Monday, May 9, 2016

Test: The secret history of antiques

Antiques are, by definition, old. Of course the definition of old is relative. My Nokia 5110 phone, which I stumbled across just last week, is an antique and it’s less than 20 years old. In Georgia you can get a special “Antique” license plate if your car is 25 years old. In the world of furniture and furnishings, for a piece to be designated “antique” it usually must be 100 years old. Indeed, that is exactly how the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agency defines antiques.

One of the great things about an item being old is the fact that it has a lot of history... which can often be quite interesting. As we have many pieces that are quite old, we wondered what stories they might have to tell. Below are some totally true, completely possible narratives from various pieces we have.  Did we mention that they are totally true?

First we have a Swedish Karl Johan drop front painted wood desk many tiny drawers and cubbyholes.  Dating back to the 19th century, this desk has almost 200 years’ worth of history associated with it. If we look closely we can see a scene from its first installation into the home of its original owner, who appears to be a Stockholm merchant. He may well have used this desk to do the books for his business or maybe record his winnings and losings at the baccarat tables. He may also have used it to write love letters to his Spanish wife who was born and raised in Barcelona and refused to spend her winters in Stockholm. While the winters were long without her, the nine months she spent with him each year more than made it worth the annual parting.

Later, somewhere in pre WWI America the desk was found sitting in the den of an American industrialist whose family immigrated to Pennsylvania after famine struck Sweden in 1866. There it mostly gathered dust as it held black and white photographs of his family, including his favorite, a picture of his father and mother riding in a carriage.

Chandeliers, unlike desks, which are generally used by one person at a time, can brighten the world of dozens or more people at the same time. This Italian crystal Empire style chandelier, hanging in a palace overlooking Lake Como, brightened the room of countless balls and galas and dinner parties during its lifetime. Indeed, it once illuminated the room where ballerina Pierina Legnani found herself somewhat wobbly while entertaining a small group of friends after a long evening of drinking. Later it would brighten the evenings in a private school library in Connecticut, where the students who should have been studying were spending most of their time writing mischievous notes to one another, usually at the expense of one of their teachers.

Chests are wonderful pieces of furniture as they hold many of our worldly… and most intimate possessions. This particular 18th century French five drawer chest appears to have belonged to one of Queen Marie Leszczyńska's (Louis XV's wife) ladies in waiting. In the middle left drawer, behind her delicates, she would hide whist cards she would “appropriate” from time to time during evenings spent in Versailles’s Games Room. She would invariably bring the cards back and would feign ignorance when someone noticed there were too many cards in the deck.

Later it belonged to an upscale Paris haberdasher who employed a barber for just one special customer, Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, who would soon be elected President. Known as Napoleon III, Louis-Napoléon enjoyed having his handlebar mustache and chin puff goatee trimmed and waxed every Thursday afternoon.

Eventually the chest would make its way to London and found itself in America in April 1915, having traveled on the RMS Lusitania’s final successful transatlantic crossing before the ship was sunk by a German U-Boat later that month off the coast of Ireland.

Of course we can’t be sure that any of these stories are actually true, but who knows? They could be... But whatever the case, one of the beautiful things about antiques is that they let us dream about the stories they have to tell. Maybe we can’t yet travel back in time to discover the real stories, but it’s a lot of fun to imagine what they might be while we’re busy making stories of our own today that people will dream about tomorrow.



A Vintage Italian Gilded and carved wooden mirror... Is it possible that this mirror was the one Sophia Loren used to use when setting her hair as she was growing up in Pozzuoli, a little village not far from Naples?



This pair of circa 1920 leather and wood French chairs could be from a smoky back room at Les Deux Magots, where regular guest Hemingway might have had long meandering conversations with Picasso or James Joyce or Bertolt Brecht  as they tried drink one another under the nearest table.  



A richly carved French wooden drop-front nightstand that might have been used by Jules Verne to keep his notes for ideas as he was writing "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" or "Journey to the Center of the Earth" or "Around the World in Eighty Days".  


This exquisite 18th Century Spanish two-drawer console  could very well have been a table upon which famed architect Antoni Gaudí sketched out his designs, its simple lines and dark colors providing a stark contrast to his Catalan Modernism.


This 19th Century English settee could have been part of the furnishings of Blenheim Palace, where a young Winston Churchill might have rested from his busy mornings of conducting war games with his collection of 1,500 toy soldiers.




Monday, April 25, 2016

From Dante's Inferno to a Pacific Paradise, Beth Webb Thrives on Baptism by Fire

One of Beth Webb’s earliest memories is of lying on the floor of her grandfather’s library tracing over images in Dante’s Inferno. You might think that a youngster being drawn to Dante’s Inferno might bode darkly for the future… but not in Beth’s case!

Actually it was just the beginning of a lifetime connection with art and beauty that has culminated in her successful career as an interior design entrepreneur. While it wasn’t a direct path from Dante to interior design… it was literally passion that led the way.

