Category Archives: Furniture

The Art of Seating in America – a Traveling Exhibit

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Chairs have been a favorite, not to mention necessary, form of design ever since they replaced benches. If you have a fascination with them, you will want to take in the “Art of Seating,” currently at the Columbia, S.C. Museum of Art.

Forty-four American seats from the collection of Diane DeMell Jacobsen are on view.  Jacobsen collected the chairs with an eye toward the domestic and international influences on domestic chair design. You will be amazed at the sculptural qualities of some possess. Even more insightful

Grove Park Arts and Crafts Conference Coming Up

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If you love Arts & Crafts and never been to the Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC, now is the time.

First of all, the Grove Park Inn commissioned its furniture directly from Roycroft. So its trove of furniture and decorative arts  is unrivaled.

Second, February 17-19 are the dates of the 25th National Grove Park Inn Arts & Crafts Conference.

 

This conference is “the most important weekend of the year for Arts & Crafts collectors,” says the New York Times.

Besides the Great Hall Displays of Mr. Stickley’s Metalwork (Craftsman Frams Museum), American Art Pottery: A Regional Approach (A.A.P.A.) and Arts & Crafts Bookends curated by Steve and Mary Ann Vorhees, there are daily demonstrations.

Demos include

  • Arts & Crafts Furniture: How to Buy, Repair & Maintain
  • Arts & Crafts Leather: How to Maintain or Replace
  • Arts & Crafts Hardware: By Hammer & Hand
  • How to Make Keyed Tenon and Mitered Mullion Joints

There are also optional hands-on workshops on stains, dyes and finishes, decorating your own Arts & Crafts Tile and Block Printmaking.

Add to that landscape design, stenciling, kitchen design, decorating your own vase and basic Arts & Crafts embroidery.

Grove Park Inn is offering packages. For details, visit www.Arts-CraftsConference.com

 

White Gloves, Skate Boards & Beer Can Tabs As Art At Outsider Art Fair

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The Outsider Art Fair is not an antiques show. It is an art show that displays works by artists that are anything but academic. Outsider opened last night with a salsa band and champagne toast to Sanford Smith, who has nurtured this genre since the fair’s inception 20 years ago.

The art here comes in all shapes and sizes, from the tiniest intricately carved peach stones (see yesterday’s blog) to wall sized mixed media pieces. All, remember, by artists who have not received formal art training and whose imaginations and obsessions drive them to create out of whatever materials are available.

I saw at least two young galleriests with a uniquely contemporary and American take on art brut.  Make Skateboards, Brooklyn, NY, for instance, offered boards with artistic designs, that are both essential gear and collectibles. They also showed more traditional forms of raw art.  At Red Truck Gallery, New Orleans, Noah Antieau displayed works by seven artists he plans to follow as they mature. Among the more finished and complex pieces were works by Bryan Cunningham of Detroit, MI, whose frames incorporate beer can tabs and laces.

Noah Antieau of Red Truck Gallery, New Orleans

At Chicago based Peter Schopf Gallery, Ellen Green’s “flash gloves” are steaming hot. White gloves, those essentials of propriety, are tattooed with suggestions of sexuality and rebellion. Yes, they are todays’ featured image.

Today, the American Folk Art Museum kicks off the 20th edition of Uncommon Artists, a series of talks about timely subjects coordinated with the Fair by Lee Kogan, curator emerita.

Finally, El Museo del Barrio and the Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne, Switzerland,

Chair, boards, art at Make Skateboards

are participating for the first time, lending a unique curatorial point of view to the entire genre.

Outsider Art Fair is a Best Bet for today, Saturday and Sunday. It’s definitely the downtown answer to the uptown scene. And, Outsider is located in midtown, at 7 W. 34th Street.

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.