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was born in 1929.
CURIOUS OBJECTS PODCAST ARCHIVES Some 250 of the choicest items from the firm’s inventory are being offered at Christie’s this October, and Dalva Brother’s principal David Dalva III, along with Christie’s specialist Jody Wilkie, talk with Ben about the crème de la crème: a secretary-cabinet resplendent with Florentine pietra dura figurative panels and gleaming ormolu mounts, possibly handled by noted marchand SAMMY DALATI, AUTHOR AT THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES To elaborate on the history of the suffragist movements, the Nantucket Historical Association has assembled a group of objects—paintings, literary paraphernalia, sculptures, and more—from those two successive waves of activism, which helped win the vote first for Blacks, then for women. JANE KIMBALL ARCHIVES In our current issue author Jane A. Kimball has written a survey of “Trench art of the Great War.” To complement this story, we asked artillery art expert and collector Raymond D. White to tell us more about this unique art.Tell us about your collection and how you got interested in trench/artillery art?There are currently 225 casings inmy collection.
TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART As with much of their history, even the name for the baskets is disputed. Nathan Taylor and Martha Wetherbee, co-authors of Legend of the Bushwhacker Basket, insist that “Bushwhacker” is the proper name—a way to reclaim a term that was applied to Hill families in a derogatory sense, akin to “hillbilly.” Barto recoils at this. OBJECT LESSON: HENRY CHAPMAN MERCER AND HIS MORAVIAN Insurance executives were far from the only people taking notice of Henry Chapman Mercer. At fifty-four years old, Mercer had been an archaeologist, a world traveler, a curator and museum director, a scholar, a successful businessman, an inventor, and was a potter ofgrowing prominence.
THE REAL STORY OF SLEEPY HOLLOW from The Magazine ANTIQUES, January/February 2012 |. Washington Irving could spin a tale so well that even Charles Dickens was in his thrall. “I don’t go upstairs to bed two nights out of the seven,” the English novelist said, “without taking Washington Irving under myarm.”*
PHILADELPHIA EMPIRE FURNITURE BY ANTOINE GABRIEL QUERVELLE By ROBERT C. SMITH; from The Magazine ANTIQUES, September 1964. French architects, painters, and craftsmen in the decorative arts played an important role in the development of the classical style in America during the second and third decodes of the nineteenth century. MOURNING BECOMES THEM: THE DEATH OF CHILDREN IN NINETEENTH The makers of other mourning pieces were far more immediately connected to their subjects. Sarah Kuhn of Boston, for instance, embroidered a magnificent memorial honoring her brother Daniel, who died at the age of seven in October 1810, in 1812 (Figs. 1, 1a). HOME - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUESCURRENT ISSUEARTLIVING WITH ANTIQUESEXHIBITIONSBOOKSPODCAST Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM H. GERDTS After Harvard, Bill served as Curator of Art at the Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences (now the Chrysler Museum of Art), a tenure, he wryly recalled, lasting a year and fifteen days before he became Curator of American Paintings and Sculpture at the Newark Museum (today the Newark Museum of Art), not far from Jersey City, New Jersey, where hewas born in 1929.
CURIOUS OBJECTS PODCAST ARCHIVES Some 250 of the choicest items from the firm’s inventory are being offered at Christie’s this October, and Dalva Brother’s principal David Dalva III, along with Christie’s specialist Jody Wilkie, talk with Ben about the crème de la crème: a secretary-cabinet resplendent with Florentine pietra dura figurative panels and gleaming ormolu mounts, possibly handled by noted marchand SAMMY DALATI, AUTHOR AT THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES To elaborate on the history of the suffragist movements, the Nantucket Historical Association has assembled a group of objects—paintings, literary paraphernalia, sculptures, and more—from those two successive waves of activism, which helped win the vote first for Blacks, then for women. JANE KIMBALL ARCHIVES In our current issue author Jane A. Kimball has written a survey of “Trench art of the Great War.” To complement this story, we asked artillery art expert and collector Raymond D. White to tell us more about this unique art.Tell us about your collection and how you got interested in trench/artillery art?There are currently 225 casings inmy collection.
TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART As with much of their history, even the name for the baskets is disputed. Nathan Taylor and Martha Wetherbee, co-authors of Legend of the Bushwhacker Basket, insist that “Bushwhacker” is the proper name—a way to reclaim a term that was applied to Hill families in a derogatory sense, akin to “hillbilly.” Barto recoils at this. OBJECT LESSON: HENRY CHAPMAN MERCER AND HIS MORAVIAN Insurance executives were far from the only people taking notice of Henry Chapman Mercer. At fifty-four years old, Mercer had been an archaeologist, a world traveler, a curator and museum director, a scholar, a successful businessman, an inventor, and was a potter ofgrowing prominence.
