Firefighters battle blaze at W.Va. flea market

MILTON, W.Va. (AP) – A fire followed by exploding ammunition has destroyed the Milton Flea Market.

The fast-spreading blaze at the U-shape wood and metal structure in Cabell County was reported around 11 a.m. Wednesday. Milton Assistant Fire Chief Steve Vititoe says ammunition from one of the booths went off.

By mid afternoon, the building had collapsed. No injuries were reported; the flea market is only open on weekends.

Every fire department in Cabell County was called to the scene, along with some firefighters from neighboring counties. One fire truck received significant damage while fighting the fire, said county Emergency Medical Services Director Gordon Merry.

The venue opened in 1989 and grew to become one of the region’s largest flea markets with more than 300 vendors who sold antiques, collectibles, crafts and jewelry.

Milton Mayor Betty Sargent estimates the market draws about 10,000 visitors each weekend. “The fire has really devastated this community,” she said.

Nina Roberts of Barboursville ran a candle shop at the market for three years. Because it’s difficult to secure insurance for a flea market-based business, she said she’ll be taking a loss on her $25,000 to $30,000 worth of inventory.

“I am watching everything just go up,” she said.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-09-10-08 1440EDT

Late 1960s Emilio Pucci printed silk jersey cocktail dress in hot and pale pink, estimate $260-$350.

Kerry Taylor Auctions presents Sept. 17 fashion sale: Sandy Stagg – A Life in Vintage

Late 1960s Emilio Pucci printed silk jersey cocktail dress in hot and pale pink, estimate $260-$350.

Late 1960s Emilio Pucci printed silk jersey cocktail dress in hot and pale pink, estimate $260-$350.

LONDON – At the end of June, Sandy Stagg closed the shutters and padlocked the doors of her famous Antique Clothing Shop in Portobello Road for the last time. Now collectors will be able to own an item of vintage fashion or accessories from the well-known shop when more than 350 lots are offered at Kerry Taylor Auctions’ A Life in Vintage sale, to be held Wednesday, Sept. 17. Absentee and live Internet bidding will be available in this auction (see link at bottom).

The store closure was a poignant moment, as Stagg has spent the best part of her life lovingly collecting and trading in vintage clothes. Indeed, she was one of the first to specialize in the field, opening her first vintage boutique – the gone but not forgotten shop called Amelia Earhart Clothing Shop – in 1970.

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Neal Auction Co.

Neal Auction reschedules Louisiana Purchase Auction after hurricane evacuation

Neal Auction Co.

NEW ORLEANS – Over the past 10 days, Auction Company experienced a mandatory evacuation and the loss of electrical services due to Hurricane Hanna. The firm’s entire entire staff has now returned to New Orleans, and the gallery and offices are now back to fully operational.

Due to the unforeseen circumstances relating to the recent storm, however, Neal Auction has advised that its annual Louisiana Purchase AuctionTM is being rescheduled. Session I will now take place on Saturday, Oct. 11, 2008, commencing at 10 a.m. Session II, on Sunday, Oct. 12, will begin at 11 a.m.

The Louisiana Purchase AuctionTM is a highly anticipated event featuring fine and decorative art and antiques, with special inclusions of regional interest. Visit Neal Auction online at www.nealauction.com.

Photo courtesy of The City of Duluth, Minn. - all rights reserved.

Duluth council postpones sale of Tiffany Studios window

Photo courtesy of The City of Duluth, Minn. - all rights reserved.

Photo courtesy of The City of Duluth, Minn. – all rights reserved.

DULUTH, Minn. (AP) – The Duluth City Council has postponed selling the city’s historic Tiffany window until next month.

The council postponed selling the stained-glass window until Oct. 13th, in hopes of finding a local buyer.

Two weeks ago, the council voted to sell the 115-year-old window to help balance the budget. But after an outcry in the community, council member Jay Fosle sponsored a resolution to give more time to find a local buyer.

The window depicts a fictional American Indian princess, Minne-Ha-Ha, or “Laughing Water.”

Council member Sharla Gardner says she spoke with the city’s purchasing director, who said the deadline for a local buyer to express interest is September 17th. If no one comes forward with a reasonable plan, the window will be sent to an auction house.

