Showing posts with label exterior design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exterior design. Show all posts

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Check This Out: New York Botanical Garden's Antique Garden Furniture 1st Dibs Preview Party is Virtual Tonight; Followed by Weeklong Events with Exhibitors & Superb Garden Programs


 

I love(d) this event in the "before times," where all The Who's Who in the garden and exterior design world gathered and hobnobbed for cocktails, conversations, and getting their first dibs on rare and unusual gotta' have plants for your collection, as well as the chance to discover and score a perfect antique and/or piece of exterior design for their garden rooms.

A few years back, one of my most delightful and favorite garden design clients set her eye for beauty on these charming, Four-Season Cherubs that nowgive sanctuary and grace her white marble parking courts.

  

Festivities for this year's show begin on Thursday, April 29, 2021, with a Preview Party Featuring the Collectors’ Plant Auction.

Public Access to the Fair Runs from Saturday, May 1 to Friday, May 7, 2021.

The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) will present its much-anticipated Antique Garden Furniture Fair virtually this year in a weeklong event from Thursday, April 29 to Friday, May 7, 2021, featuring unique offerings from leading antique dealers, including classic furniture and fine garden antiques—some with a modern twist, both elegant and inspiring—for the home and garden.

Festivities begin on Thursday, April 29, with an exclusive Preview Party Featuring the Collectors’ Plant Auction, from 4 to 7 p.m. Ticket holders will receive a special early access link that will allow them to purchase objects from the Fair exhibitors’ offerings and bid on a curated collection of exquisite and beautifully grown garden plants handpicked by NYBG’s horticultural staff. Proceeds support NYBG and its premier horticultural programs. 

For Preview Party tickets and information, please e-mail Thao Phan at tphan@nybg.org or call 718.817.8774.



The Antique Garden Furniture Fair is the ideal virtual venue for finding design inspiration for the home and garden, learning about garden antiques, and building personal collections. 

Public access to the Fair begins at 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 1, when a link to the exhibitors’ offerings will be posted on the Fair’s webpage. The exhibitors’ online showcases will remain accessible for purchases until 12 p.m. on Friday, May 7.


During the Fair, a selection of virtual programs will be available on the Fair’s webpage, including short videos spotlighting some of this year’s exhibitors, lectures by leading designers, a special documentary screening, and a floral design demonstration. The lineup of programs, which will be available to Preview Party ticket holders on Thursday, April 29, and to the general public beginning Saturday, May 1, features the following:
  •   Spotlight on Exhibitors videos, providing insight into the world of antiques through the perspectives of six exhibitors (Find Weatherly, Westport, Conn.; Barbara Israel Garden Antiques, Katonah, N.Y.; Milne’s At Home Antiques, New York, N.Y., and Kingston, N.Y.; New England Garden Company, Sudbury, Mass.; Pagoda Red, Chicago, Ill.; and Jeffrey Tillou Antiques, Litchfield, Conn.)

  •   Cultivating a Creative Life, a lecture by potter, gardener, cook, and entrepreneur Frances Palmer, who centers her creative life—and daily photo shoots—in an airy studio inside her Connecticut barn with a focus on determination, routine, prioritization, perseverance, and perspective.

  •   An Eye for Designa lecture by Kathryn Herman, founding principal of Kathryn Herman Design in New Canaan, Conn., who brings a strong horticultural background and intense interest in architecture to her international residential and commercial landscape design work.

  •   Beatrix Farrand’s American Landscapes, the 2019 documentary by director Stephen Ives and horticulturist Anne Cleves Symmes, which explores the life and innovative ideas of one of the most influential and creative garden designers of the early 20th century whose work includes NYBG’s Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden.

  •   A floral demonstration video in which celebrated designers Michael and Darroch Putnam of Putnam & Putnam will create a centerpiece in keeping with their signature opulent and densely layered style, using color as the guiding principle.

    *Antique Garden Furniture Fair and Preview Party sponsored by Bartlett Tree Experts

ANTIQUE GARDEN FURNITURE FAIR 2021 EXHIBITOR LISTING (In formation)page2image45607616

David Bell Antiques
Brennan & Mouilleseaux Antiques Dinan & Chighine Ltd
Find Weatherly
Finnegan Gallery
Garvey Rita Art & Antiques
Hawthorne Fine Art
Barbara Israel Garden Antiques Richard Kazarian Antiques
Glen Leroux Antiques
Milne’s At Home Antiques
New England Garden Company Pagoda Red
Francis J. Purcell
Rayon Roskar
Red Fox Fine Art
Thistlethwaite Americana
Jeffrey Tillou Antiques
Earle D. Vandekar of Knightsbridge Inc.
 

Van Roÿen Antiques & Objects 

Withington & Company





The New York Botanical Garden is located at 2900 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, New York 10458. It is easy to reach by Metro-North Railroad, bus, or subway. NYBG is open year-round, Tuesday through Sunday and Monday federal holidays, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, please call 718.817.8700 or visit nybg.org

Friday, April 25, 2014

How to create garden rooms & build garden décor Collections: the annual Antique Garden Furniture Fair: Antiques for the Garden and the Garden Room at The New York Botanical Garden



                               


The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) hosted its special Preview benefit this evening for the 22nd annual garden fete, Antique Garden Furniture Fair: Antiques for the Garden and the Garden Room and sponsored by 1stdibs®.  



