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— Benefiting Enterprise for Youth —
For 36 years,
has been considered
one of the most
important art and
antiques shows in
the world and the
oldest on the
West Coast.
THE OPENING NIGHT PREVIEW GALA
Called “The Highlight of the
San Francisco Social Season,”
the Preview Gala is attended
by nearly 2,000 people and
offers everything a great
party should: fabulous people,
sumptuous food, great art
and a breathtaking setting.
ATTENDANCE
Over 7,000 enthusiasts and
collectors visit the Show
over the 4 show days and the
opening night Preview Gala.
DEMOGRAPHICS
Age: • 18 - 39: 9% • 40 - 65: 56% • 65 +: 35%
College or Graduate Degrees: 98% • College: 45% • Graduate: 53%
Own more than one property: 49%
Household income: • Over $300k: 35% • Over $100-300k: 44%
Female: 63% Male: 37%
Bay Area residents: 90%
San Francisco residents: 47%
Art & Antiques collectors: 90%
Collecting for over 10 years: 82%
Typically purchase at over $5k: 45%
* Results based on a 2017 survey of attendees
PATRONS
Patrons of the Show receive early
entrance to the Preview Gala,
invitations to exclusive pre-show
events and other benefits.
Connoisseurs Circle: $5,000
Collectors Circle: $3,000
Designers Circle: $2,500
Artisans Circle: $2,500
Patrons Circle: $2,000
Enthusiasts: $800
Young Collectors (ages 21-39): $600
Patron tickets sold in pairs
PATRON PRE-PARTIES
A series of pre-parties help
build excitement in the
months leading up to the
Show. Patrons and sponsors
host these events inviting
various patron groups to each.
we invite you to join
jay jeffers author and owner, jeffers design group
and
diane dorrans saeks author and founding editor, c magazine
for a special conversation
about collecting art and antiques
as we celebrate the kick-off to
the san francisco fall antiques show
thursday, october 1
6 – 8pm
conversation at 6:30pm
cocktails and hors d’oeuvres
brooks brothers
240 post street
san francisco
25% of the evening’s proceeds will be donated
to enterprise for high school students
valet parking
rsvp bbevents@brooksbrothers.com
25% of net sales (total sales less returns) from 6 – 8pm at 240 post street on october 1 will be donated by brooks brothers to enterprise for high school
students. no portion of the purchase price is deductible by the customer.
EXHIBITORS
The best international art and
antiques dealers are invited to
exhibit and sell pieces from around
the globe and through the centuries.
Aedicule
Almond + Company
American Garage
Antonio’s Bella Casa
Arader Galleries
Carlton Hobbs LLC
Charles Plante Fine Arts
Clinton Howell Antiques
Daniel Stein Antiques
David Brooker Fine Art
Earle D. Vandekar of Knightsbridge Inc.
epoca
Finnegan Gallery
Foster Gwin Gallery
Galen Lowe Art and Antiques
Gallery 925
Hackett | Mill
Hayden & Fandetta Books
Henry Saywell
Il Segno del Tempo
Janice Paull
Jayne Thompson Antiques
Jeff R. Bridgman American Antiques
Jesse Davis Antiques
Joel B. Garzoli Fine Art
Joel Cooner Gallery
J.R. Richards
Lang Antique & Estate Jewelry
Lawrence Jeffrey
Lebreton Gallery
Ledor Fine Art
Los Angeles Fine Art Gallery
Lotus Gallery
Mallett
Meyerovich Gallery
Michael Pashby Antiques
Montgomery Gallery
The Orange Chicken
Patrick & Ondine Mestdagh
Peter Fetterman Gallery
Peter Finer
Peter Pap Oriental Rugs, Inc.
Rainforest Baskets
Roberto Freitas American Antiques
& Decorative Arts
Schillay Fine Art
Steinitz Gallery
Trotta-Bono Contemporary
Twiga Gallery
Witherell’s
Yew Tree House Antiques, Inc.
66mint Fine Estate Jewelry
2016 EXHIBITORS
Objects exhibited are from
antiquities to present day:
Fine Art
Modern and Contemporary Art
Furniture
Photography
Textiles
Ceramics
Ethnographic Art
Sculpture
Works on Paper
Objets d’Art
Jewelry & Metals
Rugs
The Show is vetted by the
Vetting Committee who
review all pieces on the
Show floor to be sold.
SELECTED PAST SPONSORS
SPONSOR PRESENCE
In addition to exclusive sponsorship of specific
show elements or programs, sponsors receive
impactful name and logo presence through a
variety of printed and electronic materials,
which include:
• Website
• Show Catalogue
• Preview Gala Invitation
• On-Site Signage
• Collateral Distribution
• Social Media*
• Lecture Theatre Slideshow*
• Press Release*
• Brochure*
• Advertisements*
• Billboards*
* Presence on these materials depends on sponsorship level. Please refer to benefits sheet for benefits by level.
