreetLondon, Mayfair, W1S 1AYUnited Kingdom67 High StreetBroadway, Worcestershire, WR12 7DPUnited KingdomSimon Shore, Steven BealeGallery Tel: 01144 1386 859 329US Cell: 347 827 5132Simon Shore Cell: 01144 7866 419 666Steven Beale Cell: 01144 7958 679 762email: [email protected], LAPADA, CINOA
Post Impressionist and Modern British Paintings
VALERIO ANTIQUES, INC.250 Valencia AvenueCoral Gables, FL 33134Waltford GonzalezTel: 305-448-6779Fax: 305-444-1634Email: [email protected]
Art Deco Furnishings
VALLEJO GALLERY1610 West Coast HighwayNewport Beach, CA 92663Joseph T. VallejoTel: 949-642-7945 Fax: 949-631-3161Email: [email protected] www.vallejogallery.com FADAMaritime and Marine Theme Paintings, Nautical
Antiques and Artifacts
VENDOME, INC.1187 Coast Village Road, #1-496Santa Barbara, CA 93108Deborah Wilson, Cindy GrubbsTel: 805-969-5997 Fax: 805-565-1112Email: [email protected], [email protected] www.vendomeinc.com AGTA, ASJH
Fine Antique and Estate Jewelry
VERONIQUE BAMPSLe Patio Palace #626, 41 AvenueHector Otto, 98000 MonacoMichel OsipencoTel: +377 9797 3757Email: [email protected], CRAB
Fine Antique and Estate Jewelry
VILLA DEL ARTE GALLERIESCalle Tapineria 39
Barcelona, Spain 08002
Nemo Jantzen
Tel: +34-93-268-06-73
Fax: +34-93-310-34-35
Email: [email protected]
www.villadelarte.com
Contemporary Art: Paintings, Photography, Sculptures
VINCENT VALLARINO FINE ART LTD.120 East 65th Street
New York, NY 10021
Vincent Vallarino, Jennie Enright
Tel: 212-628-0722
Fax: 646-607-9470
Email: [email protected]
www.vallarinofineart.com
FADA
Specialize in Post-War American Abstract
Expressionism including Artists from The First and
Second Generation New York School of Action Painters
WEINREB DIAMOND & ESTATE JEWELERS1312 Reisterstown Road
Baltimore, MD 21208
Nick Weinreb, Jacqui Juter
Tel: 410-653-7100
Fax: 410-653-7100
Email: [email protected]
www.adiamond.com
Diamond and Fine Estate Jewelry
WELLESLEY HOUSE, LTD.P.O. Box 42
Lake Forest, IL 60045
Andrew & Kelly Vogel
Tel: 847-735-9773, 847-417-6649
Fax: 847-735-9774
Email: [email protected]
www.wellesleyhouse.com
Extraordinary English Antiques
WHITLEY COLLECTION 2190 NW 87th Avenue
Doral, FL 33172
Gregg Whittecar, Alfredo Barrios
Tel: 786-464-1818, 305-527-1828
Fax: 786-464-1950
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.whitleycollection.com
WILLIAM COOK 15 Bridge Street
Hungerford, Berkshire RG17 OEG
United Kingdom
William Cook
Tel: 44-14-8868-1254, 44-78-8503-1301
Fax: 44-16-7251-4455
Email: [email protected]
www.williamcookantiques.com
LAPADA
English and European 18th and Early 19th Century
Furniture and Objects
WINICK-RUNSDORF34 West 47th Street
New York, NY 10036
Richard Winick, Karl Warman
Tel: 212-302 9555
Fax: 212-575-1991
Email: [email protected]
www.winickdiamonds.com
Fine Jewelry and Gem Diamonds
YAFA JEWELRY580 5th Avenue, Store 7
New York, NY 10036
Yafa & Maurice Moradof
Tel: 212-719-9828, 561-652-2085
Fax: 212-869-2016
Email: [email protected]
www.yafajewelry.com
YVEL USA1 Yechiel Steinberg StreetRamat Moza, Israel654 Madison Avenue, Suite 701New York, NY 10065Isaac Levy
Tel: 972-2-6735811
NY Tel: 212-755-0688Fax: 972-2-6735812
Email: [email protected], [email protected]
High-end Jewelry in 18k Gold, Pearls,
Gems, and Diamonds
229_PB11.indd 229229_PB11.indd 229 1/28/11 4:38:30 PM1/28/11 4:38:30 PM
We added one day, Thursday
August 25 – 28, 2011B A LT I M O R E C O N V E N T I O N C E N T E R
Downtown at the Inner HarborOne West Pratt Street — Two Main Entrances — West Pratt Street Lobby & Charles Street Lobby
Baltimore
Summer
Antiques Show
31ST YEAR WITH 55O INTERNATIONAL DEALERS INCLUDING A 70 -DEALER ANTIQUARIAN BOOK FAIR
Palm Beach Show Group Presents
31ST ANNUAL
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL (561)�822-5440 OR VISIT WWW.PALMBEACHSHOW.COM
media sponsor
The Kendall Collection M.S. Rau Antiques William Cook
230_PB11.indd 230230_PB11.indd 230 1/28/11 4:24:35 PM1/28/11 4:24:35 PM
FEATURING 100 INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITORS IN THE IRVING CONVENTION CENTER AT LAS COLINAS
500 West Las Colinas Boulevard, Irving, Texas 75039
Palm Beach Show Group Presents
October 27–31 , 201 1
DALLASInternational Art,
Antique & Jewelry Show
Rehs Galleries
Camilla Dietz Bergeron
M.S. RauAntiques
Steve Newman
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL (561)�822-5440 OR VISIT WWW.PALMBEACHSHOW.COM
media sponsor
231_PB11.indd 231231_PB11.indd 231 1/28/11 4:25:08 PM1/28/11 4:25:08 PM
antique ¤ estate jewelry · objets d’art · furniture · silver americana · paintings · porcelain · ceramics ¤ pottery · textiles
watches · clocks · sculpture · bronzes · asian art ¤ antiquesart glass · oriental carpets · other antiquities ¤ 20th century design
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL (561)�822-5440 OR VISIT WWW.PALMBEACHSHOW.COM
Palm Beach Show Group Presents
a prestigious event with over two hundred internationalexhibitors in the palm beach county convention center
media sponsor
William CookPrimavera GalleryGuarisco Gallery
Palm Beach
Jewelry, Art &
Antique ShowPRESIDENTS’ DAY WEEKEND
FEBRUARY 17–21, 2012
232_PB11.indd 232232_PB11.indd 232 1/28/11 4:25:34 PM1/28/11 4:25:34 PM
C3_PB11.indd C3C3_PB11.indd C3 1/27/11 6:16:59 PM1/27/11 6:16:59 PM
Palm Beach Jewelry,
Art & Antique Show
C4_PB11.indd C4C4_PB11.indd C4 1/27/11 6:17:11 PM1/27/11 6:17:11 PM