THE REAL STORY OF SLEEPY HOLLOW from The Magazine ANTIQUES, January/February 2012 |. Washington Irving could spin a tale so well that even Charles Dickens was in his thrall. “I don’t go upstairs to bed two nights out of the seven,” the English novelist said, “without taking Washington Irving under myarm.”*
PHILADELPHIA EMPIRE FURNITURE BY ANTOINE GABRIEL QUERVELLE By ROBERT C. SMITH; from The Magazine ANTIQUES, September 1964. French architects, painters, and craftsmen in the decorative arts played an important role in the development of the classical style in America during the second and third decodes of the nineteenth century. MOURNING BECOMES THEM: THE DEATH OF CHILDREN IN NINETEENTH The makers of other mourning pieces were far more immediately connected to their subjects. Sarah Kuhn of Boston, for instance, embroidered a magnificent memorial honoring her brother Daniel, who died at the age of seven in October 1810, in 1812 (Figs. 1, 1a). ABOUT US - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES About The Magazine ANTIQUES Since its inception in 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on the fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. Each bimonthly issue includes regular columns on current exhibitions, personalities in the field, notes on collecting, book reviews, and more. Meet the Team GREGORY CERIO Editor Gregory is the ON BOOKS: MAY/JUNE 2021 Marking Time: Objects, People, and Their Lives, 1500–1800 is an ambitious exploration of a subject that has rarely—perhaps never—been addressed by design historians: how was time experienced by Britons in the early modern period? In an entirely original and satisfying way, the authors seek the answer in a collection of nearly five hundred objects, most of which are relatively unassuming SUBMISSION GUIDELINES We are happy to consider proposals for articles, exhibition previews, and reports on new research in the fine and decorative arts. Please send us a short summary of your proposed submission, along with a representative sampling of the images that would illustrate it. OPENINGS AND CLOSINGS: JUNE 9 TO JUNE 15 Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio. We can probably agree that every American enjoys a good story, and we’ve spun tales for every taste. A genre that seems to resonate particularly is the supernatural—from the Headless Horseman to rumors of UFOs. THE SCULPTURE OF META VAUX WARRICK FULLER Maquette for Ethiopia (later known as Ethiopia Awakening) by Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller (1877–1968), 1921.Painted plaster; height 14 inches. Except as noted, the objects illustrated are in the Danforth Art Museum, Framingham State University, Massachusetts, gift of the MetaV. W. Fuller Trust.
ARTICLE - PAGE 72 OF 175 - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES The field of Roman topography has been blessed, over the past century, by such works as Platner and Ashby’s Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome from 1929 (which can now be found free online) as well as A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, completed by L. Richardson Jr. in 1992.But nothing, perhaps, can surpass the monumental six-volume Lexicon Topographicum Urbis Romae INTO THE FUTURE AT THE GEORGE READ II HOUSE SD: How did you get involved at the George Read II House? BG: I had been working for a couple of years as the curator of special collections for the Delaware Historical Society.It was an exciting time for people in the field to regroup and think about what would come next, and when the director of the Read House left for another position it seemed like a really interesting opportunity to take JOHN H. BRYAN II ARCHIVES A new publication explores a subject rarely addressed by design historians: how was time experienced by Britons in the early modernperiod?