SPONSORS
S U P P O RT I N G S P O N S O R S
P RI N C I PA L S P O N S O R S
P RE S E N T I N G S P O N S O R S
Katherine Jacobus Decorative Arts
Alexa Hampton
Mario Buatta
Archduke Geza von Habsburg
Ann Getty
THE LECTURE SERIES
Since its inception, The Fall Art &
Antiques Show has presented some
of the most important figures in the
fields of art, antiques, design and
architecture from around the world.
1,400 guests attend the Lecture Series
each year.
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY
Aerin Lauder
Lady Henrietta Spencer-Churchill
Stephen Sills
Timothy Corrigan Bunny Williams lecture in progress
Bunny Williams
Princess Michael of Kent
The Duchess of Rutland
Hutton Wilkinson
GUIDED SHOW TOURS
The Show offers
attendees complimentary
guided tours led by
experts in the field.
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY
COCKTAIL HOUR
Afternoon talks and panel
discussions are offered on
various subjects relating to
collecting art and antiques with
complimentary drinks served.
Open to all Show attendees.
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY
BOOK SIGNINGS
The Show features prominent
authors with new books on
the subjects of art, design,
architecture and antiques.
Book Signings are offered
in the Authors’ Alcove,
where patrons can line up
to meet the authors and
purchase a personalized
copy of the book.
Top: David Netto signing "In Pursuit of Francois Catroux"; Left: Bunny Williams signing "Parish-Hadley Tree of Life"; Right: Hutton Wilkinson and Flynn Kuhnert signing "The Walk to Elsie's"
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY
PRIVATE EVENTS AT THE SHOW
Café Girandole,
A Room with a View
and The Lecture Theatre
are available for rent
during select hours.
Please contact
sffas@ehss.org for details.
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY
GRAND ENTRY HALLand DESIGNER VIGNETTES
The Grand Entry Hall greets guests
with a powerful display each year.
Prominent designers are chosen to
bring the theme to life with their
vignettes flanking the entrance.
THE FALL ART & ANTIQUES SHOW CATALOGUE
The Show Catalogue is a beautifully
designed 250-page book, printed on
high-quality paper. It is a coveted item
that many people keep and collect
each year.
PRESS
The Fall Art & Antiques Show is covered in
national and international press throughout the
fall season. Sponsors at the Presenting level
and above are featured in all press releases.
82 ELLE DECOR
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An era of unbridled consumerism and display, widespread fascination with celebrity and
scandal, and social turbulence—sound famil-iar? Beginning in the 1850s, as Louis-Napoléon pro-
claimed himself supreme ruler, France’s moneyed middle class sought ever-novel ways of entertaining themselves:
throwing costume balls, attending salons and operas, deco-rating (and redecorat ing),
sitting for portraits. “The Spec-tacular Second Empire, 1852–1870,” an exhibition of 438 works at Paris’s Musée d’Orsay, revels in the splendor and showmanship of the period. But it also discerns the roots of modernity in the psy-chologically revealing early portraits by Degas and Monet, Nadar’s austere photographs of Pari-sian personalities, Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux’s expressive sculptures, the ostentatious interiors of the Rothschilds’ neo-Renaissance Château de Ferrières and Prince Napoléon’s Pompeii-style house, and the craftsmanship of the Thonet chair and the Sèvres vase (September 27–January 15, 2017; musee-orsay.fr).
QUALITY TIME Iron Chef Geoffrey Zakarian’s new café, bar, and res-taurant, Georgie, has opened in the Montage Bev-erly Hills hotel with a suite of menus for everything from breakfast to after-dinner drinks—and a versatile interior that looks luxurious around the clock. In the spacious dining room, designers John and Christine Gachot of Gachot Studios utilized banquettes and a forest of fiddle-leaf fig trees to create a bright, con-vivial spot for lunch; brass lamps on each table pro-vide an intimate glow over dinner. Under the café’s vaulted ceilings, above, pale gray upholstery and pink pillows are paired with brass bistro tables for a series of welcoming breakfast nooks, which effort-lessly doubles as a cocktail lounge when the lights dim (georgierestaurant.com).
CREATURE FEATURE The 2016 San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show is a walk on the wild side, with jewelry, furnishings, and artworks that highlight our fascination with the animal kingdom. “Animals have been interpreted in every discipline, technique, and material throughout time,” says designer Suzanne Tucker, this year’s chairwoman. With wares from about 60 dealers, the beastly bounty
includes an ethereal Sebastião Salgado photograph of an elephant, a 19th-century diamond-and-enamel but-
terfly brooch, and a hand-carved carousel zebra (October
27–30; sffas.org). American Art Deco lacquered
screen, 1930s.Rooster weather vane, late 19th century.
