Showing posts with label Austin Productions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austin Productions. Show all posts

Friday, October 21, 2016

Arty Farty Friday ~ Going Ape

On our recent wanders around antique and vintage stores in Kansas I found another piece of sculpture by Austin Productions. In an antique mall in Emporia KS, this one came as a surprise. I picked it up for a closer look mainly because I liked the idea it represents; turned it around and was very surprised to see "Austin Productions" carved into the base at the back, dated 1962 - quite an early piece for them. We already have four other Austin Productions pieces (see here, here, here, and here).
I bought the piece at a very reasonable price, much lower than is being asked for similar pieces on E-bay and elsewhere.

I wasn't, originally, aware that it is an "homage" piece, or rough copy, of a famous sculpture by 19th century German sculptor
Wolfgang Hugo Rheinhold
(26 March 1853 – 2 October 1900) who was arguably most famous for his
Affe mit Schädel (Ape with Skull), inspired by Charles Darwin's theory of evolution. There have been several variations, copies of, and tributes to Rheinhold's sculpture over the years. Austin Productions was one of the original US manufacturers. The Austin Productions piece differs from Rheinhold's original in fine detail, and in material used.

Tuesday, February 02, 2016

Tootling into Texas

Our long weekend out of town was spent in Gainesville, Texas - not far over the Red River, Oklahoma's border with Texas.

Gainesville, billed on road signs as "The Front Porch to Texas", doesn't have anything especially touristy to draw crowds there, though some of the town's business is sure to come from a huge casino, WinStar World Casino,located a few miles away, just across the state line in Oklahoma. Gambling is not legal in Texas. The casino is advertised on billboards as "The World's Largest Casino". I suspect they exaggerate. The casino's theatre regularly hosts concerts featuring world famous stars.

Gainesville itself has an historic rail depot. A passenger train, Amtrak's Heartland Flyer operates daily through the town, travelling between Oklahoma City and Fort Worth. We were standing in the street, very near the railway lines when the Flyer sped through one morning, nearly deafening us with its shrieking whistle. It was only the second passenger train I've seen since I came to the USA in 2004, whereas rail travel was a way of life for me back in Britain. This train had two levels though - an "upstairs" - something I'd not seen back in the UK.

As for the town's other claims to fame, (or notoriety) Wikipedia tell that:
During the Civil War, the Great Hanging at Gainesville, a controversial trial and hanging of 40 suspected Union loyalists, brought the new town to the attention of the state and came close to ripping the county apart.
And
Gainesville is home to a large outlet mall (the Gainesville Factory Shops) which used to attract visitors from north Texas as well as southern Oklahoma. Constructed in the mid 1990s as a "destination" shopping mall, it has since become a "distressed mall", with very few stores remaining in business. Our hotel was very close to the large and rather attractively designed deserted estate of outlet stores. It's now a virtual ghost town, apart from lights in GAP's still live outlet, and maybe one other. There's probably a story to tell as to how and why the development met its demise.

Gainesville has three antique stores which kept us busy for a half day. On another day we drove the 15 miles or so to a small town, Whitesboro. The short Main Street there carries three antique stores, for our delight. A few miles further down the road is Collinsville with a single big antique store recently re-located there from Gainesville.

Wikipedia, on Whitesboro, tells that:
After the Civil War, Whitesborough grew into a frontier town where female residents were prohibited from leaving their homes on Saturday nights because shootings were so common. Whitesborough had a population of 500, saloons, several stores, and other businesses when it was incorporated on June 2, 1873. By 1879, it had a bank, a newspaper, and train service from Denison, Texas on a line from the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad. In 1887, it altered the spelling of its name to Whitesboro.

Driving back to Gainesville we passed a huge field with more horses grazing there than I'd ever seen together (or probably even separately) in all my life! Apparently this area is known as horse country - the breeding and selling of. Husband tells me it's easy to spot horse ranches because they are always surrounded by white fences rather than by barbed wire or bare wooden fencing.

So...our haul from the vintage and antiques stores: husband found a nice supply of vintage photographs for his collection. I bought a couple of books, a DVD set, and the sculpture shown below. It's an Austin Productions piece (like my Black Magic Woman and a finial sculpture). This one is by by Alexander Daniel. It's about 17" high, and the only Austin Productions piece I've seen lately with a nice low price tag ($25). I've just found similar ones online priced from $45 (with some damage) to $100+ The piece's title seems to be, variously, "Lovers' Heart", "Soulmates" or "Dancers". The two figures form a heart between them Awwww! How could I possibly have left this one behind?

Friday, February 22, 2013

Arty Farty Sculptures at Home

Just for an arty farty change, a bit of chit-chat about three pieces we've acquired during our travels. The first, I found just last weekend while we were in McKinney, Texas. As mentioned in some archived posts about my "Black Magic Woman", she was made by Austin Productions Inc. in 1972 by artist "Morfy". I found another piece from Austin Productions last weekend, one that I could afford - some Austin Prods are priced beyond what I'm inclined to pay. While deciding what else to feature here I discovered we do have yet another Austin Prod. sculpture - and didn't realise it until now.

First a line or two about the company from THIS WEBSITE
"Austin was founded in 1952 in Brooklyn, N.Y., as a museum reproduction company featuring selections from great art collections of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Asian, African and Contemporary sculpture.