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Stolen Picasso etchings recovered

PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) – Authorities say they’ve recovered two Picasso etchings stolen from a Palm Beach art gallery in May.

Police arrested 37-year-old Marcus Patmon at his Miami home on Friday. Authorities say he tried to sell Le Repas Frugel, valued at $395,000, to a California art dealer in July. But the dealer checked the Art Loss Registry and discovered that it had been reported stolen.

Authorities tracked Patmon to his home, where they found the other piece, the Jacqueline Lisant etching, valued at $145,000.

Patmon was charged with dealing in stolen property. He also had an outstanding warrant for driving with a suspended license. Authorities say charges of burglary and grand theft are pending. He was released on $10,500 bail.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-09-07-08 0430EDT

Lanter Hill green-glaze face jug, Seagrove, N.C. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers Archive and Slotin Folk Art.

Pottery feud divides North Carolina town

Lanter Hill green-glaze face jug, Seagrove, N.C. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers Archive and Slotin Folk Art.

Lanter Hill green-glaze face jug, Seagrove, N.C. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers Archive and Slotin Folk Art.

SEAGROVE, North Carolina (AP) – Among the endless allegations of thievery, financial subterfuge and conspiracy, there is only this certainty: people in the state of North Carolina take their pottery seriously.

And that’s about all outspoken potter Don Hudson can say without throwing himself further into a deepening dispute among the noted artisans living in an area of central North Carolina rich in natural clay, where pottery has flourished for more than 250 years.

The dispute has resulted in two pottery festivals in Seagrove scheduled for the same November weekend. One is new this year, the other has been held for the last 26.

The divide, and all the confusing reasons for a fight over pottery, can appear ridiculous to outsiders. But it’s venomous for those involved, resulting in ugly propaganda, reports of a gunshot fired at one shop and allegations of assault. Attempts to settle it have gotten nowhere.

“It’s crazy. It’s doing huge damage, and they should get over it,” said Charlotte Brown, author of the 2006 book The Remarkable Potters of Seagrove and director of the Gregg Museum of Art & Design at North Carolina State University in Raleigh. “It’s not over anything that matters. It’s personal. Everybody stands to lose.”

Even some customers are starting to take sides, said Michelle Kovack, an artist who paints pots thrown by her husband, Craig, and is neutral in the feud.

“They’ve got to realize, we’re stuck in the middle of this,” she said. “We’re just trying to make a living.”

Potters have carved out a living in the Seagrove area, about halfway between Charlotte and Raleigh, since the mid-18th century. It was founded by seven families who embraced the abundant clay underfoot.

Seagrove artists’ fans include actors Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman, and the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Tokyo. North Carolina governors have commissioned the community’s pottery as gifts for world leaders.

All of which helps explain the passion that feeds a feud that has simmered for years and went public this summer.

The schism generally involves differences between potters who support the Museum of North Carolina Traditional Pottery – which is more of a welcome center with samples of local work – and artisans who have broken from it.

Some in the breakaway group also support the financially struggling North Carolina Pottery Center, which displays and promotes work from artists statewide, not just those based in Seagrove. It also sells pottery, which critics say hurts local artists and takes business away from their shops.

The center, which doesn’t support either festival, has been the target of attacks by Hudson, a museum board member and a potter in nearby Sanford.

Hudson has published two articles that have infuriated some potters and written numerous e-mails, one of which resulted in legislative fiscal researchers examining the center’s finances in August. The state auditor has since given the center a clean financial report.

Museum supporters operate the Seagrove Pottery Festival. It attracts 5,000 to 6,000 people to Seagrove – population 250 – each year and is considered one of the best festivals in the U.S. Southeast. Scheduled for the weekend before Thanksgiving, it gives potters a chance to make money before tourism slows in the winter and raises $50,000 to $60,000 for the museum.

“I know that people know that the economy is bad now, but really, for us, it’s been dwindling for several years,” Kovack said. “And it makes that show all the more important because the slow season is like January through March, maybe even April. And we need to make a lot of money at Christmastime to get us through that slow season.”

