|
Displaying items by tag: charleston
A Grand Tour: Trade Winds of Influence 16th Annual Charleston Art & Antiques Forum March 13–17, 2013 Old Courtroom, 23 Chalmers Street, Charleston, S.C. For information visit www.CharlestonAntiquesForum.org or call 800.926.2520
The forum will bring together an impressive group of speakers from the US and Europe who will demonstrate the influence of the Grand Tours of the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries on the architecture, furniture, silver, art, and gardens of Americans and Europeans alike. Dame Rosalind Savill, Director Emeritus of the Wallace Collection, London, England, will deliver the keynote address, focusing on her experience with French decorative arts. The mission of the Charleston Art & Antiques Forum is to present the best fine and decorative arts scholarship, and to benefit arts education and preservation. Sponsors of the 2013 Forum are Charlton Hall Auctions, PDI, and the Florence Museum.
10th Annual Charleston Antiques Show March 22–24, 2013; preview March 21 Memminger Auditorium, 56 Beaufain Street, Charleston, S.C. 66th Annual Spring Festival of Houses and Gardens March 21–April 20, 2013 For information visit www.historiccharleston.org or call 843.723.1623
Inspired by the rich historical, architectural, and cultural heritage of Charleston, the 10th annual Charleston Antiques Show is a premier destination for collectors and enthusiasts who enjoy seeing and learning about incorporating antiques into modern-day décor. Attendees will find English, European, and American period furnishings, decorative arts, and fine art, architectural elements, garden furniture, vintage jewelry, and silver. In addition to attending the show, visitors can sign up for special events such as a luncheon lecture with the award-winning classical architect Gil Schafer, behind-the-scenes tours with experts, and study tours. While in Charleston, enjoy walking tours through the city’s historic district showcasing Charleston’s distinctive architecture, history, and gardens during the 66th Annual Festival of Houses and Gardens and experience the intimate charm and elegance found within private gardens and historic homes.
Museum of Early Southern Decorative Art’s founder, Frank Horton, purchased this silver cann marked by Charleston, South Carolina, silversmith Lucas Stoutenburgh (1691–1743) in the 1960s. It is boldly engraved with a coat of arms featuring a rampant lion placed between eight cross-crosslets and crested with a combed cockatrice rising from a ducal coronet. Whose arms were these? Horton wrote to the College of Arms in London, England, in an attempt to identify the family the crest represented. They responded that the coat of arms was identifiable, but that the cost for the research would be greater than the £20 he enclosed.1
Charleston, South Carolina, is fortunate to have many of its residents and institutions focused on preserving its history and architectural heritage. One of the wealthiest ports during the colonial period, large numbers of talented artisans produced luxury goods for their sophisticated local clientele. Unfortunately, much of the furniture and decorative arts made during this golden era either no longer survive or have been dispersed (see pages 298–299), leaving scant record of what was produced and owned. One individual—businessman and Charleston native John M. Rivers Jr.—set out to reclaim the city’s decorative heritage and has made a concerted effort to acquire and return locally made furniture, silver, and other objects that tell the story of Charleston and its inhabitants.
Charleston, South Carolina, prides itself on numerous firsts. For instance, the first theater building in America was constructed in Charleston (in 1736), as was the first public golf course (in 1786). The citizens of Charleston have long been protective of their city and its unique character, and in 1931, the first historic district in the country was created by Charlestonians, and in the 1950s, the first revolving fund to purchase and rehabilitate historic buildings was developed in the city. As a result of the latter two progressive actions, Charleston represents the finest intact collection of colonial and antebellum architecture in the nation.
The blue, green, peach, and yellow facades known as “Rainbow Row” are among the most iconic landmarks in historic Charleston, South Carolina (Fig. 1). The “longest cluster of intact Georgian row houses in the United States,”1 the fourteen buildings that compose this section date to between 1720 and 1790. Originally a bustling commercial boulevard facing one of the busiest harbors in the colonies, the wharves have since been filled and tourists now stroll along this tree-lined street.
I recently visited Charleston, South Carolina. Coming from the chilly northeast, it was refreshing enjoying sunny days in the seventies. Add to that the palm trees, view of the harbor and Fort Sumpter, with the Atlantic Ocean beyond, and the elegant houses with verandas overlooking the streets or manicured back yards, and it seems a daydream.