Her art education started early, learning French and art history in kindergarten in Lookout Mountain, Tenn. From there, with a few steps in between she found herself earning an undergraduate degree in Art History at the University of Tennessee. After that she crossed the pond and worked on her Masters at the University of Kent and Sotheby’s Works of Art Course in London.

Post school she came back home and took a job at the Hirschl & Adler Galleries in New York. From there she spent years as an art dealer in Atlanta and Chattanooga. It was there, when she was minding her own business… that the interior decorating gods intervened.

As you can imagine, an art professional with a passion for beauty and style would probably have a stylishly decorated home. And indeed Beth did… well, certainly a childhood friend thought so. As a matter of fact, he was so in love with what she had done with her home that one evening at a party he asked if she would design the new headquarters for Lyndhurst, a charitable foundation. And so she was off with a commission that came out of left field but was inspired by her passion for beauty. Thus her first interior design job was doing the top to bottom transition of an 1892 Chattanooga house into an office… with the caveat that it should not look like an office!

As fate would have it, at the party dedicating the newly designed headquarters, another potential client cornered her and said that he loved what she had done with the Lyndhurst Foundation and wanted her to do the design for his 30,000 ft. 1920 Tudor home.

Two enormous and challenging jobs right out of the gate! That’s what you might call baptism by fire… or as Beth would say, learning the trade in the school of hard knocks. Since then she has designed homes – and the occasional commercial space – across the country and around the world. One of the most fascinating opportunities she has encountered was the chance to literally help design a whole town! When a friend decided to build a town on 1,400 acres on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica he called Beth. Having been involved since the project was nothing but slab, Las Catalinas today consists of dozens of unique homes and buildings and is a new urbanist paradise with lots of walking, few cars and plenty of trails and hiking and, of course, swimming, paddle boarding and ocean kayaking. At the end of the day – not to be confused with the end of the project, which is ongoing – she says it’s been one of the most satisfying jobs of her career. Like her first two jobs, Las Catalinas provided a steep learning curve but it’s been well worth it… and not just because that’s where she found her rescue dog, Catalina.

Although Beth didn’t grow up focusing on interior design, she has embraced it with both arms. She of course does design work with her team, but she’s also heavily involved in the industry as well as a member of the Leaders of Design Council and the Design Leadership Network. Not only do these organizations bring together great designers, architects and landscape architects from around the world to share ideas and learn from and teach one another, their meetings are often in wonderful locales so that designers can take in elegant and exotic design first hand in places like Marrakesh, Lisbon, Cairo etc. Such travel dovetails with her mantra which is “learn by looking”. It was one such meeting that occasioned Beth to visit Cuba last year as she traveled with a group from the Soane Museum in London. For her it was the epitome of the Stendhal syndrome, where one is overcome with emotions at seeing something indescribably powerful or beautiful. Driving home how powerful that trip was, on her blog, which almost exclusively used photographs from professional photographers in magazines and online, almost all of the pictures on her Cuba blogpost are hers… taken with her iPhone 6.

While exotic locales, beautiful homes and five star hotels can be captivating and alluring, Beth never forgets something she learned attending the school of hard knocks… success in interior design is 5% creative and 95% business. Like a 2 hour play that takes months of rehearsal, being successful in this business is far more than just an appreciation for beauty and elegance, it takes an ability to execute on the mundane as well as the exciting, the payroll and the accounts receivable as well as the choosing sconces and finding just the right tremolo. And the iPhone has helped. It’s probably been the single most important development in interior design in decades because it gives you the ability to capture and share vivid images instantly, which moves the entire process along faster and puts clients and designers on the same page more quickly and easily…

And so it is that a little girl from a small town in Tennessee grew into a woman who has harnessed her passion for beauty and taken life by the horns… doing so while traveling across the planet to places that she would never have dreamed of back when she started tracing Dante…



Lyndhurst Foundation headquarters


Cuba circa 2015


A splendid marble courtyard in Cuba


A kitchen and dining room in Las Catalinas


Catalina, Beth's rescue from Las Catalinas



Beth designed the Al Freco Dining Room in the Atlanta Home and Lifestyles'
  Southeastern Designer Showhouse which can be seen through May 15th.  


A Buckhead living room designed by Beth


A Lake Chatuge bedroom designed by Beth

The Beth Webb Interiors team...


Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Paris...TEST

Anyone familiar with this blog will most certainly recognize that we here at A Tyner Antiques are big fans of Paris. The art, the architecture and… pretty much everything else. We’re quite sure the “City of Lights” is the most beautiful city in the world. Of course we’re in good company on that score, which is why the city is the backdrop for countless movies – including everything from Audrey Hepburn’s romp in “How to Steal a Million” to Woody Allen’s wonderful “Midnight in Paris” – books such as Ernest Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast and of course the art of Renoir's Le Moulin de la Galette and Seurat’s “Eiffel Tower”.

