IF YOU ARE IN ENGLAND FROM 3 TO 6 APRIL 2014, YOU MUST ATTEND CADA FAIR IN THE LAVISH GROUNDS OF THE SPECTACULAR BLENHEIM PALACE WHICH IS WORTH A TRIP ON ITS OWN. NOW YOU CAN KILL 2 BIRDS WITH 1 STONE!
BLENHEIM PALACE IS 1.5 HOURS DRIVE FROM LONDON AND 8 MILES FROM OXFORD SO IT IS EASILY ACCESSIBLE. BETTER SPEND A DAY HERE THAN IN OXFORD STREET!
Best of all, from RM 500 to RM 500,000 there is something for everyone and every budget!
A pair of throne chairs for you and your lover! RM 75,000 for the pair. Not cheap but your ass is worth it!
This tea caddy looks charming and cute and un-costly but it is RM 50,000 as it is of tortoise shell from the Regency period with silvered ball finial and stand on silvered ball feet. From Hampton Antiques.
Just visiting CADA Fair is worth the trip from London as Blenheim Palace is a monumental house on an epic scale. It is also the only non-episcopal and non-Royal residence not owned by the Queen or Royal Family allowed to use the epithet 'Palace'!
All other stately mansions have to be called 'Manor', 'Mansion', 'Hall', 'Abbey', 'Park', 'Grange', 'Tower','Castle', 'Place, 'Court', Lodge','Priory' or plain old 'House'!
There is only one more Palace not lived in or owned by the Queen and that is Lambeth Palace in London, the official residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury. So Blenheim Palace is truly in a league of its own.
A few make do with just their names and no mention of stature, like Cliveden and Chequers. They are never called Cliveden House or Cliveden Castle or Cliveden Manor. Ditto for Chequers, the official country retreat of the 'reigning' British Prime Minister!
Blenheim Palace was the birthplace of Sir Winston Churchill the great British Prime Minister and it is one of the world's biggest and greatest private homes so apart from checking out the antiques at CADA Fair, you must visit this historic home built in 1722. Blenheim Palace is an UNESCO World Heritage Site and designated in 1987.
The Cotswolds Art & Antiques Dealers' Association
Fair returns to the elegant setting of Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire
OX20 1PP from Thursday 3rd to Sunday 6th April 2014. Now in its third year the fair has cultivated
an ardent following of collectors, art consultants, museum experts, interior
designers and the public alike making the fair a 'must-visit' destination.
1stdibs, the leading online marketplace for the best antiques worldwide, is sponsoring the fair for the first time in recognition of its position as the pre-eminent antiques fair held outside London. 29 of the Association's 51 members are taking part in the fair and Philip Adler Antiques from Tetbury, Trinity House Paintings Ltd of Broadway, Brian Sinfield Gallery from Burford and Clive Morley Harps from Lechlade are the four new exhibitors for 2014. All works are for sale with prices ranging from £100 to £100,000.
The Cotswolds Art & Antiques Dealers' Association
(CADA) is the pre-eminent of the regional trade associations and the majority
of the dealers exhibit at the top London fairs.
A comment heard time and time again at the two previous fairs is 'this is a London fair in the country'. The very best of every discipline is showcased
including furniture, pictures, silver, early needlework and antique boxes,
sculpture, bronze, clocks and barometers, carpets and textiles, jewellery,
harps, Oriental and English ceramics, garden ornaments and statuary and many
other decorative items.
The fair is the perfect opportunity to hunt for the
best antiques the Cotswolds has to offer and highlights include a magnificent
companion pair of English Medieval Revival throne chairs made by the firm Crace
Royal decorators of the period, c 1845, with ivory and gilt decoration,
bejewelled with panels of blue, green, lilac and scarlet and upholstered in
their original needlework. These chairs
would grace the most opulent of residences and are to be found on David Pickup's stand for £14,000. Equally outstanding are a set of six English
giltwood chairs, made in 1770 in the Chippendale manner bearing a provenance
from Fingringhoe Hall, Colchester from Witney
Antiques who are also bringing an English panel from an embroidered
decorative apron from the 1720s. Such
costly items of clothing, professionally embroidered, would have been included
in the wardrobes of clothes worn by Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough and her
ladies at that time.
Music lovers are sure to be excited by the addition of Clive Morley Harps whose family firm have been serving the needs of
harpists for nearly 200 years. Two
outstanding pieces are a rare Barry Hook harp from 1796 incorporating
Chinoiserie and gold decoration with elaborate scroll work for £17,500. The second harp, an Erat single action pedal
harp made between 1800 and 1820, is for sale for £14,000. At that period, stately homes such as
Blenheim Palace would have invited professional musicians to play when the
family met for musical entertainment in the afternoons.
There is ample choice of ceramics throughout the fair
: John Howard, the antique English
pottery specialist as well as Chairman
of CADA has sourced a Staffordshire
pottery tureen with a view of the South East aspect of Blenheim Palace
originally engraved by William Radclyffe from an original study by John Preston
Neale for £1,450; from Andrew Dando is a very scarce set of 18th century Derby
porcelain figures depicting the 'Tithe Pig' story, c1760 for £3,200; a pair of
Martin Brothers stoneware vases decorated in the Japanese taste with fauna and
flying birds, dated February 1889 from Hall-Bakker Decorative Arts for £6,500;
Kinghams Art Pottery are
bringing a ruby lustre mythical beast charger, c1890 by William de Morgan for
£6,000 and from Catherine Hunt Oriental Ceramics a Kangxi period famille verte
rosewater sprinkler.
Fine art is well represented with Brian Sinfield Gallery showcasing the works of contemporary artists such as ' Portrait of Eli' by Antony Williams for £22,000; original prints from the 15th century from Elizabeth Harvey-Lee including 'Les Vieilles Histoires by Henri de Toulouse Lautrec (1864-1901) for £6,500; 'The Last Gleam' by Benjamin Williams Leader, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1879 from Haynes Fine Art of Broadway for £70,000 ; and 'Portrait of Harry La Montagne on a Grey' by Sir Alfred Munnings (1878-1959) from Trinity House Paintings.
The charm of this fair is to hunt for the many highly
decorative works of art such as a very
rare tortoiseshell tea caddy with silvered ball finial and stands on silvered
ball feet for £9,500 from Hampton
Antiques; a late 19th century silk embroidered ikat coat from Bokhara,
Uzbekistan from Legge Carpets; a
6-inch diameter English universal equinoctial ring sun dial dating from the
second half of the 18th century priced at £2,450 from Jeffrey Formby Antiques and a George I ebony table clock signed
Francis Gregg, London c 1725 from Montpellier
Clocks. Architectural Heritage, creating
a garden effect to illustrate their garden ornaments include an early 20th
century garden gazebo; and a sparkling Art Deco diamond and emerald brooch
pendant from the 1930s from Howards
Jewellers of Stratford who are also bringing a good selection of
silver.
An exceptional highlight comes from W R Harvey & Co (Antiques) Ltd who
is bringing an early William & Mary
period two-door cabinet on chest attributed to Thomas Pistor of London at a
price of £90,000. And finally, the most
quirky item must be the original 17th century carved oak staircase from Crakemarsh
Hall in Suffolk for £64,000 from Architectural
Heritage.
Brass lantern clock, RM 31,000
Martin Brothers stoneware vases, RM 35,000
Munnings giltwood chair
English painting of rider on fox hunt
William and Mary 2-door cabinet, RM 470,000
Barry Hook harp, RM 93,000
My favorite! Throne chairs for you and your lover, RM 75,000 for both
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