• finding arts & crafts in unexpected places

    One thing we talk about regularly is finding Arts & Crafts vernacular in what can only be called unexpected places. Sometimes the use might be inappropriate but still well-executed; sometimes neither. Reader Jean Emery wrote to tell us about her own experience at finding Spanish Colonial architecture in the last place you’d expect – upstate New York:

    This is a visual response to the post about transplanting or recreating the arts and crafts vernacular. I hope this picture comes through. I’m a fourth generation San Diegan transplanted to upstate New York and I’ve always taken a great interest in a group of about twenty or so Spanish colonial homes built in Albany, probably in the 1920s or so. They’re so California!  But, as you can see, they haven’t fared very well here. I would love to buy one, but they generally are in pretty poor shape, have been terribly re-muddled. The stucco doesn’t take well to repeated freezing and thawing, and the original windows weren’t at all energy efficient so have been replaced with ugly double-panes.

    Also, the new Stickley arts and crafts reproductions are big here in town because we’re near the manufacturer in Syracuse, but they just don’t have the soul and the patina of the originals. And American Bungalow has recently had some vulgar, expensive houses with customized woodwork run amuck!

    I’m not really sure what the moral of all this is. I do love these bits of Mediterrean architecture plunked down in the snow belt!

    Jean notes that one such home – 17 Rosemont Street in Albany (pics) – is for sale at an asking price of $178,900.

    Thanks for sharing these, Jean. We do love to see this kind of thing, so if other readers have pictures to share, please do send them in!

  • a visit to the Lodge at Torrey Pines

    Given that the New York Times recently opened up their archives, I’ve been spending lots of time looking for interesting A&C related articles. Just found this gem by Barbara Lazear Ascher, dated September 2002. The first few paragraphs are below; visit the NYTimes site to see the full article.

    I’m driving down a twisting, clinker-brick driveway banked by
    boulders, wildflowers and rare Torrey pines. Ahead is a green-stained,
    cedar-shingled building, which from my East Coast perspective resembles
    an Adirondack lodge. Then I am reminded of Frank Lloyd Wright’s prairie
    houses with their celebration of the horizontal line. An outward sweep
    of unpainted, broad roof overhangs, projecting outriggers, and rafter
    tails appear to dance with the light.

    This isn’t Surfin’
    Safari, Southern California. John Ruskin, William Morris and Charles
    Rennie Mackintosh have come to La Jolla.

    I’d heard about the
    recently opened Lodge at Torrey Pines from my stepdaughter in San
    Diego. Tucked between the Pacific Ocean and Torrey Pines State Reserve
    by the 18th green of the South Course of the famed Torrey Pines Golf
    Course, the hotel is a result of its owner William Evans’s love affair
    with California’s Arts and Crafts Movement.

    I’m curious how a
    hotelier in the Era of Asphalt will interpret the movement’s reverence
    for nature and craftsmanship. How will he tip his hat to Ruskin, whose
    espousal of the meditative and redemptive qualities of crafting and
    living in beautiful surroundings inspired the movement in England? And
    how is it possible to integrate into a 175-room hotel the intimate
    details of Mr. Evans’s inspiration, the 1907 Blacker and 1908 Gamble
    Houses designed by his idols, the Pasadena architects Charles and Henry
    Greene?

    I drive beneath the port-cochere composed of massive
    timbers stacked horizontally on one another like a bird’s wing
    feathers, which impart an ironic sense of lightness, as though the
    entire lodge could be carried skyward on these outstretched wings.

    photo of the Torrey Pines Lodge courtesy of Flickr user John Koss

  • Arts & Crafts gems from the New York Times’ archives

    The New York Times recently decided to open up much of their historic archives for free, finally realizing that the ad revenue generated by increased access is far higher than what they could make in fees or subscriptions. As a result, there are plenty of interesting articles suddenly available to all of us that we’d have had to pay for in the past. I spent the morning searching for various Arts & Crafts related keywords, and here’s what I turned up:

  • “The Connection” – October 26-28 2007 on the Roycroft Campus

    Knottroycroft
    Last week, Sandra Starks sent us a press release on an upcoming conference at the Roycroft campus:

    East Aurora, NY – The great minds of the turn of the 20th century is the theme of this intimate gathering of Arts & Crafts enthusiasts.  It is the International Arts & Crafts Movement and the great men and women who espoused its philosophy that changed the world a little over one hundred years ago.  From the 1860s to the 1920s, this historic social and artistic eruption that turned against the Industrial Revolution and embraced a human connection to our material surroundings was meant to discover a better way to live.

