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 Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Can you identify this pig?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
From the latest "Kyle on Antiques" column: Q This print was removed from an
office of a closed-down petroleum company. It is 47 1/2 inches by 34
inches. At the top is printed “Bank by Andy Warhol. Pretty as a
pigture, huh?” Though it certainly looks like something Warhol would
paint, but I have been unable to find anything about it.
—H.P., Pampa, Texas
A I did quite a bit of research
online to try and determine if this is based on the artwork of Andy
Warhol but didn’t have any luck. Of course, he produced hundreds and
hundreds of designs and I couldn’t locate a resource that lists them
all. The value of this piece will depend greatly on how scarce it is
and whether Warhol actually licensed it as an advertising piece. Of
course, original Warhol silk-screens are extremely valuable but huge
numbers of reproductions of them are available today at modest prices.
My guess is that this isn’t a terribly rare item but perhaps some
reader may be able to enlighten us further.
If you can help, please post a reply here. Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Blog | pop art
7/16/2008 4:08:14 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Buying high-priced art?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Antique Blog | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | fine art | Modern | Modernism | pop art
4/29/2008 11:13:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Fine Art? Furniture? Not an antique, that's for sure.
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
This is being sold by Philips De Pury on Thursday in London. There is a much better pic on the home page of the auction house. It is expected to take $160,000. Don't know what I think of it, really. Just interesting. Antique Blog | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | fine art | Modern | Modernism | pop art
4/22/2008 10:29:13 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, April 17, 2008
 Tuesday, April 15, 2008
The relevance of fine art, or why we should pay to see it
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
This is a very interesting discussion from an English blogger at a site called artintelligence. While speaking from an English perspective, where a nominal fee - if any - is charged to enter major museums, and very little is paid for touring exhibitions, the subject of publicly funded museums and whether these museums should have to rely on "box office," like so many other "serious" art forms have to, is spot on as far as I'm concerned. In America, museums get public funding as well as charge at the gate, and the big institutions still have gobs and gobs of cash to exhibit artwork that is, in many cases, not meant to be accesible to anybody but the insitution itself, and the wealthy who can afford to buy it. As the author of the linked psot says, there is often ahuge amount of pretention in modern art and outright contempt for "common" viewers. I can't really offer any conclusions from my reading of this site, other than that I think it is an important disucssion and definitely food for thought. I'd be curious to know if any readers out there are checking in from the U.K. and what they think of this.
Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | fine art | pop art
4/15/2008 10:49:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, April 10, 2008
Auction of recently uncovered Arbus photos abruptly canceled
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Wrote about this a few weeks ago. A dealer in NYC sold a box of pics he found in a box lot for $3500. Turns out there was a trove of unknown Diane Arbus photos in there - very interesting ones, to be sure - and they're worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. The dealer who sold them is suing the dealer he says duped him out of the find of his life. The sale was supposed to have happened yesterday, I think. Turns out it was abruptly canceled. Both the New York Times and our friend Kristi Roberts at Here Be Old Things have been covering this pretty well, so I'll leave it to them. Kristi was going to the sale, and even went by the showroom to get a sneak peak. I know that a lot of times it's buy and sell at your own risk in this business, and that they seller should have known that he was giving away a fortune at such a small price - the first clue should have been when the buyer who bought the box said, "there's nothing in there worth much at all, but I'll give you $3500 right now for the whole thing, no questions asked. 'kay?" Money is money, I suppose, and there are no rules that say you have to play fair. Or are there? The speculation is that the original seller may just hve succeeded in his lawsuit. We'll see later. antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Ephemera | Modern | Modernism | pop art
4/10/2008 10:34:52 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, April 03, 2008
Papa's Brand New Bag on the auction block
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
When James Brown died on Christmas Day 2006, he left behind a lot more than one modern music's greatest catalogs of work, he left behind a life filled with turmoil and an estate that has been the subject of constant wrangling between his family, his adult children, his ex-girlfriends and his ex-wives. Finally, Christie's has stepped in and said, "That's enough!" I actually don't know if that's what Christie's did, but either way, t he venerable auction house will be auctioning of the possesions of the Godfather of Soul sometime this summer. This sale will include Brown's awards, instruments and all kinds of various posessions.  No matter what you think of the man personally, his influence on music was, and is, undeniable. He blended together many sounds and came up with something that was totally original, and musically, in his prime, there was absolutely no one more important. The interlocking parts of his songs were pure genius and made countless millions of people understand not only how music worked, but that they too could follow a few simple rules and enjoy playing music. For that, I do have to say, I miss Brown greatly. To see him covered with a jacket and walked, exhausted, off stage accompanied by one of his crew, only to ruh desperately back to the mic for one last chorus, or word - then to hear the crowd shriek with delight - makes you understand that he truly was... the hardest working man in show business. And I'd love to get me one them guitars...
antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Auction | Ephemera | pop art
4/3/2008 11:57:43 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Who can resist a rampaging ape? King Kong poster rages to $345K
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Really, aren't we all suckers for monkeys? This massive and very cool King King poster recently brought $345,000 at a Profiles in History auction, and it's a real beauty. At 81-inches x 81-inches, it's also about the size of the big simian himself. I love the detail on this poster, and Kong just looks like he's about ready to rip everyone a new smile. What I don't like is that they have Fay Wray running in terror with Robert Armstrong and Bruce Cabot. We all know that Kong and Fay shared an unforbidden love that the world wasn't ready for back then. the studio could have, at least, put a hint of empathy in her eyes as she watched Kong destroy Manhattan. I still say the humans deserved it... The new owner of the poster isn't mentioned, but I'd be willing to bet it's a heavy hitter, if not S teve Geppi himself, who has the greatest collection of rare movie posters in the world at his museum in Camden Yards in downtown Baltimore, MD. antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Auction | Ephemera | Historic Preservation | pop art
4/2/2008 12:01:38 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Just what I've always wanted! A corn flake that looks like Illinois...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Um... I'm... I'm just not sure what to say about this, or why I'm even posting it... I feel a little confused, and fragile... Somebody hold me...  antique | Antique Blog | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques Spoof | Auction | eBay | Ephemera | Modern | pop art
3/18/2008 11:19:13 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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No go for Guernsey's for Jack Ruby's pistol in Vegas
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
I wrote about this a few weeks ago, as a native of Dallas, about my mixed feelings about Ruby's gun going on the block as part of a truly superb Pop Culture antiques auction last weekend. At the sale, as reported here at the Dallas Morning News - only appropriate, don't you think? - the sale featured a mess of great stuff that sold for big bucks, any of which I would have loved to have myself, especially the suit that John Lennon wore on the cover of Abbey Road (the greatest album from the greatest rock band ever, n'est pas?) or Sally Field's habit from the Flying Nun (not really...).  Ruby's gun, however... I just don't know. The Kennedy assasination is still raw in this country, especially in Dallas, and I can't say I'm sorry it didn't sell for big bucks. The guy who owned it, who paid more than $200,000 for it, would accept no less than $1M for it. He came close, with the highest bid reaching $900,000, but he wouldn't part with it for less than the big $1M. Oh well. It will be sold, I reckon, to a private bidder, outside of the sale, and we'll see it again someday soon. I wonder what the folks in Big D think about - I mean really think about it. Any Texans out there want to sound off? Anyone? Anyone? antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Auction | pop art
3/18/2008 10:57:14 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, March 17, 2008
When your own life becomes an antique...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Tom Schroder, one of the editor's of the Washington Post, posted this editor's note yesterday and I found my self moved by it's insight, and impressed with its ability to convey such depth with such brevity.
I'm not quite at the point where my life has become an antique, but the things I loved as a child sure as heck have become collectible, especially the beloved stand-up first gen arcade games I wasted so many hours as a pre-pubescent boy playing on Satruday afternoons at Prestonwood Mall in Dallas. Donkey Kong, Donkey Kong, Jr., Tron, Red Baron, Pole Position, Jack the Giant Killer, Red Baron, Jungle Hunt, these were just a few of the games I ruled... Now they're being collected at big bucks. Much like Mr. Schroder, when I see these things now at shops or shows, priced too high, or undervalued, I simply have to walk away...  antique | Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques Show | Modern | pop art | Toys
3/17/2008 10:57:08 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Antique Trader 3-19 preview, comin' at ya'
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Here's a first look at our March 19 issue, a special for the Atlantique City Antiques Show, which is owned by Trader's parent company, F+W Publications. It'll be a glossy front with an extra 5,000 copies distributed at AC on March 29-30, 2008 at the Altantic City Convention Center. I'll be there. If you are around and want to say hi, please do...  antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques News | Antiques Show | eBay | Ephemera | fine art | Historic Preservation | pop art | stolen antiques | Toys | Vintage Fashion
3/5/2008 2:45:09 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Um, Albright-Knox Museum?... Timing is everything.
