Many shoppers, fewer vendors at craft fair

Many shoppers, fewer vendors at craft fair
Dennis Baccheschi of Torrington has been showing and selling his paintings at the annual Sharon craft fair (held this year on Aug. 7) since 1968. 
Photo by Leila Hawken

SHARON — Perfect weather and a busy schedule of events on the Sharon Green brought out plenty of visitors for the 62nd annual Sharon on the Green Arts and Crafts Fair on Saturday, Aug. 7. But while visitor attendance was strong, vendor participation was halved, with about 40 participants, compared to the peak of 80.

The fair was not held in 2020, because of the COVID-19 quarantine. Longtime fair organizer Matt Andrulis-Mette said the loss of momentum from last year is partly to blame for the low participation rate from vendors. He also said that craft fairs in general are facing waning interest.

The fair is a fundraiser for the Sharon Recreation Department; Andrulis-Mette has been director of the department for decades. Funds raised at the fair this year will go toward senior programs and activities for teens, he said. 

Sixty-two years ago, the craft fair was created as the Clothesline Festival. As many as 170 artists would compete for a limited number of vendor spaces; they were chosen by a panel of judges.

Portrait artist Dennis Baccheschi of Torrington said the first art show he ever participated in was in Sharon 54 years ago, when it was still the Clothesline Festival. He recalled that the fair back then was connected to a gallery that was associated with the theater.

It was mostly painters who participated. Each would set up a display and choose one painting to present to a panel of judges that was convened at the theater. Ribbons and a small amount of cash were the top prizes.

“It was my first year out of art school in Boston, in 1968.” It was at the Sharon fair that he sold his first painting for $18. 

His paintings can now be found throughout the U.S. and Canada. Baccheschi said has probably attended 30 of the ensuing 55 years of fairs, but at 73, he is thinking that this year’s show may have been his last appearance.

These days, in addition to paintings, almost any type of craft can be found at the fair, from birdhouses to quilts to doll clothes. Blacksmith Will Trowbridge once again set up his equipment on the Green and demonstrated how to work sticks of iron into useful and decorative objects. 

Community organizations also came out with informational booths.

The Food of Life Pantry at St. Thomas Episcopal Church had a table displaying preserves and other edible delicacies. Co-warden Samantha Lucas and the Rev. A.J. Stack said that in the past year they have distributed enough food for 200,000 meals; the volume has tripled during the pandemic.

Stack observed that when the pandemic struck people could easily have stepped back. Instead, he said, the first question they asked was how they could help.

There were also activities that day at the Historical Society and at Sharon’s library.

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