    The Arts & Crafts Revival, now approaching the same number of years as the original wave, has also become a phenomenal reaction to intellectual progress i.e. the electronic world.  This revival and the education it offers is another opportunity to balance life for the future with the hand and heart!

    All of the Roycrofters celebrate our treasure of Arts & Crafts sites in Western New York and we recognize that, as it was then, we are all connected to the rich legacy of Arts & Crafts worldwide.

    For more than 20 years, the Roycroft Campus has intermittently hosted long weekend conferences with a focus on brining together top-notch scholars to emphasize the wealth of knowledge and share it with colleagues and friends from near and far.

    art by Raymond Knott, from the conference’s identity

  • Arts & Crafts on Ebay: September 2007

    Lots of A&C copper, furniture & various knick-knacks of interest to Arts & Crafts collectors and aficionados up on Ebay this week. I’m not including prices since I’m writing this on Monday and by the time it goes up on Tuesday morning, the current bids may all be a bit higher than they are now; I did try to select only what I thought were underpriced / good bargain items.

    copper: Lots of copper, some nice and some crap. Ignore all the "I was told this was Roycroft but it’s unmarked" claims (or this guy, who inexplicably includes the word "Roycroft" in the name of an Joseph Sankey copper pitcher) – they diligently marked all their pieces, and while some of these unmarked pieces are nice items, they are not Roycroft so don’t be tricked into paying a premium for them. Same goes for the folks who list items as "Stickley era" or "possibly Gustav Stickley?" – they’re just using the shotgun approach to get as many people to see the listing as possible, and while you can’t fault their sales acumen, you certainly shouldn’t give money to these ethically-challenged dealers. Here are some attractive pieces which seem to be sold honestly and without the tricks listed above:

    furniture: Again, avoid the folks who have no idea what they’re selling. If it seems too good to be true (a Stickley Bros. armchair for $100?), it probably is; there are many dozens of cases of unscrupulous dealers affixing labels or making fake marks on unsigned pieces to drive the price up, so be careful. The following pieces seem to be listed accurately and fairly:

    lighting: You would be amazed (or maybe not) at the number of jerks who list their cheap made-in-China knockoffs as a "Dirk van Erp original." However, not all ebay sellers are ripoff artists:

    architectural salvage & etc.

  • Arts & Crafts on Ebay: August 2007

    There are plenty of interesting pieces of A&C furniture and ceramics on Ebay right now – almost 50% more than I usually see up there, with some neat Roycroft pieces and pretty tiles too. Maybe people are cleaning out their own collections this summer, or trying to cover the costs of their rising mortgages by selling off family treasures (I hope not!). Here are some items closing soon that caught my eye:

  • Arts & Crafts ceramic tile on ebay

    three tiles

    I’ve been getting lots of emails asking for more links to interesting items for sale – on Craigslist, Ebay, at auction or wherever. So this week and next I’ll be posting a lot more like this.

    Today, pretty A&C tiles on Ebay – some in bulk, some in frames, some individually:

  • Oaklawn Portal, South Pasadena


    Greene & Greene’s 1906 portal to the Oaklawn neighborhood in Pasadena; found in mins3rdkid’s Flickr photostream. Unfortunately, this pretty bit of stonework, wood and masonry is often overlooked in books and studies of the work of the brothers Greene; local artists, however, know it well – here’s Liz Reday’s painting.

  • a modern Craftsman kitchen

    Ih00016_plan
    Taunton publishes lots and lots of good books devoted to historic architecture in general and the Arts & Crafts movement specifically. I was happy but not surprised, then, to pick up a few back issues of The Inspired House, an (unfortunately out of print?) at a local used bookshop.

    The magazine seems to have halted publication mid-2006, but mining their online archive yielded lots of good stuff, including this article by Debra Judge Silber on a very modern yet classically attractive Craftsman kitchen remodel in a 1915 historic foursquare:

    When they found their brick foursquare in the
    mid-1980s, Ed and Kathy Friedman couldn’t believe their luck. They’d
    spent 10 years building a collection of Arts and Crafts furniture and
    decorative objects, and here was the perfect home in which to display
    it. The 1915 foursquare, with its built-in benches and bookcases, was
    as well preserved as if it had been locked in a time capsule.

    Except for the kitchen. Remodeled in the ’50s, the boxy room had plastic tiles running halfway around it and
    white metal cabinets backed awkwardly against the walls. Not just
    outdated, it was completely at odds with the purposeful beauty of the
    rest of the house.

    Visit their site for the full article. Floorplan by Martha Garstang Hill, whose illustrations and architectural drawings adorn many Taunton books.

  • Stickley on Craigslist, June 2007

    A few choice bits of Stickley from around the country: