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Showing posts with label collectibles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label collectibles. Show all posts

Monday, April 2, 2012

Catch & Release.. with Texas collectibles.

Can you read this history?

Sometimes I’m out in the woods with my camera, looking for that award winning Ansel Adams moment, and in the corner of my eye, I catch the shine of… something, deep in the jungle, reflecting back a ray of the sun, and I know, I have to go investigate. Forget photography, it might be time to go BOTTLE DIGGING!

History is not only where you find it, or where it throws itself in your path, but lurking in the deepest, darkest recesses of the wilderness. Almost every deer hunt I ever went on turned into a rock and relic hunt, because after the sun gets high, and you can actually see inside that dense Texas wilderness, all kinds of artifacts begin to emerge. Old beer cans, Indian arrowheads, sometimes an old farm implement. The animals are no longer stirring… it’s time to go get those shovels in the trunk! Sometimes all you have is a tire tool. No matter.

More often than not, whether we bagged any game, we often came home with a new pile of… some would call it junk. We called ourselves bottle diggers and called our finds pieces of history.

For some an unsightly, rusting trash heap, for me a prick to the senses.

Probably the most common “history” we found was the discarded waste of yesterday’s hunts, going back to the early 1900’s, when hunters left behind all kinds of beer, liquor and soda bottles in creek bed dumps, some of the discards very collectible. We proudly came home with those old brown snuff bottles, Purex bottles, and Coke bottles. Almost any gulch in East Texas will harbor such refuse. We would get so excited, gathering up the old glass as if it were treasure, sure we were about to find a motherlode.

It was something to do.

I began to imagine the stories behind the objects. A forest floor spread of long necked bottles and old Falstaff cone-top cans suddenly conjured up the sound of a midnight poker game, or dominoes slapping on a formica camp table, or the smell of gumbo filling my nostrils, or maybe the taste of hot Pearl beer, foolishly sipped out of tossed tin cans when nobody was looking.

And the grown-ups could get a nap. And today I can look at a bottle and tell you when it was made, what it was for, and how much it is worth… more or less. Not a skill in high demand these days, but one that kept me busy and out of trouble many a summer day. And when I am out photographing, sometimes I forget myself, as I see a twinkle in the brush. Here are some shots I took… in my element, the heart of thicket darkness, my knees pressing age- old broken bits of glass, taking in the history, while out photographing the spring flowers.

Found on top of the ground: An old embossed Texas-town Coca Cola "patent number" bottle, which I left for the raccoons to play with. Even bottle diggers practice "catch and release."

Monday, November 14, 2011

Texas Antiques

The old plantation bell on the Moore Farm, an important "antique" with intrinsic value.

If you watch The Antique Roadshow which we watch every week, you probably know that Texas Antiques are barely on the radar, unless you are in Texas. Texans are so wrapped up in their own world, and humorously compete, quite aggressively for things totally unknown to the rest of the world. One time I stood in line at the Roadshow with a couple of items, both belonging in a Texas museum somewhere, (one had been on exhibit at WashoBrazos)only to get fairly flat responses from the appraisers. In fact I had to get a reference book they had on a table and point out the maker of the rocking chair I was dragging along, only to be told I should contact Bayou Bend, a house museum in Houston, as they might have an interest in it. But they knew nothing about it and did not seem interested to learn.

I KNEW WHAT IT WAS! I just wanted to show off and be on television. But the Keno brothers would probably not know a Steinhagen rocking chair if one rocked on their toe. (That's right, they not only share a show they share a toe;) As in politics and wealth and jobs and growth and many other areas where Texas shines, the rest of the Country is... jealous and kind of indignant. We were a Country once, we have a distinct character and attitude and pride in our State, and we have our own antiques. And by and large, we don't care about the rest of the Country either.

So this series is gojng to be about the material culture that sets Texas apart. Whether it is reasonable or not, when I go to bid on early Texas blues records, or handmade spurs, or primitive furniture, or soda water trays, or stoneware, they cost more than others. There is nothing made in Texas that is inferior in price in the antique market. Texans care more and pay more, and because they do, others do as well. We call it Texas chauvenism.

So I want the next generation to know what the names McChesney, Steinhagen, Dunkin, Onderdonk, and Dance and many others mean to our state, our Texas culture, that make us so special and the envy of everybody else. Even if the Antique Roadshow has no clue.

Texas, like California, has a very diverse mix of peoples and topography and thus an exciting tradition of material culture. But you cannot name an Indian tribe from California. Texas had Comanches, Apaches, Kiowas, Cherokees and all those Hollywood words. You can't name a famous real cowboy from California... but Texas had Charlie Goodnight, John Chism, Bill Pickett, and tons more, and a healthy dose of the Hollywood cowboys, like Tex Ritter, Ben Johnson and Audie Murphy. When it comes to collecting Western Americana, Texas born items are at the top of "the most coveted list." But that is also true about many other things. The world loves Texas.

And they should.