Some museum supporters say the center has tried to steal the festival for years, though the former center director denies that.

Hudson tries to frame the feud around the center. He brought the simmering ill feelings to the public with a May article he published in the guide of a separate pottery gathering. The article, “Frankenstein’s Monster,” referenced the museum’s efforts to start the center years ago.

Hudson accuses the center of playing favorites and planting “seeds of discord and strife in a community already under the stress of intense competition.”

In doing so, Hudson didn’t win any friends. The former attorney said in an e-mail that no one “has ever confused me with Mother Teresa.”

The tone of the article upset many, including some of his museum board colleagues, who failed in an attempt to boot him. Two other board members and an office staffer resigned.

“I think Don in his heart thinks he’s doing absolutely the best he can for us,” said Judy Merritt, board secretary until she resigned in early June after the failed ouster attempt.

Word of a new event soon followed: the Celebration of Seagrove Potters, scheduled for the same weekend as the other festival. It began as a group of irked potters, but is now under the auspices of the Seagrove Area Potters Association, a nonprofit marketing group.

Phil Morgan, a potter renowned for his crystalline glazes, said the new event is part of “a vindictive attack to try to kill the museum because Don Hudson is associated with the museum.”

Nonsense, said dissident group leader Ben Owen III, another titan of Seagrove and descendant of one of the community’s founding families. He insists the new festival is about highlighting only Seagrove artists, and doesn’t have anything to do with Hudson. That despite the festival, with an emphasis on pottery made in a specific Seagrove area, not including Hudson, who is based in nearby Sanford.

In the past few weeks, things have only gotten worse. Morgan said someone fired a gunshot into his shop on N.C. 705 – known as “Pottery Highway.” Two other potters accused each other of assault.

Museum supporters are threatening to go to court, claiming the second festival doesn’t meet town ordinances. In August, Hudson wrote a flier titled, “SewerFest,” referring to the event’s location: a vacant building beside a sewer lagoon. It includes a tribute to Richard Gillson, the longtime museum president who died in January after falling from a ladder at the museum. Hudson and his supporters defended the flier as political satire.

But Gillson’s daughter, Deborah Gardner of Dunkirk, New York, said her father would be horrified.

“My father was a very outspoken man, but he never would have stooped to the level that Don Hudson has brought himself down to,” she said.

Museum of North Carolina Traditional Pottery

Celebration of Seagrove Potters

N.C. Pottery Center

Seagrove Area Pottery Association

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-09-04-08 0721EDT

Fender Stratocaster, first guitar burned onstage by Jimi Hendrix, March 31, 1967 - $497,557. Image courtesy Fame Bureau.

Torched Hendrix axe earns nearly half a million dollars in London auction

Fender Stratocaster, first guitar burned onstage by Jimi Hendrix, March 31, 1967 - $497,557. Image courtesy Fame Bureau.

Fender Stratocaster, first guitar burned onstage by Jimi Hendrix, March 31, 1967 – $497,557. Image courtesy Fame Bureau.

LONDON (AP) – A guitar set alight onstage by Jimi Hendrix during a concert in London was sold at auction on Thursday, Sept. 4, 2008 for $497,557 to a collector from the United States.

The scorched Fender Stratocaster was the star lot at an auction of music memorabilia that also included The Beatles’ first contract and a gun permit application made out by Elvis Presley.

Specialist auction house The Fame Bureau said Hendrix’s guitar, which he set alight during a concert at London’s Astoria in March 1967, was purchased by enthusiast Daniel Boucher, from Boylston, Mass.

Boucher traveled to Britain especially for the sale, which saw around 250 lots put up for auction – suggesting the market in rock ‘n’ roll memorabilia is still booming despite economic gloom.

“I thought I’d have to pay a little bit more for it, actually. I am going to play it, I hope some of it rubs off on me,” Boucher said, after successfully bidding for Hendrix’s guitar.

Hendrix famously burned another guitar at the Monterey Pop festival in 1967, where the stunt was caught on film.

The Fame Bureau said the scorched guitar on sale Thursday was found last year at the home of a relative of Tony Garland, Hendrix’s former press officer. It had been predicted to sell for up to $900,000.

