A MAHANTONGO TREASURE CHEST
by Wayne Mattox
I rarely get a chance to visit New York
City during mid January, when, in approximately a
two-week period, the most exciting antique events of the
year take place. 1998 was different. Dorothy dreamed
of Oz. Fishermen's fantasies are made up of giant
lake trout. Baseball fans want to see Mark McGuire
wallop a homer. My goal was to lay eyes on one of the
world's greatest, fresh-to-the-market, newly discovered
antiques. Even if could not afford it, I wanted to
experience it.
At Christie's auction house, I inspected
the hairy paw foot, piecrust top, carved mahogany
Philadelphia Chippendale tea table that, according to
word on the street, a Litchfield, CT area picker scooped
up for $1,400 at a Hartford, CT area auction. The table
sold for $600,000. At Sotheby's Important Americana
Auction, I was drawn to the labeled Seymour card table
that school teacher Claire Beckman bargained away at a
garage sale some 30 years ago for $25. First identified
on the Antique Roadshow, the table was hammered out for
$541,000. "Way to go Claire!" I said from my auction
seat.
Antiques had been culled in to the Big
Apple from all over the world. During Antique Week I
saw 18th century highboys and lowboys, and Baltimore
album quilts, and Tiffany Lamps, and an original painting
by Frederic Remmington, and another card table-this one
had ball and claw feet-that sold for what I understand
was four million dollars! Still, I had not found my own
personal favorite kind of object. Then, I walked
into Wayne Pratt Inc.'s booth at the 44th annual Winter
Antique Show at the Seventh Regiment Armory at Park and
67th.
My mouth dropped. The mint condition pine and
poplar Sheraton (1800-1840) period chest was painted with
a green base, outlined in red and yellow with painted fan
spandrels in the corners. It was embellished with
birds, stylized hearts and tulips, four point compass
stars, and red and yellow red rosettes were painted up and
down and all across the case stiles. As Pratt furniture
experts Johanna McBrien and Mary Beth Keene pointed out to
me, it was typical of line of elaborately painted
furniture made by German immigrants who populated a number
of river valleys centered by Schwaben Creek joining
Northumberland and Schuykill Counties in the blue
Mountains of Pennsylvanian. The "Mahantongo Valley"chest
was even dated,"1835." It was, perhaps, the finest
piece of painted furniture I had ever seen.
I asked the price.High as it was it
seemed a bargain. Not a bargain within my, or most
men's means, however. Well, at least I could pull out a
drawer. Scholars believe that the bold free hand and
stencil paint decoration on Mahantongo furniture is based
on Germanic Fractur and Taufschein birth and marriage
records. The somewhat isolated Pennsylvania Germans
who fashioned it employed decorative elements distinctive
to their own culture.Twelve or more artists may have
worked on the 100 or so surviving chests, blanket chests,
cupboards, and small painted woodenware that have been
found extant. The masterpiece I inspected sold within an
hour. Wayne Pratt had purchased the chest in a private
residence and he had helped to make my week by showing it
for the first time in New York. The thing is, he only
lives a mile up the road from me. Remember Toto,
"There's no place like home. There's no place like
home."
by AntiqueTalk.com
Reprinted with
permission Copyright by Wayne Mattox ©
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