Herbert Rosenthal bee brooch, c. 1970s.
Pavilion for a royal feast by decorating
firm Belloir et Vazelle, c. 1869.
La Dolce Vita, a 1953 photo by Thurston
Hopkins.
A mirror by Louis Constant
Sévin, 1867. Princess Mathilde by
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux,
1862.
NEW YORK CITY — Allouche Gallery is presenting its first solo show in the Meat-packing District, “Ron Eng-lish/Guernica,” featuring the inaugural debut of 18 new paintings by the prolific con-temporary Pop and street art-ist, Ron English. The exhibi-tion will remain on view until October 19.
The exhibition’s title and its pieces reference English’s own narrative to Pablo Picasso’s 1937 painting “Guernica,” which is praised as one of the most famous antiwar paint-ings in history. While Picasso’s “Guernica” was painted in response to the bombing of a village in northern Spain, English utilizes the modern war template to relay power-ful messages about the end-less cycles of creation and destruction.
The artist has been working on “Ron English/Guernica” for more than two years. He has examined the templates obses-sively to imagine the truth in experience from every angle. Each piece from this body of work forces the viewer to face cultural biases that are embedded in our conscious-ness. “I don’t believe I will
ever exhaust the possibilities of the [Guernica] template, with its unending power to visually articulate the raging complexities of waste, destruc-tion, horror and conquest, through its deceptively simpli-fied narrative,” says English.
English’s bold yet masterful style is indicative of Allouche Gallery’s ongoing commitment to pushing artistic boundar-ies.
English coined the term POPaganda to describe his signature mash-up of high and low cultural touchstones, from superhero mythology to totems of art history, populat-ed with his vast and constant-ly growing arsenal of original characters, including MC Supersized, the obese fast-food mascot featured in the hit movie Supersize Me, and Abraham Obama, the fusion of America’s 16th and 44th presidents, an image widely discussed in the media as directly impacting the 2008 election. Other characters carousing through English’s art, in paintings, billboards and sculpture include three-eyed rabbits, udderly delicious cowgirls and grinning skulls, blending stunning visuals
with the bitingly humorous undertones of America’s Pre-mier Pop Iconoclast.
English’s artwork is held in museum collections world-wide, including the Whitney Museum, the Everhart Muse-um, the Paterson Museum, the Museum Checkpoint Charlie, the Museum of Con-temporary Art, Paris, and Franklin Furnace.
Allouche Gallery is at 82 Gan-sevoort Street. For information, www.allouchegallery.com or 212-966-6675.
‘Ron English/Guernica’ At Allouche Gallery
October 14, 2016 — Antiques and The Arts Weekly — 11
Vintage Posters andLimited Edition Print Art
and PhotographyFor more information email usinfo@limitedruns.com
1050 2nd Avenue, New York, NY 10022 • 212-355-4400 • info@maacnyc.com
www.the-maac.com
OPEN DAILY:10-5
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. — The 2016 San Francisco Fall Art and Antiques Show will take place Thursday, October 27, through Sunday, October 30, at Fort Mason’s Festival Pavilion. Suzanne Tucker, chair of the 2016 San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show for the second year, has chosen the theme for the show: “Animalia — Animals in Art & Antiques.”
Exploring the fascination with the beauty and mystery of the animal kingdom, as well as its symbolism throughout the ages, the entry to the show, designed by San Francisco architect Andrew Skurman, will include four designer vignettes incorporating a few choice antiques as well as cus-tom-designed wall covering by four designers: Ann Getty, Catherine Kwong, Antonio Martins and Jonathan Rach-man.
Animal images have been metaphors in art from ancient times to today. Birds, dogs, cats, rabbits, pigs, serpents and butterflies have been used to portray wisdom, fidelity, shrewdness, fertility, self-indulgence, evil and reincarna-
tion. Chances are, if an animal appears in a painting, a piece of furniture, a decorative object or jewelry, it has meaning. The Latin word Animalis literally means “Having Soul,” and at the heart of all art, antiques and decorative objects is a boundless, collective soul — that of the artist, the collector, the observer and the history of the piece.
Aerin Lauder is the honorary chair for the 35th edition of the show, which will feature 60 fully vetted dealers from around the world. They will be offering for sale a range of fine and decorative arts represent-ing all styles and periods, including American, English, Continental and Asian furni-ture and decorative objects, paintings, prints, photographs, books, gold, silver and precious metals, jewelry, rugs, textiles and ceramics.
This year, dealers will bring pieces from antiquity to pres-ent day. Walking the aisles of the show, visitors will see the beauty and splendor of the fin-est art and antiques through-out time and be able to view pieces from many centuries
back, as well as from the Twen-tieth and Twenty-First centu-ries.
As always, 100 percent of net proceeds benefit Enterprise for High School Students, the San Francisco nonprofit that pre-pares and empowers a diverse
group of Bay Area youth to pursue life after school with passion and purpose. Enter-prise offers students every-thing they need to get and keep their first job, including inten-sive workshops, pragmatic skills and career exploration training, a network of advisors and peers, a broad database of paid internships, and college and career counseling.
The opening night preview gala and patron receptions will be Wednesday, October 26, 4 to 10. Show days and hours are:
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 10:30 am to 7 pm, and Sunday, noon to 5 pm. Fort Mason Cen-ter’s entrance is at the inter-section of Marina Boulevard and Buchanan Street.
For additional information, www.sffas.org or 415-989-9019.
Animals In Art & Antiques AtSan Francisco Show Oct. 27–30
Pair of rare, circa 1840, Roman, left and right, male and female, Carrara marble hounds with true-to-life expres-sions and poses/postures, at Antonio’s Bella Casa.
A Dutch tin-glazed earthen-ware tile picture of a cat, Makkum, Twentieth Centu-ry, at Earle D. Vandekar of Knightsbridge Inc.
SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. — Sun-day, October 9 will bring to a close the sixth season of the French Market. It will be open from 9 am to 3 pm. There is free parking and admission.
The market brings the atmo-sphere of a French neighbor-hood street market to Marin. Shoppers and browsers can enjoy a Sunday stroll through aisles of interesting antiques, collectibles, books, vintage fur-niture, jewelry, vintage clothing, retro decor, vintage shabby chic and a host of other items.
French music and crepes add to the ambiance of this event.
The market location is at the Veterans Auditorium parking lot off Civic Center Drive at the Civic Center.
For additional information, www.goldengateshows.com or 415-383-2252.
Marin’s Outdoor French MarketTo Close For Season October 9
SAN MARINO, CALIF. — A major international loan exhi-bition exploring the art, craft and cultural significance of Chinese woodblock prints made during their golden age, with works made from the late Sixteenth through Nineteenth Centuries is at the Hunting-ton Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens. “Gar-dens, Art and Commerce in Chinese Woodblock Prints” is on view through January 9. The Huntington is at 1151 Oxford Road. For information, www.huntington.org or 626-405-2100.
— Benefiting Enterprise for High School Students —
O C T O B E R 2 7 - 3 0 , 2 0 1 6 | S F F A S . O R G
W W W . S F F A S . O R G /A D S
find
the perfect pieceat this year's show
ADVERTISING
Show ads run in over 40 national and local publications, radio stations and websites, as well as customized advertising throughout San Francisco. The Fall Art & Antiques Show’s $200,000 marketing and advertising campaign is tailored to reach a targeted audience of art
and antiques collectors and enthusiasts.
Publications include:
Antiques & Fine Art Magazine
Apollo
Art & Antiques magazine
art ltd.
The Art Newspaper
C magazine
California Home + Design
California Homes
Dering Hall
Gentry magazine & Gentry Home
Grail magazine
InCollect.com
Interiors California
Luxe Interiors + Design
Magazine Antiques
Milieu
Nob Hill Gazette
Red Carpet | Bay Area
San Francisco Cottages & Gardens
San Francisco magazine
SF Gate (San Francisco Chronicle)
Silver Magazine
Veranda
7x7
ENTERPRISE FOR YOUTH
• 100% of the net proceeds of the show go directly support Enterprise for Youth, a nonprofit founded in 1969 with the name Enterprise for High School Students.
• More than 20,000 youth have learned the skills and values essential to workplace success at Enterprise.
• Programs provide students with the ability and opportunity to find and retain jobs, explore career opportunities and develop life skills crucial for their transition from high school to adult life.
• Enterprise operates one of San Francisco's largest job banks focused exclusively on high school students.
For more information, visit www.ehss.org.
SPONSORSHIP LEVELS
Exposure and benefits program opportunities
are based on sponsorship level. Customized
proposals are available for all sponsorships.
Lead Sponsor: $50,000
Premier Sponsor: $30,000
Presenting Sponsor: $20,000 - $25,000
Principal Sponsor: $10,000 - $15,000
Supporting Sponsor: $5,000
We have numerous In-Kind and Media
sponsorship opportunities.
4 days
40 pounds of caviar
60 Exhibitors
50,000 Square Feet
36 years and counting
2017 SHOW DATES
October 26-29Opening Night Preview Gala: October 25
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT
Margan Mulvihill Marketing & Events Managermmulvihill@ehss.org | 415.392.7600 x316
www.sffas.org
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