Category Archives: Ceramics

Nashville Antiques Week Starts Today

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Music City, TN is alive with dealers showing Country Americana. Nashville Antiques Week opens today.

Part of the excitement in Nashville this year is the premier of the Vintage Marketplace at the Tailgate-Music Valley show. On the cutting edge of vintage, art, design, and antiques, show promoter Jon Jenkins says this group of exhibitors are inspiring the next generation of enthusiasts with their unique style, energy, and determination to share what they love. Vintage Lamps in Nashville

The Vintage Marketplace is a new feature of the long running Tailgate-Music Valley Antiques Show, a nationally established event with a reputation as one of America’s best shows. The Vintage Marketplace will help move Tailgate-Music Valley into their new home, the Hendersonville Expo Center with an exciting inaugural event.

See some of the dealers exhibiting at the Vintage Marketplace here. Don’t miss early bird buying $40- 9 a.m. to noon-February 2 (includes readmission for entire show).

South Street Seaport Museum Re-Opens Today

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The South Street Seaport Museum is your best today.  It reopens with sixteen galleries offering a lively interweaving of the city and the sea through photography, video, historic artifacts, and contemporary design. There’s an exhibit commemorating Occupy Wall Street, as well.

Last year, when  the Seaport Museum fell on hard times, the Museum of the City of New York came to its rescue.  Like many belegured museums, South Street needs your support and will gladly accept a donation of any size. You can  click here to become a member or click here to make a general donation. If you prefer snail mail, send a check Development Department, South Street Seaport Museum, 12 Fulton Street, New York NY 10038.

But the truly  best way to support the museum is to pay it a visit. The weather’s OK today, so the setting on the East River, with the four-masted barque Peking in sight and Brooklyn across the way, should make a great outing.  Check it out. Enjoy it. Support the South Street Seaport Museum.

12 Fulton Street, New York City 10038
212.748.8600 | info@seany.org
Open Wednesday-Sunday 10-6
Subway: 2, 3, 4, 5, A, C, J, M, or Z to Fulton Street station;
walk east along Fulton Street
Bus: M15 to Fulton Street
$5 admission (children under age 9 free

Folk Tales Opens at New York Design Center

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For those of you who haven’t found exactly what you’re looking for among American antiques and art at auction and at the antiques shows last weekend, you now have until the end of February to tap the selected inventory of five of the nation’s most elite Americana dealers.

Folk Tales: Bringing Folk Art Home,  at the New York Design Center on Lexington Avenue, kicked off with preview that was packed.  They came and discovered museum quality quilts, flags, game boards, weather vanes, hand made Grenfel rugs, carved wooden figures, paintings and furniture. To cite this selling exhibition as outstanding is to understate its impact.

Unlike a regular antiques show, Folk Tales is curated by five of the country’s leading Americana specialists.  They are “A Bird in Hand,” “Ames Gallery,” ” Jeff R. Bridgman American Antiques,”  “Just Folk” and Judith and James Milne’s “At Home Antiques.” (Mrs. Milne is shown in our featured image.)

How they all packed-out from Antiques at the Armory and set up again in a matter of days is a mystery to me. But the feeling among the group is that this show is well worth the effort.  Not only does the show have the sponsorship of 1stDibs.com, where each of the dealers has a micro-site, it will run for six weeks.

A Grenfell Rug, made in Newfoundland of silk stockings. On view at "A Bird in Hand"

You can go, look, touch, and ask questions. (And if you care to broaden your perspective, the 10th floor of the Design Center has  many more, though mostly modern, exhibits to puruse.)

My personal suggestion, be sure to allow at least a morning or afternoon for this show. Although you won’t find an overwhelming number of items, you will probably find something you can’t live without. And if you don’t, chances are great that the dealers all have something special tucked away that will blow your mind.

American Flag, 34 stars

"Great Star" flag at Jeff Bridgman Antiques, c. 1861- 65, with 34 stars in a star pattern

Folk Tales is at the New York Design Center, 200 Lexington Avenue (aat 33rd Street), on the 10th floor. Hours are Momday – Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.  The show is free and open to the public.