So where to start? I want you to really appreciate the things made by Texans; things made by hand, hand carved, hand forged, hand thrown, hand woven, and hand painted. These are the rare, evocative cultural items that will never be made again, never be needed again, and yet symbolize this great State. So I made a list of names you can look forward to, for starters... in no particular order.

Texas Stoneware: Kirbee, Meyer, Stoker, Saenger, Suttles, Leopard, McDade, Prothro.

Native American Pottery & Basketry: Coushatta, Tigua, Caddo

Hand Wrought Spurs & Bits: Boone, Crockett, McChesney, Kelly

Handmade Furniture: Steinhagen, Bedemeier

Texas Originated Brands: Dr. Pepper, Borden's, Lone Star, Pearl, Shiner, Bright & Early

Highly Collectible Music: Scott Joplin, Texas Alexander, Blind Willie Johnson, Robert Johnson, Leadbelly, Bob Wills, Buddy Holly

Texas Landscape Painters: Onderdonk, Wood, Salinas

Texas Firearms: Dance Bros, Tyler

Starting soon... on the Navasota Current.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Collecting and collectors Part I


After well over three hundred blogs, I guess I can start to reveal my true self. Sure you can read about my interests, my delusions, and glean from some of my useful nuggets, but up until now I have refrained from getting real deep. I don’t preach that much at you, even though you may not think so, yet I am a natural born, insufferable preacher. Just ask my brother or wife or daughter. I haven’t tried to sell you my art, and that is my lifelong passion and profession. And I haven’t really talked much about collecting antiques. So you don’t really know the first thing about me.

You see I was almost born into the antique business. My father was a historian and a habitual packrat, and my mother was an artist, craftsperson and an instinctive decorator, so it was only a matter of time until they discovered antiques as a family pastime. Thinking back, it must have been Hurricane Carla that provided the impetus for this evolution. For months after the great storm we used to patrol the beaches on Galveston Island looking for interesting driftwood, weathered boards, old door panels, shutters, anything that could be transformed into Americana. Many a trip I remember, our sun-charred shoulders aching, headed back to Houston with that stuff sticking out of the station wagon windows while we rolled our eyes in male skepticism. Mom would take an old slab of salty pine and paint flowers or a cornucopia on it, and sold it as fast as she could paint it.

That soon turned into larger projects; old trunks, cupboards and wrought iron beds. By the time I was ten years old I was handed a sanding block or a stripping scraper and told this was what we did for fun. Weekend after weekend, we scoured the countryside hunting for antiques, bringing home truckloads of junk to fix up and sell at my mother’s rent house, turned workshop cum antique shop in a residential neighborhood in Houston’s Park Place.

We kind of became a friendly scourge of the earth. It seemed there was cool stuff lurking in every old shack and barn down every dirt road, and some old guy was glad to get rid of it. When we went to visit relatives in rural Arkansas, we always came home with a car packed with old farm implements and milk cans and churns and other things cast off by my cousins. They still talk about us today.

We made hasty trips to raid Mrs. Winslow’s sprawling shop in Montgomery, where the legendary old dealer greeted everybody with a toothless smile as she petted her pistol and money bag in her lap, forbidding all comers to dare come into her unkempt compound wearing shorts. Large signs on her dilapidated building blared crudely NO SHORTS! In her mind, she was running a high class place. My dad would stand outside looking dejected and then finally confess he was wearing shorts… UNDERNEATH! She would cackle and wave him in, and would melt and give him all kinds of “bargains,” as my brother and I wandered around the jungle in the backyard; an infinite, tangled, rotting bone yard of old farm trucks, tractors, lawn mower parts, and mysterious objects smothered under twenty years of vines and fallen pine needles. We were American pickers before we knew what that meant. But whatever you called it, we loved it. After awhile our little antique cottage in Houston looked like a genuine junk yard, and that’s when we moved out to the country in the northwest Houston suburbs to get more room to operate.

In the meantime, my mother had discovered Texas “primitives.” In the beginning we thought she had lost her mind, preferring that old pine slapstick furniture to beautiful, hand-carved Victorian masterpieces. But she proved she was on to something as she got to know the main Texas collectors and antique moguls, and she began to get invited to some of the most prestigious shows in Texas.

By the time we took up residence at Satsuma (Champions area), we were doing at least half a dozen shows annually and Canton Trade Days or the Common Market on the Southwest Freeway on weekends in between. It was at one of these convention center antique shows where I met Les Beitz of Austin, a Western author and illustrator who sort of gave me the blessing for my life’s calling. He was the one who assured my father, that yes, I had what it took, and he began to send me his own original pen & ink illustrations, published in Old West magazine to inspire and encourage me. I began to decorate my room with cowboy memorabilia, and collected spurs and skulls and animal traps. Suddenly antiques and history and art seemed like one big thing to me.

And Les taught me something else, something with eternal value. The idea of planting a seed in a young person, with nothing more than a hunch, no strings attached, giving them a larger vision of themselves, merely by assuring them they CAN. Les was not in it for the money. He was in it for the history, the love of creativity and storytelling. He understood that it was the people who made the business, not the stuff.