But that beauty is not just reserved for Parisians or tourists. Paris is one of the 10 most popular cities in the world to have a second home… because so many people want to return… so often… and spend more than just a week at time. And who wants to live out of a suitcase when you can have a furnished apartment just waiting for your return? Well this month’s Architectural Digest has a feature on just one such pied-à-terre belonging to designer Timothy Corrigan. In the 8th arrondissement not far from the French president’s residence and the American embassy, the residence is spectacularly appointed and extraordinarily bright and colorful.

And then there’s the Ace of Space blog which just last month had a feature on another apartment in Paris, this one owned by Atlanta’s own Ann Huff of Huff Harrington. She worked with a team to completely redesign the quaint space that has a spectacular view of the nearby Eiffel Tower. And the beauty of Ann’s place is that when it’s not being used… it’s available for rent!

Enjoy…


Photographs in Architectural Digest by Richard Powers























































Monday, March 7, 2016

TEST: When is money more than than just money?

Money makes the world go around… Well, technically it doesn’t really do that, but it sure can make things easier. How, you might ask? Well, imagine you’re a farmer and all you own is a cow. How do you go into town and shop at the grocery store, get a haircut and eat at a restaurant without money? Your cow is not exactly easily divisible… and you can’t exactly carry it in your wallet.

Money is something that represents a store of value. It’s something that the citizens of a nation or members of a group recognize as having value beyond its intrinsic value. A dollar bill is worth a dollar despite the paper it’s printed on being worth only pennies.

In much of the west coins were the money of choice for millennia. Later paper currency was introduced, and today virtual currencies like Bitcoin, that only exist online, are trying to replace tangible money altogether.

Well, around the world there are places where money is not only not like dollars or coins, but doesn’t look anything like what we are familiar in terms of money. (It just goes to show how creative people can be!) Here are some examples:

Mbole Copper Currency

In the Congo there is a small tribe called the Mbole. From the 18th to the early 20th century they made copper currency bracelets which were used as currency for major transactions. These large, shiny pieces could be used to purchase property, pay off a significant debt or even act as something of a wedding ring for a bride.

These substantial pieces were hammered out of single sheet of copper ingot and, once flat, formed to give it a round shape. In this case the value of the bracelet was closely associated with the size, as copper was an expensive material and forming one took a great deal of time and effort. Worn on an ankle or wrists, these bracelets were seen as a symbol of status, much like diamond rings or fashionable watches in the west.

Kina Shells

In the verdant highlands of Paupa New Guinea beautiful Kina Shells play the role of money. Kina Shells are actually made from Gold Lip Shells...a type of Oyster similar to the Black Lip shells that contain pearls. With great care they are carved and shaped and polished to give them their stunning beauty.

The Kina Shell currencies are often made into necklaces or breastplates which are worn for ceremonial occasions. Color may be added to the shells during the process and cowrie shells may be added for additional decoration. Although the Kina Shell currencies have largely been replaced with paper currency (which not surprisingly is called the Kina…) in some places the shells retain some, if not all of their status of money. Indeed, because of their value, they are sometimes used to pay for major purchases or are given as dowries to the parents of brides.

Tajere Currency – sometimes called Tajere Currency

These long and thick currency pieces are forged from iron in eastern Nigeria. Typically there is a thick center with two tapered rods that exude in opposite directions. This distinctive style was a hallmark which indicated that they were likely forged by members of the Mumuye tribe. Other tribes living in the western part of the country, which abuts Chad and Cameroon, sometimes used these pieces as well, included the Fulani and the Juken.

Dating from the 16th to the 20th centuries, these pieces sometimes had shapes worked in the ends for differentiation and decoration. Some were simple fans while others might be formed into animals or other shapes. These pieces could be used for major transactions such as dowries as well as smaller, less significant transactions.

Yua Wenga

We return to Paupa New Guinea where Yua means money and Wenga are clam rings. The Yua Wenga currencies are carved from giant clam shells using pieces of bamboo. Like the other currencies discussed above, Yua Wengas are used for major transactions, including property sales and marriages. Unlike the Kina shells, which were primarily used in the mountainous regions of the country, the Yua Wenga currencies were more often found among the tribes living near the coast.

Konga Legband / Copper Currency

These legbands were both currency and status symbols for the Mongo tribe of northwest Congo. They were made by pouring hot copper and tin into molds set in the ground. Once formed they were removed and bent around trees until they had
the appropriate size.

Because they could be heavy (up to 20 lbs) women would wrap fabric and leaves – called Litelele – around their feet to keep from damaging them – the feet that is! Typically they were worn for celebrations and relatively short periods, but on occasion brides might actually wear them for months at a time!

And so it goes. Apparently with money, sometimes there is more than meets the eye. Money pieces can act as decorations, status symbols and of course, currency to transact sales… or weddings. These pieces may not be as convenient as a $20 bill or a credit card, but they’re a lot more convenient than a cow! Think about them the next time you’re unhappy because you left Quik Trip and the cashier gave you some change that is now jingling in your pocket!


Mbole tribe members wearing copper currency