The site in Brooklyn expanded several times before the firm moved its facility to Holbrook, N.Y., in 1971. Although we have expanded the business to include the world of decorative arts, Austin still remains a family owned and operated company with manufacturing facilities in Reynosa, Mexico and Corby, England as well.

With the most extensive collection of sculpture reproductions in the world, a wide range of pedestals, and an extensive line of Garden Sculptures, Austin is the leading manufacturer of decorative, gift and home furnishing accessories."
`

The piece I bought last weekend isn't as old as my Black Magic Woman. The imprinted date on the base is 199?-something.
The trade mark, also imprinted is that newly registered in 1995 "Austin Sculpture", and the engraved name of the sculptor looks like F. Bone (though not 100% sure that's what it says). It stands 15 inches high. The correct name of this shape, or at least of the purpose of the originals from which the style is copied is: finial. The straight definition of a finial in architecture is a sculptured ornament found atop a gable, pinnacle, or other structure, an ornamental "finishing-off piece".


A little about the history of finials - I found this interesting:
From Do It Yourself Network, by Maureen Gilmer (2004)

Sharecropping was big business in old England. If you were lucky enough to own a manor house with extensive landholdings, you needed workers to make it pay. So you gave them a bit of your land to farm and they would return a share of each crop as payment. Problem was that sharecropping peasants weren't always grateful for this often inequitable relationship. They stayed poor as the lord of the manner grew fat and wealthy. He didn't want these workers to get any ideas about land redistribution, so he ruled this miniature kingdom with an iron fist. If someone broke the law on the estate, the lord would exact retribution.

Execution was a favorite form of punishment. Severing heads, per Henry VIII and his wives, was once in vogue. But the lord wanted everyone passing by to feel his wrath and so he took the head, dipped it in hot tar and impaled it on a stake in some high-profile location. Just as Romans used public crucifixion to intimidate their conquered cultures, the lord wanted the criminal's head as a gruesome warning that he meant business.

Design ideas have never come from stranger inspiration. Some garden aficionados in Britain claim this is the reason that ball-shaped finials became so popular in garden design. They got used to the head-on-a-pike in front of the manor house. So when new homes were built, those wishing to emulate all that defined the noble English manor adopted these round accents in stone. Gruesome, yes, but probably true.

A finial can be as simple as the spheres described above or quite decorative in a variety of shapes. Pointed finials created in Chinese porcelain to ward off evil spirits were adopted in western gardens during the popularity of oriental design known as Chinoiserie. Egyptian obelisks inspired a sleek tapered finial. When the pineapple was first imported into England about 1720, it became a highly popular finial design. During the Victorian era finials became impossibly decorative to match the gingerbread detailing on houses.



This owl sculpture, 12 inches high, is also an Austin Productions piece, dated 1976 (or could be 1971). My husband has had it for many years, and before we knew each other. He remembers buying it in a store selling museum replicas. That fits with the information on the company's history (above) that Austin Productions Inc. began business as "a museum reproduction company". I don't know from which culture this particular owlish representation originates - perhaps someone else might enlighten me.

As for owls in general - here's information from THIS WEBSITE:
Although it's impossible to prove, owls probably have had mythic roles as long as humans have existed. Imagine Cro-Magnon families huddled fearfully around a campfire, listening in the darkness to a distant chorus of owl hoots. Or think what must have gone through Neanderthal minds when a rabbit struck by owl talons shrieked to shatter the nighttime silence. Such fearful moments are the stuff of modern day horror films, so it's reasonable that primitive humans associated owls with evil, pain, and death.

According to Paul Johnsgard (North American Owls: Biology and Natural History, Smithsonian Institution Press), Mesopotamian tablets from 2,300 B.C. depict the goddess Lilith as "winged, bird-footed, and typically accompanied by owls," a significant association because Lilith was Sumeria's goddess of death. Pallas Athene--Greek goddess of fertility and power--was also affiliated with the owl, possibly "because of the nocturnal (and especially the lunar) . . . associations between female fertility goddesses and the cycles of the moon."

In Rome, owls were respected for prophetic abilities. Johnsgard reports Pliny's description of fear and confusion when an owl entered the Forum, Virgil wrote of an owl that foretold Dido's suicide, and Horace associated owls with witchcraft. Until recent times, "nailing up of a dead owl or its wings has been widely believed in Europe to help ward off such dangers as pestilence, lightning, and hail."

Native American tribes also have stories about owls--many of which are so similar to Oriental myth that they support the theory of an Asian origin for Amerindian peoples. Oral traditions in most American tribes associate owls with death soon-to-come, and an owl is typically the bearer of the deceased's soul as it passes from this world to the next. In the Carolinas, Cherokee women bathed their children's eyes in water containing owl feathers, believing it would help them stay awake.


Rounding off the trio of decorative sculptures here's one that isn't from Austin Productions, as far as I know. I found this one around 6 years ago in an antique store not far from home. It was standing outside by the door, very heavy, almost too heavy to lift. The store owner told me that she had earmarked it for herself, so would entertain no bargaining effort from me! I liked it a lot, so coughed up the necessary dosh. It has stood in our front narrow strip of garden ever since. I don't know exactly what it's meant to represent -other than it appears to depict an Eastern motif - a prayer to Buddah perhaps?