Tag Archives: art pottery

Societies that Preserve American Art & Antiques

America's premier museum of American fine art and decorations

If you have recently discovered a passion for things American,  you will be happy to know that there are societies and organizations dedicated to preserving different aspects of American art and antiques.

These organizations exist for the sole purpose of giving out information.  Often, they are the brain child or serious collectors and carry curatorial information that would be time consuming to access elsewhere. They are also great resources for finding people of like mind.

We will start with a very short list and as the days roll by, add on.  Also, if you know of societies and organizations, please leave a comment. We will incorporate your thoughts into the body of the blog so that it becomes a comprehensive resource.

AMERICAN FOLK ART:

American Folk Art Angel

While not exactly a society, the American Folk Art Museum is the premier institution devoted to the aesthetic appreciation of traditional folk art and creative expressions of contemporary self-taught artists from the United States, and abroad. AFAM preserves, conserves and interprets a comprehensive collection of the highest quality, with objects dating from the 18th Century to the present.

2 Lincoln Square

Columbus Avenue and 66th Street

New York, N.Y.

212-595-5933

WINTERTHUR

Founded by Henry Francis du Pont, Winterthur (pronounced “winter-tour”) is the premier museum of American decorative arts. Its collection of  nearly 90,000 objects features decorative and fine arts made or used in America from 1630 to 1860.

The collection is organized in several main categories— ceramics, glass, furniture, metalwork, paintings and prints, and textiles and needlework.

Winterthur Collection, George Washington

George Washington, from the Winterthur Collection

Famous for its American artwork, the collection is amplified with objects from other regions of the world, illustrating the active role America played in the international market.

Winterthur’s founder, Henry Francis du Pont, formed the original collection for the museum and added to it until his death in 1969.

Winterthur
5105 Kennett Pike (Route 52)
Winterthur, DE 19735

www.winterthur.org

CERAMICS:

J Palin Thorley

The Chipstone Foundation

Publishes a volume annually, “Ceramics in America”

780 North Club Circle

Milwaukee, WI 53217

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ARTS & CRAFTS

Arts & Crafts Chair

The Two Red Roses Foundation

A non-profit educational institution dedicated to the acquisition, restoration, and

public exhibition of important examples of

furniture, pottery and tiles, lighting, textiles, and fine arts from the American Arts & Crafts movement

4190 Corporate Court
Palm Harbor, Florida 34683

 

 

MODERNISM

Society for the Preservation of  American Modernists (SPAM)

Celebrates the art, lives and ideas of American modernists, such as painters Arthur Dove and Georgia O’Keefe, photographers Alfred Steiglitz and Edward Weston, and dancers Isadora Duncan and Martha Graham, and more.  SPAM provides research, exhibitions and publications, as well as history of private support for the arts in the US – from the WPA to the NEA.

Modernist Illustration

 

Contact:  Rebecca Foster, President

177 Ten Stones Circle

Charlotte, VT 05445

info@americanmodernists.org


 

 

Chocolates and Young Men

12-Chocolates-and-Young-Men-1990_1993-150x150

If the story of Rose, the potter  in James Cameron’s “Titanic,” moved you, then you will love the life story – and the ceramic works – of the artist who helped inspire the character. Her name is Beatrice Wood  and her studio pottery is among the most collectible in the Western hemisphere.

Beatrice Wood lived to be 104. In her time, she cavorted with Marcel Duchamp and Henri-Pierre Roché and became known at the Mama of Dada. She inspired “Jules and Jim,” was a follower of Krishnamurti, lived in Paris and then an intentional community in Southern California.

While Andy Warhol’s friends went  “to the opening of an envelope,” Wood loved nothing more than the opening  of a  kiln. The reason: her luster glazes were so experimental that she never knew exactly how they would come out.

Tea Set and Teapot

The definitive retrospective of Wood’s art opens at the Santa Monica Museum of Art on September 14 and runs through next spring. The Ceramics Fair in New York, one of the Americana  Week Shows, will surely have Beatrice Wood objects for sale.

Beatrice Wood did not discover her art until she was 40, and then it was an accident of hubris that led her to believe she could take a course and make a tea pot to match a set of china she had bought in Amsterdam.  Surprise. Wood was not what she called a natural craftsman. It took her quite some time to master throwing a pot on a wheel and glazes-that’s another story.

Blue luster on a double neck bottle

Blue luster glaze on a double neck bottle

Wood said that for a year  she did not understand what glazes were – “cream, water, solids, I didn’t know.”   She studied with the finest potters in California, many immigrants from war torn Europe. She developed her own techniques for luster – throwing mothballs or mustard into the kiln, even smoking it to manage the oxygen that would impact on the lusters. The results were stunning.

Wood’s molded ceramic art stands on its own as vignettes of the times. Some of it is  erotic, some feminist, some just fun.  Among the most famous is “Career Woman,” three women standing on a prone male. Wood crafted the piece for the anniversary of her 100th birthday.

Career Women-1990

Throughout, she was a compulsive diarist, committing to paper her thoughts and the recipes for the glazes.  The diaries are recently published and some are on view  at the Santa Monica show.

Beatrice Wood in her studio, c 1980

Beatrice Wood in her studio, c.1980. Photo: Bill Dow

 As for longevity, Wood attributed it to “chocolates and young men.” A sentiment much echoed in certain women’s magazines an on the reality TV show “Cougars.”

NOTE:  In the Islamic world, lusters were used to imitate gold and silver as early as the Ninth Century.

Part of Wood’s genius was that she made the elaborate acceptable in an era ruled by  form and function.  Collectors today have discovered that Wood was a woman and an artist ahead of her time.

Images courtesy of the Santa Monica Museum of Art.  Article adapted from a forthcoming cover story in Antiques and the Arts Weekly by Regina Kolbe .

The New York Ceramics Fair opens  with a Preview on Thursday, January 17, 2012  at the Bohemian National Hall, 321 East 73rd Street. It  has been called “The jewel in the crown of Americana Week.”