The Men’s Room?

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Not just for men!

We’re putting together a new booth for the shop.  It will be filled with toys for boy – trains, rifles, swords, tools, clocks, Americana, militaria, maps, coins, cufflinks – all the stuff that men (and, let’s face it, mostly men) appreciate.  It should be very, very cool.

Certainly it will be a popular new addition to the shop, especially with the fellas that aren’t really shopping.  There are antiques for everyone, even people that don’t think they like antiquing.  The trick is matching the right pieces to the right people.

The only problem we have is what to call it.  We want to keep it simple since we intend to rotate pieces in and out of the booth as we acquire things.  Calling it “The Men’s Room” clearly has drawbacks, but that’s leagues better than “Gentlemen’s Club“.  “Boy’s Room” and “Boy’s Club” are better, although we may have to start donating more to a certain charitable organization just to be fair.  Perhaps “The Lodge” or simply “The Club“?

It is a conundrum.

The next time you come by the shop please let us know your suggestions.  Don’t be shy! We always like to hear suggestions and feedback!

First Look

001

The Keeper's Daughter

This is the beginning of preparations for our first big sale in our Gordonsville shop. We’re going to put a few hundred pieces online for you to browse through. Don’t worry, though. We’ll break them up into small groups that have some association with one another. That should make it easier to browse by category.

First up? Fine art prints!

There will be more later, of course. In the meantime, why not go visit us on eBay? Just click the link to your right.

Moongleam Octagonal Glass Salad Plates

Set of 12 octagonal “Moongleam” green salad plates.  Each plate is 8 inches across.  These are likely depression glass, and the color is not uncommon.

These plates are a mild, minty green color, clear (aside from the green of course) without bubbles or scratches.  Each plate measures 8 inches diameter.  The facets of the octagonal shapes are on the back (or bottom) of the plate, leaving the eating surface smooth and clean.  There are no visible hallmarks on the plates.

Probably not Heisey

green depression glass

I personally think that these plates are Heisey, but I cannot prove it. If they are not Heisey, then they are most likely from the Tiffin/U.S. Glass Company out of San Francisco.

The Heisey company produced elegant glassware for practical usage from 1896 to 1957 in Newark, Ohio.  The glass they created was not cheap when it was made, and it showed up in many a bride’s registry.  They began producing press-molded glass from older “Early American Pattern Glass” molds, and moved on to make the beautiful, delicate glass that people often term “crystal” today.  While some of the colors the company produced resemble so-called “Depression glass”, and they did produce glass in the Depression, Heisey glass could not be more different from Continue reading

Big Sale Coming Up!

We’re in the middle of planning our first big sale of the year.  We’re going to be putting pictures and descriptions online so you can browse from home.  We’re also going to make items available to purchase directly through e-bay.  CHeck in with us regularly over ne next few weeks as we post groups of items.

This is going to be fun!

We’re open!

The new Gordonsville storefront is finally coming together. If you’ve come in to visit us already, thank you. If you haven’t come by yet, you should! We’re not your typical antique shop.  We’re a collection of dealers bound together by the common belief that any object made within our lifetime is still “new“.  We strongly emphasize pieces from the 19th and 18th centuries, although newer pieces do pass our way from time to time.

A small town with class

Main Street, Gordonsville, VA

Anyone that has spent time browsing along Main Street can tell you that Gordonsville is truly a hidden gem.  We’re located at the end of a row of gift shops, fine dining, and antique dealers that are the heart of this wonderful little town.  You could spend all day perusing and still not find all the treasures this picturesque town has to offer.  Our location is just to the left, off the edge of the picture above, beside the post office.

open for business!

The Gordonsville Shop

We have 6,500 square feet of fine art and antiques, and more pieces arrive every day.  Some of our dealers specialize in oil paintings, watercolors, and prints, while others focus more on fine furniture.  We have sizable collections of crystal, cut glass, china, ceramics, and other objet d’art.  Beautiful old clocks (all working!) and books come our way regularly.  Our stock naturally changes as some pieces leave and recent acquisitions arrive, so we encourage you all  to visit us again and again.  You never know what you might find.

Bill Burch's art gallery

One of our booths - the art gallery

If you are a collector of something, or if you are searching for something specific, we are more than happy to help.  We probably have what you’re looking for either in the shop or at the warehouse.  If not, we can use our network of dealers and buyers to locate the item for you, whatever it is, be it Seth Thomas mantle clock or a Hepplewhite tea table.

As we still get settled into our new home, our hours are limited to the weekends, Friday through Sunday, from 10am to 5pm.  Please visit, browse, or just drop in to say hello!

Piranesi & Gouache

Giambattista Piranesi was an Italian artist famous for his etchings and engravings.  He drew the most acclaim for his romantic depictions of Rome and for his “reconstructions” of extremely ornate objet d’art, predominantly urns, sculpture, and architechtural details.

hand-tinted

Painstakingly hand-tinted Piranesi urn on black gouache background

Born in 18th century Rome, Piranesi was awash in living antiquity.  He devoted his professional life to more than just depicting what he saw.  He used his keen artist’s eye and his creativity to depict recreations of fine architecture as he imagined it to be.  He created new pieces as well, imagined alongside the the thousand year old relics as if they were of the same world.

It is sometimes difficult to distinguish between his etchings of what was real and his etchings of fantastic musings on what might have been.  He was a fantastic draftsman, both realistic and romantic, using detail to bring his etchings to life.  See here a small selection of his prints, of urns that, while extraordinarily ornate and realistic,  may exist only in the mind of the artist.

Piranesi’s son, Francesco, collected his plates, in which the freer lines of the etching-needle largely supplemented the severity of burin work. Twenty nine folio volumes containing about 2,000 prints were produced between 1835 and 1837.

The late Baroque works of Claude Lorrain, Salvatore Rosa, and others had featured romantic and fantastic depictions of ruins; in part as a memento mori or as a reminiscence of a golden age of construction. Piranesi’s reproductions of real and recreated Roman ruins were a strong influence on Neoclassicism.

If you are interested in these or any other of our fine antique prints, please contact us directly or visit our e-bay storefront.

One possibility for the setup

Gamera!! Friend of Children!
Gamera!! Friend of Children!

From this vantage point it’s easy to see how the Mighty Gamera’s armored shell helps him defend Tokyo against giant, radiaoactive monsters. Clearly, the battle against Guiron would have gone quite differently if not for Gamara’s defensive advantage. 

Imagine  a set of objects or images, perhaps Gamera and an array of half a dozen Japanese monsters. There will be a gallery of images to see.  Each image will have the full details of the object, but one image will be singled out.  It will be presented larger than the others and will be accompanied by character text.  This could simply be a more in-depth description of the object, the history of the piece, its pedegree (owners, locations, etc), or possible a critique of the quality of the piece itself. 

We need not limit ourselves to mere description.  I suggest that we could also talk about tangental information.  In this case, we might discuss the origins of Gamera or the history surrounding the films.  We could also discuss the manufacturing process of this particular piece and what that means to the object.  Or we could even tell the story of how we found and acquired the piece.  All of these things are interesting to customers.  They serve to help customers better appreciate the item for what it is. 

To see more of Gamera, look below.