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Southern furnishings:
a big antique trend
by
Doug Brown
A
long time ago, folks interested in antique furniture
coronated the tables and armoires made in the Northeast
the finest in the land. Everything else, they ruled,
should be swept into historys dustbin. It took
awhile, but Southerners, and then the antique intelligentsia,
retrieved Southern furniture from the pile. They found
that Southerners made great furniture, and lots of it.
A new collecting enthusiasm was born.
Now,
people around the country, but particularly in the South,
are increasingly spending their time hunting for furniture
made not in Boston or Philadelphia, but in Richmond
or Roanoke. Southern furniture is one of several collecting
genres captivating the public now. You can buy
things under $1,000 and up to a million dollars, depending
upon what one wants to do, says Sumpter Priddy,
an Alexandria dealer and one of the foremost experts
in the world on Southern furniture.
Theres
no single style that defines Southern furniture, Priddy
says. It varies by region and reflects whatever local
influences existed. Furniture made in much of eastern
Virginia, for example, reflects the neat and plain
style of Scottish, Irish and English craftsmen who flocked
to urban areas such as Williamsburg and Norfolk in the
1700s. Western Virginia reflects the backcountry
style of European immigrants, among them Swiss, German
and French, who settled there in large numbers in the
mid-1800s.
Collectors
hunger for Southern Colonial-era furniture, made before
1780 and now hard to find. Between 1780 and 1825, however,
there was a golden period of furniture making
in the South when the arts really did flourish.
Growing urban areas fueled by agriculture wealth created
a market, says Priddy. The economy was strong,
there was a vast influx of artisans from abroad, from
the Northeast, and then a vast number who were actually
trained in these growing urban centers [in the South]
as well. Priddy says there are plenty of pieces
from the 1780-1825 eras available, for a price. A single
chair can cost $1,500 to as much as $100,000.
Collectors
looking for a unique piece can often find something
with a link to their hometown. Experts now can identify
hundreds of individual artisans working across the South,
from a state-by-state and even county-by-county basis.
Its now possible for people who live in
Richmond or Norfolk or Winchester, or in Danville or
Roanoke, to collect things that are indigenous to those
areas, says Priddy.
After 1825 and the industrialization of the Northeast,
however, everything changed, Priddy says. The South
was flooded with less expensive factory-made furniture
from the Northeast and Southern artisans businesses
withered.
People
planning to buy Southern furniture should first consult
books detailing what was made where and when, Priddy
says. They should visit dealers regularly, study the
stock of Southern furniture, and ask a lot of questions.
They also should consider attending one of the handfuls
of conferences on Southern furniture, held regularly
in cities like Williamsburg, Alexandria and Charleston,
S.C., as well as at the Museum of Early Southern Decorative
Arts in Winston-Salem, N.C. This stuff is not
for a novice, Priddy says. Its like
the stock market. A novice doesnt go in and make
a killing and walk away. It requires a lot of study.
Bill
Beck, the proprietor of Becks Antiques and Books in
downtown Fredericksburg, says early 19th-century American
furniture in general is popular right now, Southern
and otherwise. Southern silver, too, is now a very
hot market, Beck says. A silver Virginia teapot
would cost thousands of dollars, he says.
A
brisk seller at the Middleburg Antique Emporium lately
has been clocks, which can run from the hundreds to
tens of thousands of dollars, says owner Lesley Clark.
An old grandfather clock will sell fast, but they are
hard to find. Most of the ones she sells were made around
1880, but she has one built in 1720.
Why
clocks? Clark doesnt know. I dont
think there is any accounting for what happens in the
trade, she says. Thats just the way
it goes.
Virginia
Business - February 2003
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