MOURNING BECOMES THEM: THE DEATH OF CHILDREN IN NINETEENTH The makers of other mourning pieces were far more immediately connected to their subjects. Sarah Kuhn of Boston, for instance, embroidered a magnificent memorial honoring her brother Daniel, who died at the age of seven in October 1810, in 1812 (Figs. 1, 1a). ARTICLE - PAGE 67 OF 175 - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES Fig. 1. In Thomas Jayne’s decor for the living room of a house on Long Island, the organic, rounded shapes of the hanging lights and bottle collection play off the classical symmetry of the architecture by Kathryn McGraw Berry and Reade Street Studio. HOME - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUESCURRENT ISSUEARTLIVING WITH ANTIQUESEXHIBITIONSBOOKSPODCAST Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. CURIOUS OBJECTS: AN ARMCHAIR'S ASTONISHING PROVENANCE Curious Objects. : An Armchair’s Astonishing Provenance, with Tiffany Momon. This month, Ben speaks with Tiffany Momon, visiting assistant professor at Sewanee in Tennessee, where she assists with the Roberson Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation, and founder of the Black Craftspeople Digital Archive, a scholarly resource that IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM H. GERDTS In Memoriam: William H. Gerdts. Photograph of William H. Gerdts, 1959. Newark Museum of Art, Library and Archive. The great historian of American art William H. Gerdts died on April 14, 2020 at the age of 91 from complications of Covid-19 at White Plains Hospital in Westchester County, New York. Over a remarkable career spanning more than sixty TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART They are Taghkanic baskets, she insists, full stop. In a private sale, a Taghkanic basket with a round bottom, without significant damage, measuring ten inches across or more, can go for, Wetherbee and Barto agree, $1,200 or more. Minor damage that doesn’t impact the overall aesthetic reduces the value by 20 or 30 percent, as does a finish. OBJECT LESSON: ALL ABOUT THE WINDSOR CHAIR Object Lesson: All About the Windsor Chair. Continuous-arm, braced bow-back Windsor armchair, American, 1780–1800. RISD Museum, Providence, Rhode Island, gift of the estate of Mrs. Gustav Radeke. The work begins with the riving of logs. The wood is split by a series of wedges—rending the wood as one might tear open a dinner roll. SERVITUDE AND SPLENDOR: THE CRAFTSMEN AND CARVED FURNITURE May 2008 | By 1740 a colonial elite of well-to-do merchants and landowning planters had emerged in Virginia. With riches from tobacco production supplemented by investments in the profitable iron industry, they were fully prepared to engage artisans and to commission houses and furniture in the latest European styles that would express and solidify their economic status. INTO THE FUTURE AT THE GEORGE READ II HOUSE SD: How did you get involved at the George Read II House? BG: I had been working for a couple of years as the curator of special collections for the Delaware Historical Society.It was an exciting time for people in the field to regroup and think about what would come next, and when the director of the Read House left for another position it seemed like a really interesting opportunity to take THE REAL STORY OF SLEEPY HOLLOW The Real Story of Sleepy Hollow. from The Magazine ANTIQUES, January/February 2012 |. Washington Irving could spin a tale so well that even Charles Dickens was in his thrall. “I don’t go upstairs to bed two nights out of the seven,” the English novelist DEALER PROFILE: PETER TILLOU Peter Tillou, recipient of the Antiques Dealers of America 2013 Award of Merit. Peter Tillou pictured in a 1956 advertisement for his early gun-collecting business, which he started while in college. He still owns the pair of flintlock pistols. California mining sculpture,1875-1900.
JANE KIMBALL ARCHIVES Editorial Staff August 19, 2009. Art. In our current issue author Jane A. Kimball has written a survey of “Trench art of the Great War.”. To complement this story, we asked artillery art expert and collector Raymond D. White to tell us more about this unique art.Tell us about your collection and how you got interested in trench/artillery HOME - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUESCURRENT ISSUEARTLIVING WITH ANTIQUESEXHIBITIONSBOOKSPODCAST Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. CURIOUS OBJECTS: AN ARMCHAIR'S ASTONISHING PROVENANCE Curious Objects. : An Armchair’s Astonishing Provenance, with Tiffany Momon. This month, Ben speaks with Tiffany Momon, visiting assistant professor at Sewanee in Tennessee, where she assists with the Roberson Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation, and founder of the Black Craftspeople Digital Archive, a scholarly resource that IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM H. GERDTS In Memoriam: William H. Gerdts. Photograph of William H. Gerdts, 1959. Newark Museum of Art, Library and Archive. The great historian of American art William H. Gerdts died on April 14, 2020 at the age of 91 from complications of Covid-19 at White Plains Hospital in Westchester County, New York. Over a remarkable career spanning more than sixty TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART They are Taghkanic baskets, she insists, full stop. In a private sale, a Taghkanic basket with a round bottom, without significant damage, measuring ten inches across or more, can go for, Wetherbee and Barto agree, $1,200 or more. Minor damage that doesn’t impact the overall aesthetic reduces the value by 20 or 30 percent, as does a finish. OBJECT LESSON: ALL ABOUT THE WINDSOR CHAIR Object Lesson: All About the Windsor Chair. Continuous-arm, braced bow-back Windsor armchair, American, 1780–1800. RISD Museum, Providence, Rhode Island, gift of the estate of Mrs. Gustav Radeke. The work begins with the riving of logs. The wood is split by a series of wedges—rending the wood as one might tear open a dinner roll. SERVITUDE AND SPLENDOR: THE CRAFTSMEN AND CARVED FURNITURE May 2008 | By 1740 a colonial elite of well-to-do merchants and landowning planters had emerged in Virginia. With riches from tobacco production supplemented by investments in the profitable iron industry, they were fully prepared to engage artisans and to commission houses and furniture in the latest European styles that would express and solidify their economic status. INTO THE FUTURE AT THE GEORGE READ II HOUSE SD: How did you get involved at the George Read II House? BG: I had been working for a couple of years as the curator of special collections for the Delaware Historical Society.It was an exciting time for people in the field to regroup and think about what would come next, and when the director of the Read House left for another position it seemed like a really interesting opportunity to take THE REAL STORY OF SLEEPY HOLLOW The Real Story of Sleepy Hollow. from The Magazine ANTIQUES, January/February 2012 |. Washington Irving could spin a tale so well that even Charles Dickens was in his thrall. “I don’t go upstairs to bed two nights out of the seven,” the English novelist DEALER PROFILE: PETER TILLOU Peter Tillou, recipient of the Antiques Dealers of America 2013 Award of Merit. Peter Tillou pictured in a 1956 advertisement for his early gun-collecting business, which he started while in college. He still owns the pair of flintlock pistols. California mining sculpture,1875-1900.