General admission visitors can enjoy the Fair from 10 am to 5 pm, Friday through Sunday, April 25-27 with the All-Garden Pass or you can purchase tickets on-site at the Garden.

But from The Collectors’ Plant Sale to the rare antiques, items were already selling like first-day sales of Harry Potter books or Apple’s latest iPhone. 


The Sold stickers were blistering plants, urns, mirrors, fountains, benches, botanical prints, bird baths, and sundials, faster than the cherry blossom petals falling from the trees gracing the Enid A Haupt Conservatory.



According to NYBG the Antique Garden Show is the “country’s original, largest and most important venue for authentic garden antiques  - with more than 30 leading exhibitors.”

There is no doubt this is THE event to build an indoor or outdoor garden room Collection.  The unique items at the show are important, authentic, decorative art.   


Entering the event, me and my Plus+One, EunYoung Sebazco (www.silverflowerdesign.com) a graduate of the NYBG School of Professional Horticulture (SOPH), landscape architect, pioneer of growing rice in NYC and former associate with my garden design firm, Duchess Designs, were greeted with cool jazz from the live band, hort friends, and double-sided rows of unusual herbaceous and woody plants from the finest growers, including Itoh peonies, orchids, Coral Bark acers, herbs, and annuals. 
  






Here too, were the Silent Auction items. I had pen in hand poised to bid on the Munder Skiles (www.munder-skiles.com)  bench designed by my garden friend, John Danzer. 
Exterior designer, Horticultural Society of NY 2014 honoree, John Danzer (c)
John will have the distinct honor of being honored at this year’s Horticultural Society of New York on Monday, April 28th at the Pierre, along with Sofia and Peter Blanchard, patrons and visionaries of the Garden State’s Greenwood Gardens.
I wrote about Greenwood in January featuring the glory of this beautiful jewel of historical significance.
For tickets and support to the Horticultural Society: http://thehort.org/support_specialevents_nyfs.html











Garden Room Magic
Stepping in to the garden room furniture showroom area, there were waiters poised with silver platters of wine and hors d’oeuvres, flanked by giant urns and planters filled with glamorous and colorful, spring-blooming plants.  


The annual Antique Garden show oozes more than great garden room finds, though.
It’s an intimate, frisson-fueled party. 
Straight away, there was Barbara Corcoran, successful real estate maven and Bunny Williams, doyenne of design, in a tete a tete.
Barbara Corcoran, (L) Real Estate mogul & Shark Tank panelist,  Bunny Williams, renowned designer 
More Garden beautiful people, L: Charles Yurgalevitch, Director, School of Professional Horticulture, NYBG; EunYoung Sebazco, SOPH graduate, landscape architect, Randall's Island hort pro, Eric Lieberman, Garden Ed Manager, NYBG, SOPH student, Chris Ruiz   

Every exhibitor booth was curated with items that elicit curiosity, awe and garden lust!


Highlights:

In no particular order, we found these items particularly beguiling:

Gilded wrought iron florals from Italy circa 1950’s from Brennan & Mouilleseaux Antiques www.antiqueseclectic.com)   According to Tim Brennan, “The NYBG Show is the best of its kind in the country and we come perilously close to selling out.”  He added, “The show attracts a sophisticated and educated clientele.”

Here was also a slate table for $12,000. that sprouted a Sold sticker while we were just getting started.

The sweet, white garden furniture winked a happy welcome at Dawn Hill Antiques.  

But I was completely smitten with their whimsical, antique sprinklers. ($425)
Why haven’t I ever seen these conversation pieces cum works of art and garden workhorses?


John Peden, who with his wife Paulette, own the Connecticut-based dealership explained how these wonders worked. 
Made of indestructible cast iron, he’s passionate about these 1950’s American-made wonders, manufactured by the Nebraska company, National Manufacturing Company. 


With accelerating enthusiasm, he describes how the mechanical sprinkler spins, and “walks” the yard, even crawling up a hill, all the while following where the hose was laid out.”
Kind of like those Roomba robot vacuum cleaners – but for the lawn. 
But more rugged and clearly more cool. And handsome.

“They move at a stately pace,” he says with pride.

NYBG president, Gregory Long (R)
As Gregory Long, president of NYBG stops to say hello, Peden doesn’t break stride; continues to narrate how he’s sold perhaps three dozen of the sprinklers over the course of his career.
“How do you keep finding these?” asks Long. 
“They find me,” Peden replies gleefully. 