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
I have to say that this is a little strange, given the very well publicized problems that The Albright-Knox in Buffalo, NY has had in the last few years. You'll remember the Albright - one of my favorite museums, in the spirit of full disclosure - with its emphasis on modern and contemporary art, decided to auction off some of its antiquities to raise money to buy new art. The antiquities, the museum's board said, were a luxury the museum couldn't afford. They auctioned off a sculpture, "Artemis and the Stag," for some obscene amount that made national news. What it can afford, however, is the launch of a capital campaign to expand its building and exhibition space and invite an internation ally renowned architect to design it - please, not Frank Gehry - so that it will be a place visitors from across the globe will flock to, as reported by The Buffalo News.
I have no qualm with a pretty new building, but the timing is a little bit weird. There's a stipulation that the money from the art cannot be spent on the building, but in the words of one not-so-thrilled Buffalo area blogger, CultureGrrrl, better keep an eye on that $90M art endowment. 
antique | Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Blog | fine art | Historic Preservation | pop art
3/4/2008 10:21:01 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, March 03, 2008
Travel lodging the Wright way
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
This is a link to an article in the Sunday New York Times. A lot of you will remember when the Duncan House - one of Frank Lloyd Wright's 11 surviving Usonian houses - was dismantled and moved from Illinois to Western Pennsylvania. The writer stayed at the re-assembled house, part of a trinity of FLW houses known colelctively as Polymath Park, where you can rent a FLW house for the weekend, enjoying the master's work, and taking in nearby Falling Water and Nob Hill during your stay. For anyone enamored of Wright's timeless genius - and count me among them - it would be a lifelong dream come true to spend a few nights in one of his houses. Just as the writer describes it.  antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Historic Preservation | pop art
3/3/2008 10:28:03 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 29, 2008
 Wednesday, February 27, 2008
In Case of Apocalypse, break stylish glass
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
This was widely covered, and hailed in the MSM the last few days. I don't know... Philosophically speaking, I find it a little daunting and frightening. A tangible reminder of the damage that humans are wreaking on the planet at alarming places. It's the Svalbard Seed Vault in Longyearbyen, Norway (nice name). You can see the below pics here.
   Architecturally, though, I think - in fine Scandanavian Moderne fashion, I might add - the building is pretty awesome, a real tribute to the modern aesthetic, not that visitors to the planet eons from now will appreciate the differences in Lloyd Wright and, say, Gropius... It's as if, in a million years or so - hopefully longer - if the planet is rid of humans and retakes everything, then we're visited by our future progeny returned to the homeworld to see exactly where they sprang from - stick with me - thart they would find not only the seed as proof that we wanted to preserve our existences, but a really cool building refelctive of the best of modern design of the time. Man... Won't those bionetic cyborgs be impressed. Most importantly, the American eggplant will survive. From the Web site: Svalbard Global Seed Vault: Arctic Seed Vault Opens Doors for 100 Million Seeds Ceremony Marking Unprecedented Effort to Protect Global Agriculture Draws World Leaders and Seeds from Over 100 Countries LONGYEARBYEN, NORWAY (26 FEBRUARY 2008) - The Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened today on a remote island in the Arctic Circle, receiving inaugural shipments of 100 million seeds that originated in over 100 countries. With the deposits ranging from unique varieties of major African and Asian food staples such as maize, rice, wheat, cowpea, and sorghum to European and South American varieties of eggplant, lettuce, barley, and potato, the first deposits into the seed vault represent the most comprehensive and diverse collection of food crop seeds being held anywhere in the world. antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Architecture | Ephemera | Fenton Glass | Historic Preservation | pop art
2/27/2008 3:26:16 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 22, 2008
A great piece of architectural glass gone in NYC
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Living for so many years in NYC, I had more than my share of opportunities to check out the Robert Sower's window at JFK Airport's American Airlines terminal. It is - was - truly- an architectural masterpiece and a piece of Modernism that never lost its glory.  As an entry point to NYC and America for many millions of flyers, it spoke philosophically of the American spirit, its artistic soul and its ability to make the seemingly impossible possible. As a piece of art, I love this thing. Now it's gone. Or going, at least, as reported across the nation and against the best efforts of the good folks at Save America's Window. They did their best to get a sponsor to get behind the project, but many musuems said it would be too hard to keep the piece intact. Personally, I don't believe it and think it's a damn shame the window is coming down, piece by piece, to be scattered across the nation and possibly the world. Often, traveling through JFK, the airport was so hectic to get into or out of that the only respite I was given, the only moment of zen and calm, was when I could walk out and see the sun streaming in distinct blades through those colored panes, or reflecting the light of night time, reminding me I had indeed just come home. Goodbye to the Sower's window and goodbye to a distinct American art treasure.
