Louisville Magazine

JUL 2012

Louisville Magazine is Louisville's city magazine, covering Louisville people, lifestyles, politics, sports, restaurants, entertainment and homes. Includes a monthly calendar of events.

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[ Culture ] Louisville Bazaar Keep By Kane Webb Courtenay Kunnecke (top) and Nathan Erickson are the masterminds behind the monthly Flea Off Market and its spin-off "pop-up" markets. T he temperature on the dashboard says 96 degrees. Lying car! It's 120 at least. In the shade. And there's hardly any shade. Te corner of Barret and Winter av- enues — aka, the parking lot of the Monkey Wrench — is a frying pan of baked black as- phalt. I think I can feel the rubber soles of my flip-flops sinking into the heat-softened tar. On this Saturday of Memorial Day week- end, the shotgun start of summer, the weather gods are feeling a little too frisky. But on this paved beach, close to a thousand people will turn out anyway to buy stuff. Also barter, trade, visit, eat, drink, network, listen to mu- sic and hang out. I'm at a "pop-up" flea market — an offshoot of the hit-from-the-start Flea Off Market, which began last November at the parking lot of Salvo Collective and is now held the second Saturday of each month near, not on (off, get it?), East Market Street downtown. More pre- cisely, the Flea Off Market is on Shelby Street between Market and Jefferson. Te pop-ups, so far, have been at the Nach- bar in Germantown and here. (Future pop- ups are in the works.) Wherever they've been, parades of treasure-hunters have followed. Courtenay Kunnecke, who coordinates the markets with Nathan Erickson, estimates that 3,000 people will flow through a typical Flea Off Market, which attract up to 80 vendors. (Some 30 vendors are at the pop-ups.) "Tere seems to be a need for this," says Kunnecke, 36, a native Louisvillian and pho- tographer who has seen the Flea Off Market turn into a full-time job. "Tere are a lot of makers and collectors and a lot of people who want an alternative to shopping at the big mall." I brought 10 bucks, not thinking I'd spend a dime of it. Just get quotes, atmosphere and leave before melting. But wait. Over here. Check it out. Hiding between an old li- brary copy of Tom Wolfe's Te Right Stuff and a celebrity biography. It's a first-edition hard- back of Te Dog of the South by Charles Portis, which is only the funniest book ever written in the English language, probably Swahili and [40] LOUISVILLE MAGAZINE 7.12 Bengali, too. First edition. Portis. Dog. Price: $5. A steal. Sure, I already have a half-dozen copies of Dog — if you're new to Portis, he's the author of True Grit, which is his second- or third-best book behind Dog and maybe Norwood — but not a first edition. I take it up to Harold Maier, the former owner of Twice Told Books who now sells his wares at these Flea Off and pop-up markets, manning his booth (actually, a cluster of tables and shelves) from a lawn chair, and ask him to hold it for me while I browse some more. "You found it!" Maier cries. He turns to the vendor next to him, Brett Ralph, a musician/poet/English professor who's selling records and books. He holds up the Portis. "It's already gone!" Tis starts a three-person Portis Cult con- versation about the author's under-appreci- ated oeuvre. It ends with a recommendation from Ralph: Warlock by Oakley Hall. True Grit-esque. I write down the title in my note- book, then hand my $10 bill to Maier, who pulls out a thick brick of folded bills and peels off change. Tis is the attraction of a good flea market — the buyer-seller experience is more personal than fiscal. Although the money ain't bad, either. Some vendors may make up to $600. What's most popular? "Records sell crazy good," says Erickson, 40, originally from St. Cloud, Minn. Vinyl, he means. Real records. "As Americans, we have so much accumu- lated stuff," Erickson continues. As an ex- ample, one vendor unloaded a box of vintage clothing, some of it from the 19th century, he'd bought at an estate sale. Tere's also the made-for-market items — from the funky like handmade "diseased hankies" (handker- chiefs featuring silkscreened diseases) to cus- tom jewelry, photographs and paintings. Musicians are invited to busk, or throw out a hat and play. You also might find the oc- casional juggler. Or a strongman hammering nails with his bare palm. (Not kidding.) D an and Janie Anthony are sitting in handmade wooden chairs under a siz- able canopy-umbrella, surrounded by all manner of custom-made bourbon-barrel crafts. Scratch that. Crafts sounds so, well, arts-'n'-crafts-y. Tese are cool. Both upscale — a wine rack made from a barrel plank that holds the bottle sideways via balance and gravity — and…ohsweetheaven, is that a table made out of a bourbon barrel with an ice cooler full of beer in the belly? How did you make this? Why? I blurt out. And before Dan can answer, his wife does: "He likes beer!" It goes for $300. Hmmm. How's business been? "Absolutely great," Dan says. "We had people here even before we were set up." You can make the case that America's fa- vorite pastime is shopping. Consumers R Us. And flea markets are nothing new. Dating back in this country at least to the Trade Days in Canton, Texas, circa early 19th century, why, they even pre-date malls! So what is it about this market in this town that's attracting these crowds? Erickson thinks it may be as simple an eco- nomic concept as supply and demand. Te market demanded a market like this, and Erickson and Kunnecke and a whole host of artists and booksellers and junktiquers and creative folk — makers, meet collectors — obliged. Hey, keep Louisville bazaar. When Erickson first landed in Louisville a decade ago, "I was shocked the city didn't re- ally have any vintage clothing stores." (Nitty Gritty, Readers' Choice winner of Best Vin- tage Clothing Store, as revealed in this very issue, was just gaining its footing.) "People like shopping and people love the bargain element of a flea market or vintage store," he says. "You never know what you're gonna find." As if on cue, a woman stops by to show Erickson and Kunnecke her purchase — tap shoes — noting that she didn't know she wanted/needed them until she saw them. How very American. As for me, I didn't realize how much I wanted/needed that bourbon-barrel table with the built-in beer cooler. I wonder: Will Dan Anthony take a free magazine subscrip- tion in trade? Photos by Nicholas Karem

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