In our upcoming Anniversary issue (Jan/Feb 2011) we will be featuring a number of Charleston’s jewels. The main reason for this is that Historic Charleston Foundation will be the loan exhibit at the 2011 Winter Antiques Show in Manhattan this January 21-30. In our current Autumn-Winter issue we started getting readers thinking about the loan show with an article on the history of the foundation by curator Brandy Culp (HCF was “founded in 1947 to preserve and protect the integrity of Charleston’s architectural, historical and cultural heritage.”). In the forthcoming Anniversary issue, her colleague Winslow Hastie will write about some of the many architectural preservation efforts within and outside of Charleston with which the foundation has been involved. Director Kitty Robinson will write about the loan show.
The flagship properties owned by Historic Charleston are the Nathaniel Russell House (1808), one of “America’s most important neoclassical dwellings,” and the Aiken-Rhett House (1818; 1830s; 1850s), “the most intact townhouse complex showcasing urban life in antebellum Charleston.” HCF was also integral in the early preservation efforts of Drayton Hall. Located outside of Charleston on the Ashley River, the plantation is now owned by the National Trust for Historic Preservation and “considered one of the finest examples of Georgian-Palladian architecture in the United States. The grounds represent one of the most significant, undisturbed historic landscapes in America.” An article on this spectacular house will be in the same Anniversary issue. Another important plantation located along the Ashley River is Middleton Place. Though the original mansion house was burned during the Civil War, the 1755 gentleman’s guest quarters serve as the museum, housing important furnishings and art. The Stableyards interpret eighteenth- and nineteenth-century life on a working plantation.
Middleton Place Foundation also owns the Edmonston-Alston House (1825; 1838) in downtown Charleston. While back in Charleston, visit the elegant Joseph Manigault House (1803), built with proceeds from the Rice industry in the early nineteenth century. The Heyward-Washington House (1772), also built from Rice profits, was originally owned by a signer of the Declaration, Thomas Heyward, Jr., and, opened in 1930 as “Charleston’s first historic house museum.” The house is fully furnished and contains some of the most noteworthy Charleston furniture to be found.
Both houses are owned by the Charleston Museum. Historic in its own right, the institution is referred to as “America’s First Museum, founded in 1773.” This institution showcases the “cultural and natural history of Charleston and the South Carolina Lowcountry.” While there are changing exhibits (such as the Sesquicentennial of the Civil War), the permanent installations include such “cabinets of curiosity” as prehistoric skeletons and extinct animals, “Early Days” (specimens, Egyptian relics, and other material from the museum’s early collecting history), weaponry from 1750 to the twentieth century, Civil War material, textile and silver galleries, regional materials, and hands-on exhibits for children. The museum is a veritable assemblage of interesting and well-interpreted material. The Gibbes Museum of Art, founded with monies left by James Shoolbred Gibbes, was opened in 1905, with Gibbes’ direction for a building or hall for the purpose of the “exhibition of paintings.” The museum has expanded during the years, and today visitors can see both fine and decorative arts, “of Charleston, the Lowcountry and American South from the colonial era through today.”
There so much more to Charleston: more plantations; gardens; and naval and maritime museum, among other activities. Perhaps begin with a tour of the city, whether walking or in a carriage (by boat as well!). If you prefer a bus tour, that too is possible. Some tours also have themes such as art or ghosts. The rich culinary scene can be explored on culinary tours. There are plenty of tours with a focus on the rich history of the town as well, and, of course you can venture out on your own to see the sites. Along your way, be sure to visit the County Courthouse of 1753, “one of the most important buildings in the state.” Among the things you will see, are some of the original portions of the walled city of Charleston, located on the subterranean level.
Before you leave Charleston, be sure to visit the antiques dealers. Among them are Mary Helen McCoy Fine Antiques and Moore House American Antiques. Art galleries include Charleston Renaissance Gallery and The Sylvan Gallery.
When planning your trip, perhaps consider visiting this March. The weather is lovely that time of year, and from March 16-20, 2011, the Charleston Art & Antiques Forum offers attendees cutting edge scholarship. This year’s theme is “Made in America: Century by Century.” The timing overlaps with the March 18-20 Charleston International Antiques Show, a fundraiser for Historic Charleston Foundation, which brings us full circle to where we started this trip. Enjoy! There is a lot to see!
|
|
|
|
|