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All items15203 of 244525Fulper/Stangl Pottery Parula Warbler (3583) White/Cream/Ivory Glaze     Garfield Protected by Attack Cat Sticker Card
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    Posted 3 years ago

    kwqd
    (1185 items)

    Just a few things at my new house:

    1. Thrift shop find. Floral, 15" x 22" (half sheet) watercolor on paper. Has label for frame shop in a nearby city. I looked at this at a local thrift shop half a dozen times and thought it was good but never had a magnifier with me to determine if it was an original watercolor or print. Finally remembered to bring a jeweler's loupe with me and found it to be an original work. Has writing in the lower right corner. The jeweler's loupe was over-kill and I couldn't make it out. I think it may actually be a stamp by the papermaker. After looking at it twice in one day and going home in between to Google the name, I finally bought it. Trying to not buy original art as I have plenty at home. But, this is really well done. It is in a metal frame which will require quite a bit of disassembly. It may be signed and titled verso, but a project for another day. My image is so-so.

    2. Display of some of my okimono on some existing shelving. Just trying to get my Japanese metal work up to my new house, so this is probably temporary. I have most of it at my new house, maybe 90% of it.

    3. Display of the majority of my Japanese tetsu kyusu and tetsubin. This is a good spot for these and I may retain this. This and the okimono display are in a roughly converted upstairs space. Probably going to eventually have this area enlarged and properly redone by a professional. I think the previous owner hired a boy scout troupe to do it. Not very well done, but functional.

    4. Female nude, oil on board, 14" x 22". While rooting through my storeroom, I found this painting that I bought years ago from the estate sale of Joseph Newman. I actually had to excavate my way back to a window that needed repair and this was one of the things I pulled out to either keep or donate. Newman was a well known artist. Note that the feet are not finished. Guessing he was working on this when he either died or became inactive. Bidding at the auction was spirted and I was happy to get even an unfinished work. Rather that stick it back in storage for another 15 years, I decided to bring it up to my new house.

    https://www.jimsoflambertville.com/artist-biography.php?artistId=322619&artist=Joseph%20Newman

    "Joseph Newman (1890 - 1979)

    Painter Joseph Newman was born in New York City in 1890. He attended both Pratt Institute and Adelphi College Art School before serving in World War I for the U.S. Army. At the war’s conclusion, Newman remained in Europe to travel with his new wife. Upon his return to New York in the mid-1920s, Newman established the Fifteen Gallery with several other artists. He was a member of such famed artist organizations as the L.C. Tiffany Foundation, the Salmagundi Club, Rockport Art Association, and the American Watercolor Society. Throughout his career his paintings could often be seen at institutions like the Brooklyn Museum, the National Academy, the Carnegie Institute, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Society of Independent Artists.

    Newman’s paintings often varied in subject and style. Throughout his career he moved from genre scenes to landscapes to figurative works and from realism to post-impressionism. His most successful pieces are his colorful genre scenes inspired by various locales, such as Rockport Harbor, Maine and Taos, New Mexico.

    Newman’s works can now be found in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum, the Newark Museum, the Boston Library, and the Library of Congress.

    He died in Flushing, New York in 1979."

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    Comments

    1. jscott0363 jscott0363, 3 years ago
      I love them all, especially your display in pic#3. Really nice!!
    2. Newfld Newfld, 3 years ago
      Beautiful collection Kevin - my fave is pic two with those gorgeous animals on the shelf
    3. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      Thanks jscott0363! I am tweaking the display on that shelf, but it was close in that picture. Trying to make the flow of the arrangements down the shelves flow better. I will update my photo when it is finished.

      Thanks, Jenni! Thought you would like that one. I am still digging out all of my boxed okimono and will be rearranging things on those two shelves.

      Thanks for loving my post Jenni, Kevin, vcal, fortapache, Watchsearcher, jscott0363, dav2no1 and BHIFOS!
    4. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      Updated display in image 3. Close to finalized.
    5. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      Thanks Alfie21!
    6. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      Thank you Cisum!
    7. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      Thanks Eileen. I have arranged them a couple of times. Will add a new photo, soon.

      Thanks for loving my miscellaneous stuff Vynil33rpm and Eileen.
    8. rancherswife rancherswife, 3 years ago
      Thanks for sharing some of your collections! That’s one big collection of iron teapots! Very nice!! The ironwood rat was done very well! That tail!! Whoa!! :-)
    9. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      Thanks for your comments rancherswife! I love teapots, but not a tea drinker! The rat is actually cast iron with a bronze patina applied.
    10. rancherswife rancherswife, 3 years ago
      kwqd, I wondered if you were a tea drinker. Now we know. ;-). thanks for correcting me on your rat. And that makes it that much cooler! :-)
    11. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      Yeah, making tea is a lot of work to do it right. I cannot really taste most teas, either, since I don't have a sense of smell which affects my sense of taste.

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