Antique bargains in Buenos Aires
Brian Day
If you collect antiques or just love fine old objects, Buenos Aires
is one huge, magical estate sale. The world’s ninth largest city
encompasses 75 square miles around a core called the District
Federal. Buenos Aires today is also one of the best kept secrets for
inexpensive, sophisticated urban adventure.
Currency, unlinked from the U.S. dollar in 2002, has dropped from
3.5 Argentine pesos per dollar to about 2.75 per dollar. Regardless,
American greenbacks still wield clout in this lively, cultured
metropolis once called the “Paris of the South.”
Buenos Aires was an immensely rich and powerful immigrant
destination in the 19th and 20th centuries. Wealthy families imported
high-end furniture, clothing, decorative objects, jewelry and more by
the boatload from Europe. Argentina’s on-again, off-again economic
woes have forced many portenos, or people of the port, to sell
cherished family heirlooms. There’s a flood of beautiful old items
available, and bargains are routine if you know where to shop.
The San Telmo district has a famous open-air Sunday antique fair
at Plaza Dorrego and many surrounding stores are crammed with unusual
old merchandise. The fair is fun, but prices are high and the tiny
square crowded. Browse the outdoor stalls and enjoy the street
performers, but you’ll need to explore the city for better deals.
Defensa Street bisects Plaza Dorrego and, away from the tourist
fair, prices drop. San Telmo is rich with historical architecture and
some majestic, cavernous old buildings are subdivided into
collectives. Many shops have specialties: dolls, French furniture,
old toys, vintage linens, brass and bronze decorative hardware,
posters, period lighting fixtures, ornate picture frames and antique
clocks.
Art Nouveau and Art Deco abounds. I saw beautiful WMF sterling and
plate vases, trays, boxes and mirrors. There’s art glass by top-notch
makers -- Daum Nancy, Galle, Loetz, Sabino, Lalique and more.
Victorian jewelry is readily available too. As old families vacate
their enormous apartments, good 18th and 19th century furniture often
comes to market for the first time in generations.
Fascinating stories abound. A hundred years ago, prominent local
families ordering from the city’s best florists got their
arrangements delivered in “free” hand-blown Galle cameo vases. The
flowers have long since crumbled to dust, but the vases can be worth
thousands of dollars.
Buenos Aires is sprawling and quite dense, and luckily, cheap cabs
are abundant. There are extensive bus and subway systems, but for a
couple of dollars, the yellow-topped taxis will take you virtually
anywhere.
After a day of hard bargaining, cafe society beckons. One of the
oldest is Cafe Tortoni, where swoony tango singer Maria Volante holds
audiences enthralled Thursday evenings. At Cafe La Biela in Recoleta,
the rich, powerful and famous crowd table-hops under faded photos of
vintage racing cars and brave drivers from the past.
Nightlife bubbles and swirls everywhere; the chic crowd dines at
11 p.m. or later. There’s haute cuisine in the swanky Recoleta and
trendy Palermo Viejo areas and simple but delicious fare at working
class San Telmo cafes. Prices are right: $7 U.S. buys a thick,
flavorful steak dinner of grass-fed beef with side dishes, a
half-liter of decent local wine, dessert and coffee.
Getting your treasures home can be straightforward. Small items
should be carefully packed in bubble wrap and hand-carried or checked
in luggage. U.S. Customs allows $800 free of duty, but I brought back
even more with no problems.
Prices can be so compelling that it’s often worth the extra cost
-- and wait -- for a special find. If you fall in love with a massive
Gothic Revival sideboard or other large piece of antique furniture,
accommodating dealers will crate and ship in their monthly container
loads. Most containers go by freighter to Miami and then truck to
other U.S. destinations. Dealers handle local paperwork, including
customs and export forms, but you’ll have to take care of the U.S.
side. For a small surcharge, some dealers will also ship items you
find yourself.
International buyers are omnipresent in Buenos Aires since the
latest currency devaluation, but bargains can be found with a little
investigation. For such a large, sophisticated city, Buenos Aires
offers a compelling melange of value, culture, night life, food and
fun.
* BRIAN DAY is a Corona del Mar resident.
* TRAVEL TALES runs on Thursdays. Have you, or someone you know,
gone on an interesting vacation? Tell us about your adventures in
about 400 words, accompanied by a couple of photos to choose from
that do not have the Daily Pilot in them, and send them to Travel
Tales, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; or e-mail
[email protected]; or fax to (949) 646-4170.
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