antique | Antique Blog | Antique Glass | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Architecture | fine art | Historic Preservation | pop art
2/22/2008 1:10:23 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Dude... It's like, this dude's got all these records... and, dude, he's selling them...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Antique Trader had an article about this sale, by one Paul Mahwinney of Pittsburgh, of perhaps the greatest single collection of records ever to be sold at one time. Our story was in the 2-20 issue. It is truly an amazing collection, and, if I had a cool $3M for just about every record ever recorded - and you can bet there are some rare and valuale ones in there - then I'd get in a second. I'd reference Trader's article, but I couldn't resist this headline: Dude Auctions off "World's Greatest Record Collection."Dude... Whoa... 
antique | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Auction | eBay | pop art
2/19/2008 11:52:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, February 14, 2008
One banana, two banana, three banana four!
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
It is snowing again here in Central, WI, making it a record setting year for snow - In Wisconsin. Did I mention that? At least in Madison, about 90 minutes to the south. Somehow, here in Central WI we manage to dodge a lot of the severe weather just above and just below this. Going through Heritage Auctions' Web site I cam across a sale that speaks so directly to a Gen-Xer like myself that I had to mention it here. Part of the Dallas Auction firm's current online comics sale.  Man, I remember the Banana Splits like yesterday, along with the freaky cartoons that went along with it. They had a very bizarre version of Tom Sawyer that mixed a live Tom and Becky - maybe Huck - with the rest of the characters being animation. I used to watch in the afternoons - The Banana Splits, that is - as part of a show with an eerie clown who broadcast from a central Ohio amusement park and was always pushing some kind of red frozen treat, whjich I desperately coveted but never got. We moved from Cincinnatti long before the summmer... But I digress. As you might be able to tell by this Wiki on the Splits, the show and its immortal characters - Fleegle, Bingo, Drooper and Snorky - had quite a history, part of which was filmed in my hometown of Dallas. I also remember Bingo had a thing about hitting Fleegle. Check out the sale, and that Banana Splits comic. A steal for $100, and my birthday's comin' up...
antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Auction | pop art | Toys
2/14/2008 9:48:42 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, February 13, 2008
World's longest arch bridge to be built in Dubai
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
You just have to wonder why...
And you have to wonder what future alien civilizations will think of our cultures when they excavate our defunct planet millions of years from now. They'll find this bridge, and a building or two from Las Vegas... I do have to admit that the picture is pretty funky and space age, but I have to wonder about the water in the pictures. Dubai is a desert, no? Also, Dubai? It says that the bridge will allow passage of 2000 cars an hour, that 48,000 a day, right? I guess there will be plenty of men busy driving back and forth on that thing, because they don't allow women to drive over there... The info above came from a blog called Rocket Boom. Fun stuff. 
antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | Architecture | pop art | Toys
2/13/2008 12:27:36 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Just can't resist this - American Roadside Architecture as serious art...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
This is about an exhibition of mid-20th century American Roadside architecture - pictures of it, at least - making its way across... are you ready?... Macedonia.  Yes, one of the most ancient places on the globe is getting a good look at how American represented itself architecturally in the era of post-war business hedonism. Personally, I love this kind of architecture and remember fondly many roadtrips as a kid in Texas and in my 20s - during those blissful summers when i had nothing to do and a car to take to do it - when my friends and I would literally set out for a few days at a time and seek out these places. The more dated the better. I truly believe that America's rapidly dissapearing roadside architecture is replete with gems and they should be saved, if only for the enjoyment of the world and the throngs of Macedonian tourists that are bound to be flocking to our rapidly decaying rural highways... antique | Antique news odd | Antiques publications | Architecture | Historic Preservation | pop art
2/12/2008 1:23:38 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 01, 2008
Worst Building Ever?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff
I am, at heart, a a great lover of groundbreaking architecture - Modern, post-modern, post-post-modern - you name it, I'm an adherent and a seeker. Esquire Magazine's Web site regularly features some of what it considers the worst architcture on the planet, and I have to frequently agree with the choices of its writer(s). The alert for the column that came across the Web today is for what writer Eva Hagberg calls " The Worst Building in the History of Mankind," it's the Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea, and I'm not necessarily discinclined to agree, though there is something amazingly thrilling and strange about this monstrosity that was abondoned 2/3 of the way through building, and has sat vacant for the last two decades. It's a great little essay, with a great couple of videos - totally sci-fi and futuristic in a retro, steam punk kind of way. From the article: "A picture doesn't lie -- the one-hundred-and-five-story R | |