 

 

 

 

Ceramics Fair

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Cruising the Ceramics Fair yesterday, one of the longest running January antiques shows,  one thing was immediately clear. Porcelain is a living art.

In fact none other than Ai Wi Wi, the Chinese artist who changed the economics of an entire porcelain making village by commissioning thousands of  porcelain sunflower seeds for his installations, is on the cover of the “Ceramics in America.” The annual hardcover is published by the steward of porcelain, the Chipstone Foundation.  If that’s putting the Present in Porcelain, what could?

The hand of the artist, in fact, is visible in all the sculptural and decorative items for sale.  Whether old or contemporary, these works invite you to ask about the process.

One of the most notable exhibits is “Ceramic Art of Post 1945 Germany.” Set in the aftermath of World War II, a group of ceramic artists set out to make fresh beginnings. The highly geometric pieces, most with glazes of grays and earth tones, twist, twirl, rise, round, and reach out in all directions. The sculptural over rides the practical and from an aesthetic point of view, as you’ll see from the Beate Kuhn item in our featured image, they are visually stimulating.

At Katherine Houston Porcelain, Boston, MA, the artist herself was very much in

Katherine Houston with her "Big Apple" sculpture

evidence. Having once worked with Neiman Marcus, Houston fired up her own studio and now creates porcelains – real, hard paste porcelain, not pottery. Her large pumpkin, commissioned by Barbara Bush, decorates the White House.

Houston’s process is not a slap dash one. It begins with hand formed clay, moves on to a firing – bisque – at about 1500 to 1800 degrees,  goes back into her hands for a clear glaze and another firing at 2500 degrees, which produces something like blanc d’chine. Overglazes in color are then fired at a lower temperature – each color gets its own firing – and if she uses gold, it’s fired three more times.

Clarice Cliff Art Deco Pottery at Cara Antiques

A Cara Antiques, from Langhorne, PA, the colorful Art Deco ceramics of Clarice Cliffe, active in the 1930s- 1940s, make you want to take them all home. The oranges, blues and greens on these pieces are vibrant, rare treats for the eye.

Best advice on this snowy day: head on over to the Ceramics Fair at Bohemian National Hall on East 73rd Street, and bask in the beauty of ceramics.

And if you’re still not convinced that porcelain is a living art, , maybe this picture of Ai Wi Wi, arguably

Ai Wi Wi and handfu of porcelain sunflower seeds on cover of 2012 Chipstone Society's Ceramics in America

the best known contemporary artist today, will convince you.

The NY Ceramics Fair opens at 11 a.m. and runs through tomorrow, Sunday, till 4:00.  (Click the link for directions and details on discount parking.) Bohemian National Hall has a delightful cafe where you can snack on sandwiches made on “fried bread.” The prices are right. The menu perfect for a day like today. And, once inside, there’s no reason to leave until you have purchased the piece that’s perfect for your apartment.

Metro Show Opens

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I made my way to the Metro Show opening last night and it looked great. The dealers were psyched, as well they should have been because within minutes of the official opening the line went through the lobby to the front door of the Metropolitan Pavilion. Once inside, wall to wall people were having a good time. Many faces were familiar and it seemed that everyone knew everyone else. Collectors. Decorators. Museum Curators.

The theme of the show is “Breaking Boundaries,” and the mix of antique and modern pretty much reflected that.

Scott Chalfant - Phladelphia Desk and Modern Painting

The HL Chalfant booth was a striking mix of traditional and modern. An antique Philadelphia desk juxtaposed with a Nakashima cocktail table.

At David Rudd’s American Decorative Arts, a mission style sofa sported leather upholstery samples, making it clear that it’s easy to fit old into the new scenario.

Throughout, the look was crisp, clean and blended. If this isn’t a statement about the evolving aesthetic, I don’t know what is.