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Archive for the ‘Community’ Category.
September 3, 2010, 11:38 am
Roger and Carmela Arturi Phillips have published a hardcover catalogue of their portrait miniature collection, THE ARTURI PHILLIPS COLLECTION: A Catalogue of Portrait Miniatures. Some of the primarily British and Continental pieces may be seen on their blog, http://portraitminiature.blogspot.com/ , and they also have a page for their portrait miniature club on Facebook.
“Featuring the work of over 130 artists dating from 1588 to 2004. 447 pages all in colour, hardcover, printed on art paper, with a double page devoted to each miniature, including full page enlargements showing brushstrokes and signatures. In this book, which we have written for collectors, we discuss our collecting criteria, our experiences in buying miniatures both from auctions and dealers, our techniques for photographing them and our storage solutions. There is also new information on later artists.”
Their book is available for sale in the US from me, and the cost is $105, which includes shipping. Contact me for further detail, at CAPMiniatures@aol.com. It may also be purchased directly from the Phillips if you’re in the UK or Europe, at portraitminiatureclub@googlemail.com , from Thomas Heneage Art Books in London at artbooks@heneage.com , or in Australia from Armadale Antique Centre, at www.armadaleantiquecentre.com.au . ISBN 978-2-9536625-0-4.

March 8, 2010, 10:04 am
A New York collector went to visit the Nathaniel Roger’s house last weekend, and emailed me a photo of the dignified Greek Revival dwelling. It is in Long Island, at the southeast corner of Montauk Highway and Ocean Road. Further information on the Nathaniel Roger’s House Preservation Project may be found at: http://www.bridgehamptonhistoricalsociety.org/rogers.html. For those collectors not familiar with Roger’s work, he was one of the foremost 19th century American miniaturists. Further information on him may be found on my website, where I have one miniature listed by him: http://www.archibaldminiatures.com/collection/american.php .

February 22, 2010, 7:47 am
Contemporary artist Elizabeth Berdann, based in New York City, has a solo show entitled “Marvels, Curiosities & Conundrums” at the Contemporary Museum in Honolulu. It will include a survey of her work from the last 20 years, and also some new work, such as her current installation, “String of Pearls,” which was inspired by the Thomas Seir Cummings necklace of miniatures in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The show opened on February 11, 2010, and will run through mid-May. For further information on the artist, please see her website, www.elizabethberdann.com, and for further information on the show, please see the Contemporary Museum’s website: http://www.tcmhi.org/cal.htm .
February 16, 2010, 4:31 pm
The collector in the previous post who is a direct descendant of the British artist Thomas Heaphy has shared images of a signed portrait miniature by Heaphy’s wife Mary Stevenson. Mary Stevenson’s work is extremely rare, and a signed miniature by her will help with future attributions. It’s interesting to note how similar Stevenson’s style was to her husband’s.


February 7, 2010, 2:04 pm
Don Shelton, a miniatures collector who maintains the blog “Artists and Ancestors” (www.portrait-miniature.blogspot.com), is featured in an article in today’s Sunday Observer in London. The article, entitled “Founders of British Obstetrics Were ‘Callous Murderers,’” recounts some of the subversive information Shelton uncovered when researching the sitter Anthony Carlisle in a miniature he owns, painted by Henry Bone. The link to the article is below.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/feb/07/british-obstetrics-founders-murders-claim
As an addendum, the article has provoked a flurry of interest: New Zealand national radio interviewed him this morning, BBC UK and BBC Scotland are interviewing him live tonight, and a UK producer wants to talk to him about a TV documentary.
November 10, 2009, 8:55 am
The following anecdote about portrait miniatures recently appeared on the blog “Artists and Ancestors” (http://portmin.blogspot.com/):
“I will leave you with a story that I was told just a few days ago. A man, very old today, remembers visiting in his grandfather’s jewellery store in Manhattan during the depression. The man remembers people bringing in scraps of metal to be sold for pennies. And he remembers being just tall enough that he was eye to eye with a large jar his grandfather kept on a table. And the jar was full of little faces. The faces of miniatures which were discarded for the small amount of the precious metal would bring. All those tiny bits of art, lost to the world.”
September 12, 2009, 9:08 am

