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Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the 17th century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture (distributed for the Chipstone Foundation) presents new
research on furniture design, use, production, and appreciation.
Begun in 1993, this award-winning annual provides a comprehensive
forum on furniture history, technology, connoisseurship, and
conservation by the foremost scholars in the field. It is the only
interdisciplinary journal devoted exclusively to furniture made or
used in the Americas from the 17th century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
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Ceramics in America 2009 (Hardcover)
Luke Beckerdite, Robert Hunter; Photographs by Gavin Ashworth
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R1,908
R1,691
Discovery Miles 16 910
Save R217 (11%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Now in its ninth year of publication, Ceramics in America is
considered the journal of record for historical ceramic scholarship
in the American context. The 2009 volume presents new research
related to the rich and varied earthenware production in the
eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Moravian settlements of
Bethabara and Salem, North Carolina. Setting a new standard for
American ceramic studies, this transdisciplinary effort draws on
archaeology, art history, social history, religion, ceramic
technology, and many other areas of inquiry resulting in a
substantively revised history of this much-admired North Carolina
pottery tradition. Many examples of highly decorative slipware and
intriguing figural bottles are illustrated for the first time with
color photography by Gavin Ashworth.
Art in Clay: Masterworks of North Carolina Earthenware Exhibition
Schedule: The Milwaukee Art Museum: September 2, 2010 - January 17,
2011; Old Salem Museums & Gardens: March 2011 - August 2011;
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation: September 26, 2011 - June 24,
2012
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the 17th century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the 17th century to the present.
This volume includes articles on mannerist furniture from a
Northern Essex County, Massachusetts shop, the career and work of
David Evans, early New York turned chairs, the Lisle
desk-and-bookcase from Rhode Island, a Salem cabinetmakers' price
book, two early eighteenth-century Schraenke, as well as book
reviews and bibliography.
This volume features articles on the furniture by the Potthast
Brothers of Baltimore, 1892 - 1975, the early furniture of Job and
Christopher Townsend, Boston Japanned furniture from1715 to1750, a
study of the New Mexican Caja, seventeenth-century joined furniture
from Newbury, Massachusetts, John Cadwalader's commode-seat side
chairs, the Lisle family desk-and-bookcase from Rhose Island,
eighteenth-century New York shranks, Edward Priestley (1778 -
1837), a Baltimore cabinetmaker, Baroque style in Philadelphia
furniture, neoclassicism in Baltimore furniture, Quakers and the
furniture industry in early Salem, as well as book reviews and
bibliography.
The Chipstone Foundation's annual American Furniture and its sister
publication Ceramics in America are the most influential
publications to have emerged in the decorative arts field during
the last twenty-five years. These journals continue to set new
standards for cutting edge research, photography, and graphic
design while forging links between academia, museums, craftspeople,
and the collecting world. Acknowledged as the journal of record in
its field, American Furniture presents new research on furniture
design, use, production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this
award-winning annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture
history, technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the
foremost scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary
journal devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the
Americas from the seventeenth century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
The Palladian style in Rhode Island furniture, eighteenth-century
Newport cabinet shops and the furniture-making trades, the
influence of Windsor chairmaking in early Federal Rhode Island,
Rhode Island influence in the work of two North Carolina
cabinetmakers, the accounts of Job Townsend, Jr., Providence
provenances and pitch-pediments, serpentine furniture of colonial
Newport, plus the usual book reviews, and bibliography of recent
writing.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
Acknowledged as the journal of record in its field, American
Furniture presents new research on furniture design, use,
production, and appreciation. Begun in 1993, this award-winning
annual provides a comprehensive forum on furniture history,
technology, connoisseurship, and conservation by the foremost
scholars in the field. It is the only interdisciplinary journal
devoted exclusively to furniture made or used in the Americas from
the seventeenth century to the present.
This volume features articles on late Baroque Boston seating
furniture, Germanic influence on furniture early nineteenth-century
design in Philadelphia, Randolph chairs, the Christian M. Nestell
drawing book, the inlaid cherry furniture of Nathan Lombard, the
Waldo family joined great chair, "Tinkham" chairs, as well as book
reviews and bibliography of new books in the field.
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