The Los Angeles Antiques Show goes on and on in my blog entries, and well it should. For nearly everyone who’s participated, the follow-on business from the show has been phenomenal- certainly, the hallmark of a great antiques show, and something that bodes well for the future. You heard it here first- book your 2009 tickets as soon as you can!
This year, wonderful adjuncts to the show were the designer vignettes set up in the pavilion housing the show entrance. Unfortunately, the space allowed for only four, but those four were really lovely. Disparate, too, in terms of style, but unified in their use of materials that, by in large, a collector or another designer could have purchased at the show.
Joe Nye, our old friend, general gadfly, and, I hope, soon to be guest blogger, had a pleasing vignette suggesting an urban dining room. The use of the word ‘pleasing’ might seem dismissive, but, frankly, the appearance made one feel, well, pleased. As with everything Joe does, it presented a jolly mix of colors- in this instance a warm, Christmassy red drapery setting the tone that was repeated subtly, not shouted, throughout.
Don’t get me wrong, though- a number of elements in the vignette were significant items on their own, including a pair of John Dickinson anthropomorphic low tables from the late 1970’s.
Next to Joe Nye was probably the most expensive installation, a terrific marble-floored bathroom with a large soaking tub, with green trellised walls surrounding. All this from the inventive mind of Windsor Smith, it struck within me a particularly responsive chord, as I’m a luxurious bather in my old age. Windsor’s tub would even accommodate my gangling frame. Who doesn’t love a tub where your legs can be outstretched, and not rucked up on the wall like a contortionist?
Opposite Windsor Smith’s bath was an installation by Oliver Furth. A gentleman’s office, designed, of course, by a gentleman, Oliver’s vignette was a wonderful mix of the new and the old. An Empire style writing table and Russian and French Empire seating furniture were backed up by, naturally, shelves laden with books and bibelots. The shelves, though, were contemporary industrial metal shelving that Oliver had made into striking pieces of furniture by having them chrome plated.
The final vignette of the four was a fascinating installation from Laurie Ghielmetti and Doug McDonald, whose San Francisco-based firm always includes a touch of quirky amidst some fascinating, fine quality furniture and artwork.
For their antiques show vignette the quirky was supplied by a tin and glass occasional table, with the base in the shape of a date palm, with green malachite ‘dates’. This bit of whimsy was acquired from Jackson Square Designs, the 20th century gallery of Chappell & McCullar (who are they?)
In spite of the column inches, my blog-point is not really to recite encomia for the authors of each vignette, whose reputations precede them and need no boost from me, but to praise the very fact of their inclusion in the show. No question, as I’ve written ad infinitum, in the best antiques shows, engagement of the design community is essential for success, and, frankly, the vignettes, extremely well done, can set in motion a chain of events that yield productive results for everyone. Certainly, eclecticism is how everyone lives and, frankly, how every really talented designer designs. But when a designer uses their talent to mix extraordinary items, like Dickinson low tables, with the less extraordinary, design and collecting move further within the experience of more people- and increased show attendance, and sales, is the result. One might have an extraordinary collection of contemporary art, akin to the fine paintings in Laurie Ghielmetti and Doug McDonald’s installation, but including in the same setting a well-loved though intrinsically less vaunted item, like the ‘palm tree’ table, personalizes the setting, and, personalized, it becomes welcoming and, consequently, more inclusive. It occurs to me that what I’ve overlooked is that, despite their disparate appearance, all the vignettes had one tremendous feature in common- all were clever, artful, and certainly exuberant, but importantly, they were also, all of them, fun.








For the LA Show, though, what’s great is the number of high profile types that find the charity one of their favorites, and, it is promised, will attend at least the preview party for the LA Show. Diane Keaton and Angelica Huston are supporters and will attend the preview. They are right up there in the Anne Baxter/Bette Davis category, and no one I would rather have a chance to scope out.