A copy of The Beatles’ first contract with manager Brian Epstein sold for $426,478, the auctioneers said.

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French provincial carved and paneled oak armoire, ex Elizabeth Parke Firestone Collection, estimate $4,000-$6,000.

Oh, Priscilla! Oh, John! Sample this auction attraction with a Mayflower twist

French provincial carved and paneled oak armoire, ex Elizabeth Parke Firestone Collection, estimate $4,000-$6,000.

French provincial carved and paneled oak armoire, ex Elizabeth Parke Firestone Collection, estimate $4,000-$6,000.

FALLS CHURCH, Va. (ACNI) – Had People magazine been in business back in the early 17th century, it’s quite likely they would have chosen the love triangle centered around Pilgrim hottie Priscilla Mullins as a cover story. Mullins (b. circa 1602, d. circa 1680, sometimes spelled Mullens) was a Mayflower passenger and Plymouth Colony Pilgrim settler who won the affection of both Capt. Miles Standish and government official John Alden. As immortalized in the Henry Wadsworth Longfellow poem The Courtship of Myles Standish, Mullins married Alden in what was the third “Mayflower” wedding in the New World. Mullins subsequently bore anywhere from 10 to 15 children; historical accounts vary on that point.

The Mullins-Alden union is considered a highly significant one in America’s history, as several distinguished families can trace their lineage back to Priscilla and John. Antiques associated with Alden descendants carry an automatic pedigree, one of them being a hand-stitched sampler to be auctioned on Sept. 13 at Quinn’s Auction Galleries.

The alphabet sampler, dated July 27, 1805, was crafted by 8-year-old Betsy Shaw, believed to be a descendant of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins. Also stitched into the sampler is the maker’s name and the name of a now outer-Boston suburb, Abington. The sampler is estimated at $800-$1,200, but its possible provenance could inspire a much bigger payday at Quinn’s.

“It’s from a collection of 13 samplers consigned by a single collector in Williamsburg, Virginia,” said Quinn’s partner Matthew Quinn. “We spend a lot of time researching the Shaw sampler, and we believe collectors will see the value in it.”

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Grey Flannel Auctions president Richard E. Russek with Hall of Famer Earvin Magic Johnson at the Basketball Hall of Fame Induction banquet. Image by Chuck Miller.

Grey Flannel Auctions team and hoop stars snapped at Hall of Fame dinner

Richard Russek, president of Grey Flannel Auctions, with NBA superstar and businessman Magic Johnson. Image by Chuck Miller

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (ACNI) – Around 350 people, including Basketball Hall of Famers and their families, gathered at an invitation-only reunion dinner Thursday evening, Sept. 4, 2008, at the Springfield Marriott in downtown Springfield, Mass. Hosted by Grey Flannel Auctions of Westhampton Beach, N.Y., the dinner was one of many official activities planned around this weekend’s 2008 induction ceremonies at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, also in Springfield. Grey Flannel has an exclusive marketing agreement with the Basketball Hall of Fame and serves as its official appraisers and authenticators of basketball memorabilia.

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Ralph and Terry Kovel in the fully outfitted country store located in their home.

In memoriam: Ralph Kovel, beloved figure who brought antiques to mainstream media

Ralph and Terry Kovel in the fully outfitted country store located in their home.

Ralph and Terry Kovel in the fully outfitted country store located in their home.

CLEVELAND – Ralph M. Kovel, nationally known antiques author and expert who ran a multimedia empire together with his wife Terry, died on Thursday, Aug. 28, 2008, at Euclid Hospital in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. The cause of death was complications from a previously performed hip surgery.

In the early 1950s, Kovel came up with the idea of a book that indexed ceramics by the factory-specific marks imprinted or incised on them. He and Terry became nationally known with the publication of their first book, Dictionary of Marks: Pottery & Porcelain, published in 1953. The book led to a weekly question-and-answer column, Kovels: Antiques & Collecting, syndicated in 1954, which still runs in more than 150 newspapers. It was also the first of 97 books that the couple would co-author.

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