 |
Shoes
Jonathan Hose and Son. London, ca. 1770.
Gift of Miss Mary C. Wheelwright |
From
March 10 through June 5, 2005 The Bard Graduate Center for Studies
in the Decorative Arts, Design, and Culture is presenting Cherished
Possessions: A New England Legacy, a major exhibition covering
four centuries of New England history from the mid seventeenth
century to the end of the twentieth. The artifacts are drawn
from the collections of the Society for the Preservation of
New England Antiquities (SPNEA), a museum of cultural history
with 35 historic house museums. The holdings count among the
most notable collections of American fine and decorative arts
in the United States. Now, for the first time in its 95-year
history, the collections are being seen outside New England.
They illuminate the cultural and domestic history of one of
this country’s most interesting and best-loved regions.
Perhaps more than any comparable organization,
SPNEA has collected objects contextually, retaining related
documents, historical photographs, genealogical evidence, family
traditions, and the like, so that the objects survive intact
with their history of use and manufacture. The more than 100
objects in the exhibition, therefore, have been chosen not only
for their artistry but also for the stories they tell. They
range from paintings and furniture to needlework, ceramics,
costumes, photographs, and textiles.
The exhibition has been organized by the Society
for the Preservation of New England Antiquities. It has been
curated by Nancy Carlisle, a graduate of the Winterthur Program
in Early American Culture and curator at SPNEA for over sixteen
years.
The
Exhibition
The exhibition has been organized around the following topics:
Cherished Possessions; New England’s People; New England
Climate and Landscape; Before the Revolution (1650-1775); Revolution
(1775-1783); Early Nation (1790-1820); Growth, Innovation, and
Reform (1820-1930); and Modernism and Antiquarianism (1930-1970).
The
range of items is as broad as the history of the region and
nation and includes furniture, ceramics, historic photographs,
costumes, jewelry, paintings, and textiles. Among the highlights
– and illustrating the range of the exhibition –
are a high chest (1735-1745), painted, gessoed, gilded and heavily
varnished, it is a magnificent – and very rare –
eighteenth-century example of the technique known as japanning;
a 1793 portrait by John Singleton Copley of Richard Codman;
a magnificent lacquer Pembroke table (ca.1800); micromosaic
vest buttons and a gold cameo set; and a fascinating photograph
(ca. 1858) of a building in India, part of a remarkable album
of early photography brought back by Ogden Codman, serving as
a record of his journey to such an exotic culture.. Codman is
best known today for the seminal book he wrote with Edith Wharton,
The Decoration of Houses, which changed forever the
way Americans look at house interiors. It should be noted that
every object in the exhibition was selected based on its ability
to tell a story as well as to speak of the larger historical
context of the region and the nation; the japanned high chest
belonging to the Quincy family, for example, is the survivor
of two fires, while Richard Codman had to be called back from
his sojourn in France because of his many extravagances although,
as the family maintained, “he had nice taste in pictures
and statuary.”
Cherished
Possessions: A New England Legacy is organized by the Society
for the Preservation of New England Antiques. The Society for
the Preservation of New England Antiques is the oldest, largest,
and most comprehensive regional preservation organization in
the country. It offers a unique opportunity to experience the
lives and stories of New Englanders through their homes and
possessions. For more information visit Historic New England
online at www.HistoricNewEngland.org.
The
Catalogue
A fully illustrated color catalogue published by SPNEA in association
with Antique Collectors’ Club accompanies the exhibition.
The contents, written by SPNEA Curator Nancy Carlisle, a nationally
recognized expert in the study of American material culture,
present more than 175 objects, examine their roles in people’s
lives, and show how they give us a nuanced perspective on the
past. All are selected from the collections of fine and decorative
arts belonging to SPNEA.
Related
Programs
An array of lectures, panels, and other offerings will be presented
in conjunction with Cherished Possessions: A New England
Legacy. For further information, please call 212-501-3011
or e-mail programs@bgc.bard.edu.
Exhibition
Tours
Group tours of Cherished Possessions: A New England Legacy
may be scheduled Tuesday through Friday between 11:00 a.m. and
4:00 p.m. and on Thursday until 7:00 p.m. Reservations are required
for all groups. For further information, please call the Bard
Graduate Center Gallery at 212-501-3023 or TTY 212-501-3012,
or e-mail gallery_assistant@bgc.bard.edu.
General
Information
The Bard Graduate Center is located at 18 West 86th
Street, between Central Park West and Columbus Avenue, in New
York City. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Sunday from 11:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Thursday from 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Admission: $3 general, $2 seniors and students (with valid ID).
Free admission Thursday evenings. For further information about
the Bard Graduate Center and upcoming exhibitions, please visit
our website at www.bgc.bard.edu.