Inside the big world of small objects

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, May 21, 2024


Inside the big world of small objects
For over 40 years, Tom Bishop’s dollhouse miniatures show has been the gold standard for serious collectors and hobbyists alike. Photo: Facebook.

by Emma Orlow



CHICAGO, IL.- Moments before 10 a.m., a security guard thanked the crowd for being cooperative.

When the clock struck the hour, it became clear why: The doors of the Marriott Chicago O’Hare conference center opened, and hundreds of attendees, most over the age of 60, beelined as fast as they could to the booths.

Many had studied the color-coded map listing each booth’s location ahead of time and came prepared with a shopping plan. It was a scene that could easily be mistaken for a Black Friday sale. Instead, it was the Chicago International Miniatures Show.

Despite the gathering touting itself as “the World’s No. 1 Dollhouse Miniatures Show,” there aren’t many actual dollhouses. Shoppers instead sift through thousands of tiny objects that fill these tiny homes: miniature sponges, chocolate fondue fountains, rocking chairs, barbecue sets, Tupperware containers or fly swatters.

The Tom Bishop show, as many attendees call it, is considered by its founder, Bishop, to be the largest dollhouse miniatures event in the world. Numbers appear to support that claim. This year, over 250 vendors traveled from 21 countries and 35 states.

More than 3,000 people attended, filling three large conference rooms, with hallway spillover. The weeklong event in April included ticketed workshops with themes like “Lobsterfest” (focused on making miniature lobster boil accouterments), trade shows and three days of ticketed shopping for the public.

Bishop estimates that he has done over 500 miniatures shows around the world, though in recent years he has downsized to only Chicago, which has been a recurrent stop for nearly 40 years. Even the hotel itself is personal for Bishop: It’s where he and his wife, Leni, 77, spent the first night of their honeymoon.

In 1977, the duo relocated from Chicago to Margate, Florida, where they opened a dollhouse store, Miniland, before closing it in 1984 to focus on traveling conventions. Bishop, who also worked for American Airlines for 17 years, was inspired to create his own show after attending others that “weren’t run very well,” he said.

“The largest miniature dollhouse convention” may sound like a silly distinction to some, but it is no joking matter for the sellers. For many, the Tom Bishop show is where they hope to make the bulk of their annual sales.

Teri, 77, of Teri’s Mini Workshop, who declined to give her last name, said she wouldn’t have been able to showcase her miniature nacho cheese machines, plates of gefilte fish or medical supplies (about $10) had a booth not dropped out at the last minute. She hoped her soft power would be her low pricing, in contrast to some other tables, where pieces can go for hundreds of dollars a pop.

If a collector wants something that’s one of a kind, it might sell out on the first day, said Becky Evert, 68, a customer who had traveled from Denver with friends for the event.

“Did I come with a budget? Yes,” she said. “Did I stay to it? No.” Of her seven years in attendance, it was the largest crowd she had seen.

Beth Pothen, 42, who runs Mountain Creek Miniatures and is a full-time postal worker, is a second-generation miniaturist, making items like Goth furniture and Christmas cookie trays (she got her start at a Girl Scouts craft fair). She drove from Spokane, Washington, for the convention and hoped to recoup the cost of travel and labor, and then some, she said. Individual tables cost $325, and some opt to have two at their booth, according to Bishop.




While there’s value in breadth like Pothen’s, others distinguish themselves with a niche. Kristin Castenschiold, 41, of Heartfelt Canines in Green Village, New Jersey, made a name for herself selling miniature dogs on Etsy — “I get some of the hair from a friend who is a pet groomer,” she said — and has since expanded to all kinds of furry friends, miniature light-up aquariums and trompe l’oeil cat litter boxes.

Margie Criner, 53, of Chicago’s Itty Bitty Mini Mart, makes miniatures as part of her full-time fine art practice (she’s currently on display at the traveling show “Small Is Beautiful”), but wanted a way to make her work more accessible. Her tiny items, which include translucent Jell-O and teensy records from the rock band Television, are inspired by things she had growing up.

Criner is a part of a new generation of miniature makers, following in the footsteps of artists like Laurie Simmons, bringing the genre out from the home into the gallery — with designs more modern and cheeky than the antiquarian selections that once came to define the miniature world.

While it can be hard to stand out, everyone described the world of miniature selling and buying as quite collaborative and joyful, and there are many reasons people have become obsessive collectors and makers.

Anita Hobson, 63, a customer from Belleville, Illinois, said she came to the Tom Bishop convention with her husband to find items to add to the dollhouse her mother had started before she died. She became giddy over a working clothespin sold by Maria Fowler from the Little Dollhouse Co. in Toronto.

Morgan Cressey, 30, was one of the convention’s youngest adult customers in attendance. Cressey, who works as a nanny and server, had traveled from Spokane alone that weekend to stock up for her collection, a pastime she became fascinated by through her mother’s childhood miniatures.

A sense of community is a huge draw for people. Veronica Morales of Vero’s Miniatures said the show was her big chance to sell in the United States, which has a more robust miniatures market than Mexico City, where she is based. For Tom Bishop this year, Morales sold miniatures of an ofrenda, an altar for deceased relatives, and piñatas, among other items she makes with her family.

The current state of the miniatures scene is encouraging, according to Barbara Davis, 76, a retired principal who is the director of the school for the International Guild of Miniature Artisans, where many of the convention’s makers had either taken courses or taught.

“There’s a surge of people doing such a variety of creative miniatures,” said Davis, who attributed the change to younger and more diverse makers entering the industry. She added that the guild’s school, held in Castine, Maine, had its largest enrollment last year in its more than four decades.

Bishop said he had already signed an agreement for the next two years with the Marriott Chicago O’Hare. But it remains up in the air whether his children — Rachel, 48, and Rebecca, 51, neither of whom works in miniatures professionally — will want to take the reins when Bishop, 82, is no longer the showman.

In the meantime, Bishop is excited by the current state of affairs. As he prepared for this year’s convention, he recalled telling his wife that he hardly knows all the attendees anymore.

“They’re all new,” he said. “It’s growing again.”

One tiny item at a time.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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