Friday, 18 December 2009
Distracted
Thursday, 5 November 2009
Plaster of Paris
Monday, 31 August 2009
Things I have collected
Things I collected as a child:
- Stamps - kept in albums, my Uncle Graham would send 1st day covers, some of the stamps were old, my prized stamp was a Penny Red.
- Postcards - kept in a photo album. I would buy at least one everywhere I visited.
- Rubbers (erasers) - kept in an ice cream tub, brought out, counted, arranged, re-arranged, sniffed, put back in box.
Things collected as a teenager:
- Parrots - earrings, brooches, ornaments, pictures etc. displayed in my bedroom, gifts mainly and all new.
- Vintage Handbags - started buying them when I was about 15 and I started to buy my clothes in secondhand shops. Kept in a box.
Things I collect now:
- Coffee pots - dispalyed in kitchen, all brought at jumble sales or secondhand shops. All practical and I have used them.
- Jugs - as above.
- Necklaces - all worn, vintage and cheap plastic, kept in jewelery boxes and dishes in bed room.
- Vintage haberhashery - most brought, some gifts, some displayed, most in tins and boxes, brought out, counted, arranged, re-arranged, sniffed and put back in boxes.
So what's to made of that? The collections as a child were kept private, probably not my choice, I'm sure my mum made me put them away, but they were taken out and viewed, worked on/added to and then put away.
As a teen the parrots were displayed, more of a way of rebelling, they were bright and bold in a house of beige and brown, my room was very 80's, pink and grey. I then started collecting and coverting vintage practical things again as a rebellion to the new plastic that was all around. I had also started working as a Stage Manger having to buy and find props, so I was becoming more aware of these items. All the things I started to buy would be used, they had to be practical again the opposite of my mum's ornaments that would sit on the side, even practical things she brought couldn't be used straight away, they had to be washed up, put back in the box and put in the cupboard.
The vintage haberdashery is a fairly new collection but I feel it's a mission to save it from being thrown away or unappreciated. I think that's the thing that distresses me most, the idea that things can be dismissed as rubbish and thrown out, this idea makes my blood run cold.
A collection of collections
I have been reading a selection of essays called Collectors, Expressions of Self and Others, edited byAnthony Shelton who is the Head of Collections at the Horniman Museum.
In Sarah Cheangs essay 'The Dogs of Fo: Gender, Identity and Collecting' she say's at 'the Collection is the self, created by the will of the collector in response to both conscious and subconscious desires.
It represents the desired self: an ideal self. Whatever longing has produced the collection, it can be seen as a way of providing a controlled cohesion of identlity which is otherwise fractured and unstable.
This self possession through possessions is so strong that the loss of the collection can be likened to loss of self. The collection also offers an opportunity for immortality, as the materiality of the collection, of preserved intact can insure continuing integrity of the collector's identity after his/her death.
Collections provide a material encoding of the collectors desired identity.'
Friday, 14 August 2009
My Cabinet
Don't know why but I thought the cabinet opened the other way??? I've had it for ages, years and I used to use it as a bathroom cabinet but it's been hidden in the loft and shed since we moved to this house. I've had to hide it because every time Peter finds it he tries to get rid of it asking me what I want it for? I've not known what I wanted it for until now, hurray for not getting rid of things, I knew there was a reason I kept it, didn't know it at the time but I do now.
Natural History Museum
Thursday, 16 July 2009
Rachel's Collections
My friend Rachel collects things; dolls, hearts, photos of shoes, graffitti......
There are some great photographs she has taken on her blog, photos from her travels near and far.
Rachel is also an expert on cabinets of curiosities having made her own 'Cabinet of Hearts' which contains lost hearts, each one telling it's own story.
Friday, 10 July 2009
Frames
So what happens when you frame something?
Wednesday, 1 July 2009
Manchester Hermit
Tuesday, 23 June 2009
Catherine the Great Collector
With this single stroke, Catherine the Great acquired more than 4,000 master drawings by Western European artists. Sheets from the Cobenzl collection in the present show include examples of Poussin, Rubens, van Dyck, Primaticcio, Hans Holbein the Elder, Jacob Jordaens, Hendrick Goltzius, Guercino and Greuze. Every one of them is a touchstone of quality. In the Poussin ''Baptism'' -- a sketch for the painting of that name that is a part of Poussin's ''Seven Sacraments'' -- rigor and awe work as equal partners.
Catherine went on to buy 1,020 drawings from the collection of Count Heinrich Bruhl, who was at the time a minister at the court of Saxony in Dresden. Virtually on her own doorstep she also acquired the drawings -- almost 2,000 -- that had been collected by Count Butskoy, the president of the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg.
Monday, 22 June 2009
Dirty Dick's
Sunday, 21 June 2009
Thursday, 18 June 2009
Dictators who collected
- Saddam Hussein - Sci-fi fantasy paintings featuring menacing dragons and barely-clad blondes.
- Adolf Hitler - Bavarian 18th century furniture. Munich antique dealers were ordered to keep an eye out for him.
- Kim Jong II - 20,000 videos (Daffy Duck cartoons, Star Wars, Liz Taylor and Sean Connery flicks)
- Idi Amin - Several racing cars and loads of old film reels of I Love Lucy reruns and Tom and Jerry cartoons
- Joseph Stalin - Westerns with Spencer Tracy, Clark Gable and John Wayne. Stalin also inherited Joseph Goebbels's films.
The Psychology of collecting
Podcast from the Frieze Art Fair.
Sunday, 14 June 2009
Horniman Museum
Victorian tea trader Frederick John Horniman began collecting specimens and artefacts from around the World in the 1860's. Horniman's key mission was to bring the world to Forest Hill and he opened part of his family house to the public so they could view the riches he had collected. As the collections increased they outgrew the family home and in 1898 Horniman commissioned Charles Harrison Townsend to design a new Museum.
The Museum opened in 1901 and was dedicated with the surrounding land as a free gift to the people of London by Frederick Horniman forever for their recreation instruction and enjoyment. The original collections comprised natural history specimens, cultural artefacts and musical instruments. Over the last 100 years the Museum has added significantly to the original bequest with Horniman's original collections comprising only 10 per cent of current ethnography and musical instrument holdings.
Further buildings were added to the original during the course of the last century notably in 1911 when a new building was donated by Frederick's son Emslie. In 1999 the Museum demolished some of the later additions and embarked on a Centenary Development to create a new extension and several associated spaces, and opened in June 2002.
The Horniman is our local museum and I've been visiting it for nearly 10 years. There is a permanent natural history display and in the Centenary Gallery there is an interesting display about the collections and how they are clasified. I had a quick visit with my son recently and took some photos but will have to go back soon for a longer visit.
These type of displays are a favorite with my children, many an hour has been spent studying the life cycles of various animals.
Wednesday, 3 June 2009
Cabinets of Curiosity
I've been search the internet, seeing what comes up and came across this blog
not sure how clear this page from my sketchbook is, but I've been thinking about interactive cabinet's of curiosity, ones that the viewer can choose what to put in. Using an OHP the viewer can select slides and arrange them so they look like they are in a cabinet.
Tuesday, 2 June 2009
Display Assignment
I need to go through my journal so far, scan and photograph it and catch up before my brain runs to far ahead and I lose track.