The seashell “floral bouquets” from were such a score that they were seized almost immediately by David Rozenholc and his wife Dina Weiner, who said they attend the show every year. 
When I asked the cost of the seashell bouquets, Rozenholc didn’t know the price - but knew they’d be perfect for their Southampton country house.  Along with the stork statue.
The dealer was reticent to share the price but when asked for a ballpark figure, she offered they sold for around a thousand a piece.
Well done, David. I covet these beauties! 
David Rozenholc



Another shell-based design was found at Blitheworld Home (www.blitheworldhome.com)
A 1940’s gem, this treasure box had a surprise inside – 1949 magazine headlines decoupage!











Blitheworld previewed a mix of intriguing through the looking glass pieces contrasting BIG and diminutive.  






Owner Sandra Seiger sources her art from Belgium and France.  Love the Big, early 20th century, pond-scum green & gold mirror $2,200 and small outdoor garden chairs $3,900.











The Oscar de la Renta Collection from the Shop in the Garden is even better than I remembered from seeing it in the Shop during the Orchid Show, after including the collection in the Garden Glamour post about the Macy’s Flower Show and tablescapes. 

Who wouldn’t love the story about how the designer researched the look from the Garden’s LuEsther T. Mertz Library’s Rare Book Collection for this, his 20-piece home collection.   (www.nybg.org)
The marbleized green chargers are a nod to the inside covers papers found in the antique books. 


Upon closer inspection – and pointed out to us, the trellis plates are in fact based on an in-plan garden design drawing and then repeated.  Brilliant!

Peonies (my favorite flower) and the May apple botanicals punctuate the cocktail, dinner and dinner plates that coordinate to mix and match casual, elegant look. 
I loved the dahlias, magnolias, and gardenia paperweights and pagoda salt & pepper shakers that look for all the world like table art. 


A first-time exhibitor, Cottage & Camp, showed intriguing toile painted andirons.  



Their booth showed lots of other intriguing garden lifestyle items, too, including plant stands. 










We discovered an astonishing mirror whose provenance hailed from South Kensington in London and was originally a ceiling mirror that was embellished with a frame that will make you blush. 


Here also was a very, very, extremely rare set of four large mid-19th century French blue decorated enameled cast iron conservatory planters, each with lion head handle and our lion paw feet, signed C.H. Paris & Cie, Le Bourget, selling for $65,000. 
The set is in excellent condition and is from the collection of Gene and Marlene Siskel (Siskel & Ebert fame) posing 20” high and 16” in diameter. 
This look is referred to as the “Rouen style”  “likely because the decoration in both color and form is similar to 18th century Rouen enameled pottery” according the Chicago-based dealer and exhibitor Finnegan Gallery, (www.finnegangallery.com)

The Philadelphia-based Francis J. Purcell (www.francisjpurcell.com) dazzled with a zinc and cast iron Fiske fountain circa 1876 priced at just south of $20,000. 

Joseph Winn Fiske and his company J.W. Fiske & Co. was the most prominent American manufacturer of decorative cast iron and cast zinc and was the preferred darling of mid Victorian garden art. 
The fountain bowl is stamped with the Fiske New York Park Place foundry address.  

Don’t you agree that banter about a Foundry on Park Place alone is worth a few year’s of cocktail party chatter when showcasing this piece?  
Toss in the American-made craft and legacy, along with the fountain’s enduring beauty  -- and you can surely make that 20K sticker price justified.

There were Fiske classic urns, too. 
And 1930’s grills that were found in a hotel inspired by Rococo gate and trellis designs.




The Italian well from Balsamo was a remarkable beauty – and already sold $16, 500. The dealer wouldn't reveal the selling price when asked but EunYoung simply turned over the price ticket...















Firehouse Antiques was a first-time exhibitor (www.firehouseantiques.com) and given what we saw of co-owner Paul Thien’s creative design, they are sure to be successful at the show.
Thien showed us a pair of early glass consoles that he had a wood topped with zinc to look like slate, make two tables.  Brilliant design and very handsome. $900. 

The two black Salterini wrought iron chairs with black and white pony skin seats are too gorgeous: a work of art to behold. $600. 

I have to look into collecting Salterini mid-century sexy gems… I researched his nesting tables, cocktail tables, and Peacock chairs! 
Joan Bogart exhibited a mint-condition Salterini white liquor cart that still had its original finish. $2,695.


Firehouse also presented two arresting zinc wall panels from 1930’s for $1,875. 








RT Facts was all about neoclassical inspired pieces – from a startling svelte settee (American 1820) to mirrors and stands and urns. (www.rtfacts.com)


The highlight for me at the Scott Estepp Gallery were the two pieces they’d just gotten in from atop mid Western grange exchange – and are now gold sculptures perched on stands.  Ornate, floral designs!




















The catering was provided by Steven Starr Events. 

Most everything edible was teeny:  mini bison sliders, cherry tomatoes stuffed (with a tweezer, I guess) with Feta cheese and itsy-bitsy, toothpick-sized cucumber slice, served on an ingenious bed of olive tapenade that looked not unlike potting soil! 

There was also mini BLT, spicy tuna tartare rolls, and be still my heart: marble-sized risotto arancini rolled in truffle oil and honey.

For a full list of the Garden Furniture Fair’s weekend special programs, including lectures, book signings, and Q&A with NYBG plant experts, visit: