Showing posts with label miniature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miniature. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

A visit to Lucullus Antiques

A lovely plate setting in Lucullus Antique shop in the French Quarter. 

Yesterday I posted about a 18th century garden flower sprig decorated gravy boat that I bought on ebay. Today I went for a visit to my favorite French Quarter Antique shop, Lucullus. Named after Lucius Licinius Lucullus a Roman general famous for his luxurious banquets & enormous consumption of food. Lucullus is a upscale shop for French culinary antiques, with furniture, tools & serving pieces, plus design services. I met the proprietor, Patrick Dunne in the mid 1990's when I was a teenager and had just moved to New Orleans from Mobile, Alabama. 

I have stayed friends over the years! Looking at the elegant antiques in this amazing shop is a feat for the eyes! The displays and vignettes are carefully chosen for the utmost pleasure of the eyes!  The shop window displays have themselves become a destination for many people walking in the historic Vieux Carre.  Both the casual collector and serious connoisseur will certainly find something at Lucullus to please them. The beautiful showrooms open up onto a lush Elegance and Decadence original patio, which evokes the quintessential New Orleans experience and provides the perfect setting for the collection of antique garden furniture and ornaments. 

A wonderful 18th century French porcelain dinner plate in the garden sprig pattern.  



Wonderful 1820's Charles X champagne flutes 


Neoclassical Ormolu on a armoire 

Wonderful early cut glass 


Louis Philippe champagne flutes, I think it was in this shop in my teens when I discovered Louis Philippe champagne flutes. I have had a love for them ever since.    

A wonderful French Restoration period portico clock under its original dome! 

A nice Old paris porcelain dinner service. 

A cornflower decorated sauce boat on stand. 

The courtyard has so much patina 



18th & 19th century French Brass candlesticks 

18th and 19th French century cooper 

A carved wood and gilded French chandelier.   

Back when I first meet the proprietor, Patrick Dunne. I was making miniatures out of clay of French decorate arts like these miniatures of Old paris vases & plates still on display at Lucullus. 



LUCULLUS
610 Chartres Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
(504) 528-9620

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Miniature New Orleans 1850's Creole bedroom

Miniature New Orleans 1850's Creole bedroom

In my younger days I played with clay and became good at creating antiques out of clay  in miniature, and painting the clay to look like the various materials I was coping . As I child I could make a Ancient Roman Village or a Southern Antebellum town out of clay on the top of a table. In the late 1990's I was making period rooms in miniature. 


Prudent Mallard , 1853

This room Creole New Orleans bedroom from the 1850's was completed in 1999. It show a Louisiana Creole bed chamber dating from the 1850's. The architecture of the room is of the Classical Greek Revival period and dates to the 1830's. The Greek Key doorways in the room have ornate  entablatures toped with classical anthemion's. The paneled doors are wood grained to look like rich flamed mahogany and birds eye maple. The baseboard and the Creole mantel are marbleized. At the top of the walls is a classical cornice molding. The transoms are made up of Neoclassical Bow and arrow design




The furniture in the room is copied from Mid 19th century pieces by Creole New Orleans most renown cabinetmaker Prudent Mallard. Prudent Mallard was born in Sevres, France, in 1809, the son of Parisian mother whose husband was a Scotsman. He emigrated to America in the 1830's first living in New York city and then moving to New Orleans. Mallard became the most popular cabinetmaker in New Orleans during the antebellum period and shipped his furniture all over the South.   He died 6 AUG 1879 in New Orleans, having married Augustine Andrea Beltram with whom he had seven children. The rosewood Rococo Revival bedroom suit of furniture consists of a half tester bed, dressing table, armoire, shaving stand & pray due ( a chair to pray on at night).









Sunday, October 31, 2010

Mourning Art and jewelry

Soldier weeping at the tomb of Napoleon l miniature painting 1820's




I started to collect mourning/sentimental jewelry over 10 years ago when you could get 18k gold pieces with rose cut diamonds for $50 bucks on ebay. I stopped collecting when I had over 200 pieces of high end Georgian and Victorian mourning jewelry dating from 1760-1860. Now most of the pieces I paid $50 bucks for are going for $500. and up on ebay. Over the years I have loaned out my collection to museums for Mourning exhibits for the month of October.




I first became interested in hairwork mourning jewelry at the age of 10 after touring a 1833 Greek Revival Historic House Museum in Mobile, Alabama called Oakleigh Mansion. In the master bedroom in a French display case was a small collection of mid 19th century mourning hairwork jewelry own by 19th century Mobilions. I was festinated with the stuff. It was woven as fine as lace but was made of human hair and gold. In my late teens I started to collect pieces of the popular 19th century art. In my hay day I had five packages a day of Old Paris porcelain and hair and gold Mourning jewelry coming in from the mail man.