JANE KIMBALL ARCHIVES Editorial Staff August 19, 2009. Art. In our current issue author Jane A. Kimball has written a survey of “Trench art of the Great War.”. To complement this story, we asked artillery art expert and collector Raymond D. White to tell us more about this unique art.Tell us about your collection and how you got interested in trench/artillery ABOUT US - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES About The Magazine ANTIQUES Since its inception in 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on the fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. Each bimonthly issue includes regular columns on current exhibitions, personalities in the field, notes on collecting, book reviews, and more. Meet the Team GREGORY CERIO Editor Gregory is the SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Submission guidelines. We are happy to consider proposals for articles, exhibition previews, and reports on new research in the fine and decorative arts. Please send us a short summary of your proposed submission, along with a representative sampling of the images that would illustrate it. EARLY AMERICAN GLASS Art. By Helen McKearin; from The Magazine ANTIQUES, August 1941. FOR MOST STUDENTS and collectors “early American glass” is a comprehensive term indifferent to the factors of time and foreign influence. It bridges the widening stream of American glass manufacture from colonial days well through the mid-nineteenth century, covering all theMARRIAGE À LA MODE
The parsing of the complex relationship between Monsieur and Madame Hector Guimard is but one element in a reappraisal of the architect-designer’s work and life that is the subject of a newly published book from Yale University Press, Hector Guimard: Art Nouveau to Modernism.A related exhibition, co-organized by the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in New York and the OPENINGS AND CLOSINGS: JUNE 9 TO JUNE 15 Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio. We can probably agree that every American enjoys a good story, and we’ve spun tales for every taste. A genre that seems to resonate particularly is the supernatural—from the Headless Horseman to rumors of UFOs. GROWING INTERESTS: EXPANDING THE COLLECTIONS AT THE ABBY Fig. 6. Appliquéd quilt by Dora Smith, DeKalb County, Georgia, probably 1901. Cottons; 73 by 67 inches. Although some AfricanAmerican women quilted in the dominant tradition, others reflected their African roots through bold colors, asymmetry, rhythmic variations, and a deemphasis on the quilting stitches in favor of the overall design. WANDERING EYE: "SCISSORS-MINERVA," A WARHOL MYSTERY, AND ART FOR THE PEOPLE. After a year of painstaking restoration, the Tiffany Studios stained glass Hartwell Memorial Window is now on view at its new home in the Art Institute of Chicago.This monumentally scaled century-old artwork is well worth a visit to the Windy City. HECTOR GUIMARD ARCHIVES Design styles from art nouveau to modernism informed the intertwined legacy of Hector and Adeline Guimard ADELINE OPPENHEIM GUIMARD ARCHIVES Design styles from art nouveau to modernism informed the intertwined legacy of Hector and Adeline Guimard ARTICLE - PAGE 67 OF 175 - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES Fig. 1. In Thomas Jayne’s decor for the living room of a house on Long Island, the organic, rounded shapes of the hanging lights and bottle collection play off the classical symmetry of the architecture by Kathryn McGraw Berry and Reade Street Studio. HOME - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUESCURRENT ISSUEARTLIVING WITH ANTIQUESEXHIBITIONSBOOKSPODCAST Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. CURIOUS OBJECTS: AN ARMCHAIR'S ASTONISHING PROVENANCE Curious Objects. : An Armchair’s Astonishing Provenance, with Tiffany Momon. This month, Ben speaks with Tiffany Momon, visiting assistant professor at Sewanee in Tennessee, where she assists with the Roberson Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation, and founder of the Black Craftspeople Digital Archive, a scholarly resource that IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM H. GERDTS In Memoriam: William H. Gerdts. Photograph of William H. Gerdts, 1959. Newark Museum of Art, Library and Archive. The great historian of American art William H. Gerdts died on April 14, 2020 at the age of 91 from complications of Covid-19 at White Plains Hospital in Westchester County, New York. Over a remarkable career spanning more than sixty TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART They are Taghkanic baskets, she insists, full stop. In a private sale, a Taghkanic basket with a round bottom, without significant damage, measuring ten inches across or more, can go for, Wetherbee and Barto agree, $1,200 or more. Minor damage that doesn’t impact the overall aesthetic reduces the value by 20 or 30 percent, as does a finish. OBJECT LESSON: ALL ABOUT THE WINDSOR CHAIR Object Lesson: All About the Windsor Chair. Continuous-arm, braced bow-back Windsor armchair, American, 1780–1800. RISD Museum, Providence, Rhode Island, gift of the estate of Mrs. Gustav Radeke. The work begins with the riving of logs. The wood is split by a series of wedges—rending the wood as one might tear open a dinner roll. SERVITUDE AND SPLENDOR: THE CRAFTSMEN AND CARVED FURNITURE May 2008 | By 1740 a colonial elite of well-to-do merchants and landowning planters had emerged in Virginia. With riches from tobacco production supplemented by investments in the profitable iron industry, they were fully prepared to engage artisans and to commission houses and furniture in the latest European styles that would express and solidify their economic status. INTO THE FUTURE AT THE GEORGE READ II HOUSE SD: How did you get involved at the George Read II House? BG: I had been working for a couple of years as the curator of special collections for the Delaware Historical Society.It was an exciting time for people in the field to regroup and think about what would come next, and when the director of the Read House left for another position it seemed like a really interesting opportunity to take THE REAL STORY OF SLEEPY HOLLOW The Real Story of Sleepy Hollow. from The Magazine ANTIQUES, January/February 2012 |. Washington Irving could spin a tale so well that even Charles Dickens was in his thrall. “I don’t go upstairs to bed two nights out of the seven,” the English novelist DEALER PROFILE: PETER TILLOU Peter Tillou, recipient of the Antiques Dealers of America 2013 Award of Merit. Peter Tillou pictured in a 1956 advertisement for his early gun-collecting business, which he started while in college. He still owns the pair of flintlock pistols. California mining sculpture,1875-1900.
JANE KIMBALL ARCHIVES Editorial Staff August 19, 2009. Art. In our current issue author Jane A. Kimball has written a survey of “Trench art of the Great War.”. To complement this story, we asked artillery art expert and collector Raymond D. White to tell us more about this unique art.Tell us about your collection and how you got interested in trench/artillery HOME - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUESCURRENT ISSUEARTLIVING WITH ANTIQUESEXHIBITIONSBOOKSPODCAST Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. CURIOUS OBJECTS: AN ARMCHAIR'S ASTONISHING PROVENANCE Curious Objects. : An Armchair’s Astonishing Provenance, with Tiffany Momon. This month, Ben speaks with Tiffany Momon, visiting assistant professor at Sewanee in Tennessee, where she assists with the Roberson Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation, and founder of the Black Craftspeople Digital Archive, a scholarly resource that IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM H. GERDTS In Memoriam: William H. Gerdts. Photograph of William H. Gerdts, 1959. Newark Museum of Art, Library and Archive. The great historian of American art William H. Gerdts died on April 14, 2020 at the age of 91 from complications of Covid-19 at White Plains Hospital in Westchester County, New York. Over a remarkable career spanning more than sixty TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART They are Taghkanic baskets, she insists, full stop. In a private sale, a Taghkanic basket with a round bottom, without significant damage, measuring ten inches across or more, can go for, Wetherbee and Barto agree, $1,200 or more. Minor damage that doesn’t impact the overall aesthetic reduces the value by 20 or 30 percent, as does a finish. OBJECT LESSON: ALL ABOUT THE WINDSOR CHAIR Object Lesson: All About the Windsor Chair. Continuous-arm, braced bow-back Windsor armchair, American, 1780–1800. RISD Museum, Providence, Rhode Island, gift of the estate of Mrs. Gustav Radeke. The work begins with the riving of logs. The wood is split by a series of wedges—rending the wood as one might tear open a dinner roll. SERVITUDE AND SPLENDOR: THE CRAFTSMEN AND CARVED FURNITURE May 2008 | By 1740 a colonial elite of well-to-do merchants and landowning planters had emerged in Virginia. With riches from tobacco production supplemented by investments in the profitable iron industry, they were fully prepared to engage artisans and to commission houses and furniture in the latest European styles that would express and solidify their economic status. INTO THE FUTURE AT THE GEORGE READ II HOUSE SD: How did you get involved at the George Read II House? BG: I had been working for a couple of years as the curator of special collections for the Delaware Historical Society.It was an exciting time for people in the field to regroup and think about what would come next, and when the director of the Read House left for another position it seemed like a really interesting opportunity to take THE REAL STORY OF SLEEPY HOLLOW The Real Story of Sleepy Hollow. from The Magazine ANTIQUES, January/February 2012 |. Washington Irving could spin a tale so well that even Charles Dickens was in his thrall. “I don’t go upstairs to bed two nights out of the seven,” the English novelist DEALER PROFILE: PETER TILLOU Peter Tillou, recipient of the Antiques Dealers of America 2013 Award of Merit. Peter Tillou pictured in a 1956 advertisement for his early gun-collecting business, which he started while in college. He still owns the pair of flintlock pistols. California mining sculpture,1875-1900.