An exhibition entitled Dearly Departed: Women and Mourning 1680 – 1918 will be presented August 15th – October 31st at the Tioga County Historical Society in historic Owego, New York. The exhibition outlines the history of mourning, told through over 600 pieces of jewelry and other commemorative artifacts.
Many of the pieces on display can be found in the book Mourning Art & Jewelry and in the book Georgian Jewelery 1714-1830. A very rare ring for Napoleon, possibly one of a kind, will be on display. In addition, a Charles the first miniature and two commemorative rings will be displayed. Other highlights include the following items of the popular Princess Charlotte: a ring, medals, cups and saucers, and a teapot.
Over a dozen original lithographs depicting death bed scenes of George Washington, Andrew Jackson and the New York funeral of O’ Connell are a part of the exhibit. Currier and Ives and other lithographers contributed to making it possible for the common person to have a colored memorial for their family depicting a commemorative stone which could be personalized. Examples will be on display.
A locally made Cruciform Casket patented design 1884 will be displayed along with stereo cards of the historic Evergreen Cemetery now on the national register.
A full color 48 page catalog is available for this exhibit from Tioga County Historical Society for $18.00 plus postage $3.25. (NY state must add tax $1.44 ). To order a copy:
Send a check or money order to:
TIOGA COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
110 Front Street, Owego , New York 13827
Or visit the website and order via PayPal: http://www.tiogahistory.org/dearly%20departed.html .
The show was covered on Fox News: http://www.wicz.com/news/video.asp?video=09+10+09+wom%2Ewmv%2Eflv&zone=News
September 10, 2009, 6:47 am
A collector recently told me that my Christine Archibald Portrait Miniatures website was a “lighthouse in the night” for him–which tickled me so much that I wanted to post it here.

May 26, 2009, 1:33 pm
A private collector has recently posted a number of British portrait miniatures from his collection on his blog. They are outstanding pieces and well worth viewing. Please see: http://portraitminiature.blogspot.com/2009/05/18th-century-miniatures-1700-1770.html .
It would be wonderful if other private collectors followed suit. Not only is it a joy to view miniatures from people’s collections, but it is educational to see them and widen the spectrum of known pieces by different miniaturists.
May 10, 2009, 7:08 am
Here is a good summary of the book An Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean (@susanorlean on Twitter)–which was later made into a film starring Meryl Streep–including a quote that captures the frenzy of collectors:
Orchidelirium is the name the Victorians gave to the flower madness that is for botanical collectors the equivalent of gold fever. Wealthy orchid fanatics of that era sent explorers (heavily armed, more to protect themselves against other orchid seekers than against hostile natives or wild animals) to unmapped territories in search of new varieties of Cattleya and Paphiopedilum. As knowledge of the family Orchidaceae grew to encompass the currently more than 60,000 species and over 100,000 hybrids, orchidelirium might have been expected to go the way of Dutch tulip mania. Yet, as journalist Susan Orlean found out, there still exists a vein of orchid madness strong enough to inspire larceny among collectors.
The Orchid Thief centers on south Florida and John Laroche, a quixotic, charismatic schemer once convicted of attempting to take endangered orchids from the Fakahatchee swamp, a state preserve. Laroche, a horticultural consultant who once ran an extensive nursery for the Seminole tribe, dreams of making a fortune for the Seminoles and himself by cloning the rare ghost orchid Polyrrhiza lindenii. Laroche sums up the obsession that drives him and so many others:
“I really have to watch myself, especially around plants. Even now, just being here, I still get that collector feeling. You know what I mean. I’ll see something and then suddenly I get that feeling. It’s like I can’t just have something–I have to have it and learn about it and grow it and sell it and master it and have a million of it.”
Even Orlean–so leery of orchid fever that she immediately gives away any plant that’s pressed upon her by the growers in Laroche’s circle–develops a desire to see a ghost orchid blooming and makes several ultimately unsuccessful treks into the Fakahatchee. Filled with Palm Beach socialites, Native Americans, English peers, smugglers, and naturalists as improbably colorful as the tropical blossoms that inspire them, this is a lyrical, funny, addictively entertaining read. –Barrie Trinkle, from Amazon.

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