I also collected Mourning portraits and a few other items connected to Mourning. Although today it seams like the average person has little time to mourn a death. In the 18th and 19th century mourning could go on for years are a life time. The first major person to die in America was the death of the country's father on December 14, 1799. George Washington's demise inspired the commercial production of songs, poems, images, and memorabilia in his honor well into a hundred years after his death as a sign of prolonged mourning. Middle class and wealthy lady's embroidered colorful silk scenes of classical figures crying at the tomb of Washington that proudly hung in parlors along with family oil portraits. If you were poor maybe you could afford a hand colored mass produced engraving of the same scene. Or if you were a close friend of Washington or family member you might get a miniature portrait of his likeness on ivory painted by a fashionable artist of the day with his hair on the back.



By the middle of the 19th century having a period of mourning was becoming cheaper due to the Industrial Revolution making every class of people able to afford to be fashionable and to display mourning art or a photo of the dearly departed. Not only did people dress in mourning, but wealthy people eat off of specially made porcelain dinner services painted in black. They wrote on mourning stationary outlined in black. A home was decorated outside and in, in mourning. Books were published on mourning protocol. In the 19th century Mourning was big bucks. English Queen Victoria mourned her husband death prince Albert until her death in 1901. Today hairwork jewelry and mourning portraits are a lost art. But the Attention to Detail that went into pieces are amazing and exquisite making mourning art rare, beautiful & interesting to today's viewers. I glade I collected my pieces when I did as the prices keep going up.



1790 Navette shaped Mourning brooch On the tomb are the words, "Rest in Peace".


Written on this Georgian  memorial brooch is, "John Kempson ob. 30 of May 1783 Ae 20".  The picture on this brooch is hair on ivory surrounded with garnets.


English 15k gold Victorian brooch On the back is brown woven hair and the inscription, "Frances Chalmers obt 12 May 1853".


Cupid and woman decorating a tomb with roses late 18th century. The pearls represent tears


Belt ring made of woven hair, pearls and blue enamel Georgian early 19th century


A dog (symbolizing fidelity/loyalty) is looking up at the word "fidelity" which the woman is holding in her hand.  To emphasis the depth of her love and loyalty, the woman is holding a cage or basket with the word "fidelity" in it.  The beautiful paste stones and cobalt blue enamel really make the sepia painting stand out.



Mourning jewelry worn by Mrs. Joel Gutman of Baltimore, Maryland in 1865.                                                                                  

Early 19th century Georgian brooch made of gold get and rose cut diamonds in the shape of a forget-me-not flower




Portrait miniature of George Washington with his hair on the back sold by Skinner auction Feb 2009 for $336,000.00


Locket with locks of George Washington and Martha Washington’s hair Sold at James D. Julia Auctions August 5, 2009 for $ 7,475.00


Sentimental Portrait of George Washington, 1789 watercolor on ivory by John Ramage half-length, wearing the blue uniform of a General with yellow facings, and gold epaulettes, yellow waistcoat and lace cravat, and the Order of the Cincinnati, powdered hair en queue. Gold frame, the reverse with gold monogram GW on plaited hair in navette aperture within engraved inscription navette shape.

Early 19th century engraving weeping at the tomb of Washington
                                                                                 



 Mrs.Washington, painted two years after her husband's death


Bernard Duchamp c. 1822, Born in Bordeaux, France, Bernard Duchamp immigrated to New Orleans prior to 1814. During the Battle of New Orleans, he served with the American forces. A prosperous commission merchant, he married Marie Theodore Basilica Pédesclaux, daughter of New Orleans notary public Pierre Pédesclaux, in 1820. They maintained a residence on Royal Street in the Vieux Carre. Around 1822, Duchamp hired someone to paint his likeness. The unknown portraitist, probably an itinerant painter traveling through the south, followed the prevailing French Neoclassical tradition of portraiture particularly popular in Louisiana at the time. /collections of the “Louisiana State Museum, Gift of Mrs. P. Malarcher.”



The Bernard Duchamp Family Mourning Portrait c. 1832 is unusual in that the bereaved family is shown dressed in black mourning clothes beside their beloved father’s draped portrait. Bernard Duchamp’s death left behind his widow and five children. The bright ethereal light coming from the window on the left of the painting alludes to the eternal afterlife. / collections of the “Louisiana State Museum, Gift of Mrs. P. Malarcher.”




Creole Family Mourning Portrait, New Orleans 1830's by Tomassin


                                                                     
Marie Antoinette in her black velvet mourning dress in the Temple Tower.


All Souls Day - 1859 by William Adolphe Bouguereau


Early 19th century Mourning portrait of children at a tomb.Note Guardian Angel and children with orange coral jewelry to ward off bad sprits.