JANE KIMBALL ARCHIVES Editorial Staff August 19, 2009. Art. In our current issue author Jane A. Kimball has written a survey of “Trench art of the Great War.”. To complement this story, we asked artillery art expert and collector Raymond D. White to tell us more about this unique art.Tell us about your collection and how you got interested in trench/artillery ABOUT US - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES About The Magazine ANTIQUES Since its inception in 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on the fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. Each bimonthly issue includes regular columns on current exhibitions, personalities in the field, notes on collecting, book reviews, and more. Meet the Team GREGORY CERIO Editor Gregory is the SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Submission guidelines. We are happy to consider proposals for articles, exhibition previews, and reports on new research in the fine and decorative arts. Please send us a short summary of your proposed submission, along with a representative sampling of the images that would illustrate it. EARLY AMERICAN GLASS Art. By Helen McKearin; from The Magazine ANTIQUES, August 1941. FOR MOST STUDENTS and collectors “early American glass” is a comprehensive term indifferent to the factors of time and foreign influence. It bridges the widening stream of American glass manufacture from colonial days well through the mid-nineteenth century, covering all theMARRIAGE À LA MODE
The parsing of the complex relationship between Monsieur and Madame Hector Guimard is but one element in a reappraisal of the architect-designer’s work and life that is the subject of a newly published book from Yale University Press, Hector Guimard: Art Nouveau to Modernism.A related exhibition, co-organized by the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in New York and the OPENINGS AND CLOSINGS: JUNE 9 TO JUNE 15 Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio. We can probably agree that every American enjoys a good story, and we’ve spun tales for every taste. A genre that seems to resonate particularly is the supernatural—from the Headless Horseman to rumors of UFOs. GROWING INTERESTS: EXPANDING THE COLLECTIONS AT THE ABBY Fig. 6. Appliquéd quilt by Dora Smith, DeKalb County, Georgia, probably 1901. Cottons; 73 by 67 inches. Although some AfricanAmerican women quilted in the dominant tradition, others reflected their African roots through bold colors, asymmetry, rhythmic variations, and a deemphasis on the quilting stitches in favor of the overall design. WANDERING EYE: "SCISSORS-MINERVA," A WARHOL MYSTERY, AND ART FOR THE PEOPLE. After a year of painstaking restoration, the Tiffany Studios stained glass Hartwell Memorial Window is now on view at its new home in the Art Institute of Chicago.This monumentally scaled century-old artwork is well worth a visit to the Windy City. HECTOR GUIMARD ARCHIVES Design styles from art nouveau to modernism informed the intertwined legacy of Hector and Adeline Guimard ADELINE OPPENHEIM GUIMARD ARCHIVES Design styles from art nouveau to modernism informed the intertwined legacy of Hector and Adeline Guimard ARTICLE - PAGE 67 OF 175 - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES Fig. 1. In Thomas Jayne’s decor for the living room of a house on Long Island, the organic, rounded shapes of the hanging lights and bottle collection play off the classical symmetry of the architecture by Kathryn McGraw Berry and Reade Street Studio. HOME - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUESCURRENT ISSUEARTLIVING WITH ANTIQUESEXHIBITIONSBOOKSPODCAST Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. ABOUT US - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES About The Magazine ANTIQUES Since its inception in 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on the fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. Each bimonthly issue includes regular columns on current exhibitions, personalities in the field, notes on collecting, book reviews, and more. Meet the Team GREGORY CERIO Editor Gregory is theCURIOUS OBJECTS
Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been the leader in fine and decorative arts scholarship. We’re certain that you’ll enjoy this twenty-first century means of telling stories about the things we collect and cherish. A new episode of Curious Objects is available each month on iTunes, Spotify, SoundCloud, and other podcastplatforms.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Submission guidelines. We are happy to consider proposals for articles, exhibition previews, and reports on new research in the fine and decorative arts. Please send us a short summary of your proposed submission, along with a representative sampling of the images that would illustrate it. CURIOUS OBJECTS: AN ARMCHAIR'S ASTONISHING PROVENANCE Curious Objects. : An Armchair’s Astonishing Provenance, with Tiffany Momon. This month, Ben speaks with Tiffany Momon, visiting assistant professor at Sewanee in Tennessee, where she assists with the Roberson Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation, and founder of the Black Craftspeople Digital Archive, a scholarly resource that IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM H. GERDTS In Memoriam: William H. Gerdts. Photograph of William H. Gerdts, 1959. Newark Museum of Art, Library and Archive. The great historian of American art William H. Gerdts died on April 14, 2020 at the age of 91 from complications of Covid-19 at White Plains Hospital in Westchester County, New York. Over a remarkable career spanning more than sixty EARLY PITTSBURGH GLASS-HOUSES (FROM OUR ARCHIVES) In 1797, the Pittsburgh partners secured Eichbaum’s services and erected the first successful glass-house in Pittsburgh. This pioneer establishment was located on the south side of the Monongahela River, nearly opposite the mouth of the Allegheny. It was a frame building and accommodated an eight-pot furnace.EAST MEETS WEST
Fig. 1. The Fog Warning by Winslow Homer (1836–1910), 1885. Signed and dated “Winslow Homer 1885” at lower left. Oil on canvas, 30 ¼ by 48 ½ inches. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, anonymous gift with credit to the Otis Norcross Fund. “Winslow Homer is an important figure in the annals of American art, and the period in which he lived TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART They are Taghkanic baskets, she insists, full stop. In a private sale, a Taghkanic basket with a round bottom, without significant damage, measuring ten inches across or more, can go for, Wetherbee and Barto agree, $1,200 or more. Minor damage that doesn’t impact the overall aesthetic reduces the value by 20 or 30 percent, as does a finish. INTO THE FUTURE AT THE GEORGE READ II HOUSE SD: How did you get involved at the George Read II House? BG: I had been working for a couple of years as the curator of special collections for the Delaware Historical Society.It was an exciting time for people in the field to regroup and think about what would come next, and when the director of the Read House left for another position it seemed like a really interesting opportunity to take HOME - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUESCURRENT ISSUEARTLIVING WITH ANTIQUESEXHIBITIONSBOOKSPODCAST Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. ABOUT US - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES About The Magazine ANTIQUES Since its inception in 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been America’s premier publication on the fine and decorative arts, architecture, preservation, and interior design. Each bimonthly issue includes regular columns on current exhibitions, personalities in the field, notes on collecting, book reviews, and more. Meet the Team GREGORY CERIO Editor Gregory is theCURIOUS OBJECTS
Since 1922, The Magazine ANTIQUES has been the leader in fine and decorative arts scholarship. We’re certain that you’ll enjoy this twenty-first century means of telling stories about the things we collect and cherish. A new episode of Curious Objects is available each month on iTunes, Spotify, SoundCloud, and other podcastplatforms.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Submission guidelines. We are happy to consider proposals for articles, exhibition previews, and reports on new research in the fine and decorative arts. Please send us a short summary of your proposed submission, along with a representative sampling of the images that would illustrate it. CURIOUS OBJECTS: AN ARMCHAIR'S ASTONISHING PROVENANCE Curious Objects. : An Armchair’s Astonishing Provenance, with Tiffany Momon. This month, Ben speaks with Tiffany Momon, visiting assistant professor at Sewanee in Tennessee, where she assists with the Roberson Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation, and founder of the Black Craftspeople Digital Archive, a scholarly resource that IN MEMORIAM: WILLIAM H. GERDTS In Memoriam: William H. Gerdts. Photograph of William H. Gerdts, 1959. Newark Museum of Art, Library and Archive. The great historian of American art William H. Gerdts died on April 14, 2020 at the age of 91 from complications of Covid-19 at White Plains Hospital in Westchester County, New York. Over a remarkable career spanning more than sixty EARLY PITTSBURGH GLASS-HOUSES (FROM OUR ARCHIVES) In 1797, the Pittsburgh partners secured Eichbaum’s services and erected the first successful glass-house in Pittsburgh. This pioneer establishment was located on the south side of the Monongahela River, nearly opposite the mouth of the Allegheny. It was a frame building and accommodated an eight-pot furnace.EAST MEETS WEST
Fig. 1. The Fog Warning by Winslow Homer (1836–1910), 1885. Signed and dated “Winslow Homer 1885” at lower left. Oil on canvas, 30 ¼ by 48 ½ inches. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, anonymous gift with credit to the Otis Norcross Fund. “Winslow Homer is an important figure in the annals of American art, and the period in which he lived TAGHKANIC BASKETS: FOLK ART They are Taghkanic baskets, she insists, full stop. In a private sale, a Taghkanic basket with a round bottom, without significant damage, measuring ten inches across or more, can go for, Wetherbee and Barto agree, $1,200 or more. Minor damage that doesn’t impact the overall aesthetic reduces the value by 20 or 30 percent, as does a finish. INTO THE FUTURE AT THE GEORGE READ II HOUSE SD: How did you get involved at the George Read II House? BG: I had been working for a couple of years as the curator of special collections for the Delaware Historical Society.It was an exciting time for people in the field to regroup and think about what would come next, and when the director of the Read House left for another position it seemed like a really interesting opportunity to take CONTACT US - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES Contact Us SubscriptionClick here to subscribe online Domestic - 800.925.9271International - 515.243.3273Email: tmacustserv@cdsfulfillment.com Editorial inquiriesFor submission guidelines or questions about our articles, please contact the editorial department at tmaedit@themagazineantiques.comGregory Cerio, Editor Eleanor Gustafson, Consulting EditorSammyMARRIAGE À LA MODE
1 day ago · The parsing of the complex relationship between Monsieur and Madame Hector Guimard is but one element in a reappraisal of the architect-designer’s work and life that is the subject of a newly published book from Yale University Press, Hector Guimard: Art Nouveau to Modernism.A related exhibition, co-organized by the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in New York and the EARLY AMERICAN GLASS Art. By Helen McKearin; from The Magazine ANTIQUES, August 1941. FOR MOST STUDENTS and collectors “early American glass” is a comprehensive term indifferent to the factors of time and foreign influence. It bridges the widening stream of American glass manufacture from colonial days well through the mid-nineteenth century, covering all the WANDERING EYE: "SCISSORS-MINERVA," A WARHOL MYSTERY, AND ART FOR THE PEOPLE. After a year of painstaking restoration, the Tiffany Studios stained glass Hartwell Memorial Window is now on view at its new home in the Art Institute of Chicago.This monumentally scaled century-old artwork is well worth a visit to the Windy City. BLACK HISTORY ARCHIVES Researchers in Williamsburg identify a building that housed an eighteenth-century school for black children HECTOR GUIMARD ARCHIVES Design styles from art nouveau to modernism informed the intertwined legacy of Hector and Adeline Guimard ADELINE OPPENHEIM GUIMARD ARCHIVES Design styles from art nouveau to modernism informed the intertwined legacy of Hector and Adeline Guimard BRAY SCHOOL ARCHIVES Researchers in Williamsburg identify a building that housed an eighteenth-century school for black children ARTICLE - PAGE 68 OF 175 - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES Since its founding in 1963, the Portland Japanese Garden has maintained a special relationship with Japan. Lumber from Oregon forests was exported to rebuild the country during the postwar years, and many Japanese corporations have maintained a presence in Portland. ARTICLE - PAGE 70 OF 175 - THE MAGAZINE ANTIQUES Benjamin Miller, host of The Magazine ANTIQUES’ podcast Curious Objects, interviewed Michael Pashby of Michael Pashby Antiques about a Windsor chair with interesting history. Made about 1790 by Gillows, it’s composed primarily of ash and has a sycamore seat. In this excerpt, Miller and Pashby discuss how the Internet has affected collectors and buyers.__ __
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------------------------- ------------------------- _Wandering Eye_: “Scissors-Minerva,” a Warhol mystery, and more - What the editors of The Magazine ANTIQUES are looking at this week _New light_: Hidden in Plain Sight - Researchers in Williamsburg identify a building that housed an eighteenth-century school for black children _Openings and Closings_: June 2 to June 8 - Check out what's going on at museums at home and abroad! _Curious Objects_: Chatting about Museum Health and Georgian Glass - A look at current and upcoming episodes of our podcast _Wandering Eye_: A Stitch in Time - What the editors of The Magazine ANTIQUES are looking at this week _From the Archives_: OMG Indeed! - Follow Susan Talbott's journey through a newley renovated Wadsworthfive years ago
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This week we are featuring the collections of the This copper alloy ewer was made in England in the Researchers in Williamsburg identify a building th Jacopo Ligozzi, Pietre dure tabletop, c. 1625. A r Joseph Mahoon, double harpsichord, made in London Check out the link in bio to see what's going on t Moritz Mansfield, Table Top Still Life, 1887. This Miniature chest in rosewood, Portugal, c. 1780. Lo A tool of the trade: Ansel Adams’ personal Vest Follow us on InstagramPOPULAR TODAY|
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