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Introduction
Jonathan Prown
Americas love of early Rhode Island furniture and, in particular,
Newport furniture did not originate in one time or place. Even so, much
of the enthusiasm was inspired by our earliest furniture historians, who
were especially fascinated with that most distinctive of all local craft
expressionsthe blockfront. The pioneering furniture scholar Luke
Vincent Lockwood proudly declared in his 1904 catalogue of the furniture
in the Pendleton House that the blockfront forms made in Newport were
superior both in cabinetwork and design to most other examples of colonial
furniture. Similarly laudatory was English furniture historian Herbert
Cescinsky, who wrote in his well-known English and American Furniture
(1929): Although these Philadelphia highboys and lowboys bring enormous
prices at public auctions, if I were asked to select the finest examples
of American furniture, my choice would fall on the block-fronted bureaux
from Newport and Rhode Island.
American furniture enthusiasts continue to admire the great artistic achievements
of the regions early craftspeople, and similar sentiments abound
in the articles in this special volume of American Furniture. But
the primary aim of the 1999 volume is to present New Perspectives
on Rhode Island Furniture Making, the title of the October 1999
Symposium cosponsored by Christies and Chipstone, where these papers
were presented. Over the last twenty years a growing range of cultural
historians have expanded our understanding of this important early American
colony. Decorative arts scholars, too, have begun to explore innovative
modes of interpretation that reflect a broader intellectual fascination
with the craft traditions of this colony, a fascination rooted as much
in the people, place, and cultural patterns as it is in the objects themselves.
The most creative of these newer modes of analysis are multidimensional
in charactermerging methods of traditional connoisseurship with
modern material culture methodology, socioeconomic analysis, quantitative
research, and other innovative approaches that jointly enhance our understanding
of Rhode Island furnituremaking.
In its support of this type of scholarship, the Chipstone Foundation also
is expressing its continued commitment to forwarding American decorative
arts scholarship. At the same time, the organization itself is moving
in several important new directions. To many people in the decorative
arts world, Chipstone stands as a familiar name but its precise mission
or purpose remains something of an enigma, which is understandable given
its primary and longtime role as a private collection. Beginning in 1946,
Stanley and Polly Stone began to amass an important collection of American
furniture, English ceramics, and American prints, which they lived with
in their home, Chipstone, a colonial revival brick house located on a
bluff overlooking Lake Michigan. The Stones, more than just inspired collectors,
also had the foresight to create a foundation dedicated to promoting American
decorative arts scholarship through sharing their artifacts and supporting
significant decorative arts projects and publications at other institutions.
Stanley Stone died in 1987 and Polly in 1995. Since that time the challenge
has been to redefine the nature of the foundation so as to contribute more
fully to the field; several exciting new directions are now being pursued.
Because the Stones residence is located in the small, residential
neighborhood of Fox Point, one of the questions faced after their death
was how to provide public access to their collection. Loans to other institutions
have been one viable way of sharing portions of the collection, and the
foundation will continue to make loans in the years ahead. Still, a more
permanent solution was desirable. This was accomplished in September 1999
with the public announcement that Chipstone and the Milwaukee Art Museum
would work together on the reinstallation of the decorative arts wing
at that fine public museum, scheduled to open in early 2001. Through this
joint venture, the significant collections at Chipstone will be on view
to the public at the museum, whichalong with the associated Layton
Art Collectionalready has a wonderfully deep and diverse collection
of American decorative arts from the seventeenth century to the present.
The venture is all the more exciting because the Milwaukee Art Museum
is in the final stages of a $63,000,000 expansion that centers around a
spectacular waterfront addition designed by the famed Spanish architect
Santiago Calatrava. Thus, through new cooperative efforts, in particular
the support of interpretive programming and evolving exhibits at the museum,
Chipstone is seeking new ways in which to fulfill its stated goal of advancing
American decorative arts scholarship.
A second major venture for the foundation was inspired by the great success
of American Furniture, which has been edited by Luke Beckerdite
since its inception in 1993. Chipstone has a modestly sized but highly
important collection of early ceramics, mostly of English origin but with
a representative assortment of Continental and Chinese wares that together
help tell the story of ceramics in early Anglo-America. Through the aforementioned
institutional partnership this story will be told at the Milwaukee Art
Museum. On a larger scale, it also is clear that the ceramics world needs
a new type of journal, one with a strong cultural as well as artifactual
focus. This sort of journal could help put into context the story of Ceramics
in America, which will be the title of Chipstones new annual publication.
We envision a well-rounded journal that brings together a wide range of
perspectives, not just curatorial but also archaeological, anthropological,
historical, and scientific. Toward this end, Robert R. Hunter, Jr., who
has considerable experience both as a curator and an archaeologist at
Colonial Williamsburg and the College of William & Mary, will serve
as executive editor. Mr. Hunter already has planned several exciting issues.
The first volume is due out in May 2001 and will assess past and present
scholarly understanding of ceramics in America through an exciting series
of essays by scholars from leading museums and universities in this country
and abroad.
The final major new development at Chipstone involves a rapidly evolving
association with the University of Wisconsin at Madison. In 1998, Ann
Smart Martin, formerly of the Winterthur Museum and Colonial Williamsburg,
was named the Stanley and Polly Stone Professor of American Decorative
Arts, a position funded by Chipstone. Professor Martins arrival
has proved to be a wonderful catalyst at the university, where she and
a talented group of colleagues in the art history department are working
to design a program that broadly explores the story of material culture
in America. The program reflects contemporary interest in multiple approaches
to the study of American material culture and is bringing together scholars
from other departments at the university, including history, art, African
studies, design, and literature. This, in turn, promises to greatly enhance
the way material culture topics are explored at the university and, by
association, at Chipstone and the Milwaukee Art Museum. Chipstone also
is funding a material culture graduate fellowship named in honor of James
Watrous, a longtime and widely regarded professor of art history at the
University of Wisconsin, and in the future plans to work in cooperation
with the university to expand the number of scholarships and professorships
in the program. In a further effort to bridge the eighty miles that separate
Chipstone and the university and to give students a richer educational
experience, a specialized research center and digital library are in the
planning stages. The study center, located on site at Chipstone, will
be a part of the University of Wisconsin library consortium and, through
the use of the latest technologies, will support research and provide
the resources for teaching material culture themes.
The response to these new initiatives has been extremely positive, both
with the general public and professionals in the field. Renowned historical
archaeologist Ivor Noël Hume and his wife, Carol, have decided to
place their important collection of ceramics at Chipstone. This didactic
collection, formed over the last fifty years, tells the story of British
pottery from the Roman period on up to the introduction of industrial
modes of production in the mid-nineteenth century. Featuring a wide range
of wares, numerous archaeological shards, and rare experimental objects
made during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Hume collection
will become an important teaching tool that will be used at Chipstone,
the Milwaukee Art Museum, and University of Wisconsin. Mr. Hume currently
is completing a book that traces the formation of this collection and
documents his many experiences in the fields of archaeology and decorative
arts.
In sum, the Chipstone Foundation is moving forward and, in a sense, going
public. The foundation will continue to support significant publications
and conferences, but it also now will advance scholarship in the field
through the ceramics journal and the new associations with the Milwaukee
Art Museum and the University of Wisconsin.
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