We did antique shows in Columbus, Pasadena, Chappell Hill, Richmond-Rosenberg, La Grange and finally in the early seventies we were invited to do the famous show in Round Top, Texas at Rifle Hall. That was the cat’s meow. Emma Lee Turney had established a real Texas tradition at Round Top, and everybody in the Antique world came to or wanted to be an exhibitor at her stellar show at the old Rifle Hall. You had to pay to even get in to look. As you parked your car, you smelled barbeque and heard German polka musicians echoing in the live oak trees. Sweet country greeters sold you homemade bread and pies at the front door, and inside was a veritable Smithsonian of Texana, with fabulous New England antiquities salted around for good measure. And Texas primitives were IN!

It was not unusual for Texas dignitaries to be seen walking amongst the crowd. This is where I saw my first Houston “Gay” antique dealer. Several of them became good friends of the family and lifetime sources for rarities. Faith Bybee, antique collector and author extraordinaire, and Ima Hogg, legendary Texas preservationist and founder of the Winedale Historical Center were occasionally seen perusing the booths. My mother took great pride when attendants rolled Ms. Hogg, probably in her eighties by then, into our booth. She was even more thrilled when she complemented her on her things, and sometimes purchased something. Meanwhile, my little brother and I ran with the other antique dealer’s kids, exploring the nearby creeks and pastures and enjoying the local food and hospitality.

I was oblivious of what was being instilled in me, and could never have imagined that all those weekends would in many ways set my course for life. Now it is obvious, but at the time it was just having something to do. We were “antiquers,” “junkers” as my dad called it. What little my dad knew about antiques, he more than made up with his skill in merchandising. Whenever mom could not sell something, he always suggested for her to go UP on the price. It was always good counsel, and worked so often that my mom became almost indignant.

My father recognized there was more going on than bargain hunting for a certain group, who needed something even more important to them; status. And to an amazingly sizable group, things only had value when they were difficult to attain, and were priced accordingly.

To be a good dealer, you have to be at least half mercenary. As another old dealer who has known and counseled me since childhood has always preached… “You can’t be in love with the stuff.” If you love it too much, then you will pay too much for it, not leaving enough room for profit, and you will not care whether you sell it or not, and thus not ever make any money. And even though my mother enjoyed antiques, she never loved things so much she would not turn them, and she made plenty of money that way. My old friend also has always told me I was too generous, giving away trade secrets. “Your knowledge is your stock and trade,” he would say. But Les Beitz got a hold of me first. So I am about half mercenary, after all. But it was the Les in me that has started several pickers in the antique pickin’ business.

This was the beginning of my education about collecting, and a more ugly topic; collectors. I grew up with half a dozen collectors hovering around my house, like sharks amongst the fishes, always finding some pretense to come in and “talk” to my mother, who was all too aware of the game. She used her reputation and “home field advantage” like a black widow. She just grinned sweetly, innocently, but now I know she understood these folks, mostly women, were driven by greed and covetousness. They were far beyond wanting what was in her shop, but wanted to get at those things she did not wish to sell. And nearly everything had its price. That was the challenge. Soon it became clear that for the passionate collector, collecting was about winning. About wanting and getting the best, most coveted, most protected treasures, from those who had them. Sometimes these were totally clueless hoarders, other times they might be someone like my mother who was “in the know.” It was an added plus to be able to say, “I got this from Margaret… from her own collection.” This was the ultimate honey hole.

In other words, “I have access to the real stuff, but you can’t even get in the door”. Often, as soon as they “conquered” her, they were calling back, wanting to relive the experience; “What else you got?” Sometimes, as the thrill would wane, they came back, even wanting to trade something back in. It was a collecting “fix” they hungered for; A shallow, materialistic, covetous game, and my mom was the ambivalent pusher. I can’t tell you how many times one of these “customers” would buy something out of our dining room while in competition with the others, only to call the next day with buyer’s remorse. The things themselves had no magic, they only represented a false promise that things always make… “If you have me, you can be satisfied.” But the collectors never were.

That illustration has recreated itself multiple times over the years as I have watched the same demons drive the collectors of my generation. And that has made me love the whole “collecting thing” less and less. I have always told myself I collected for a kind of altruistic purpose, to save the material culture of my community for future generations, so they will care and understand more about our and our forefather’s time and place. I’m worried that we are losing our identity and our story, and I want to help preserve it. The way Ms. Ima Hogg did.

So my family began to dream of living where the antiques grew on trees... out in the hinterland of Texas.. someplace in Austin or Montgomery County. We would drive on weekends and look over the landscape... Taking note of for sale signs. And then we discovered Washington County when we did an antique show there. Soon a picker for my mom said he had a place for sale...

Next time on the Navasota Current.

Collectors and collecting… Part II


In the seventies we moved to Plantersville in Grimes County, and set up an antique shop in an old mercantile building. “Bluebonnet Antiques.” Hey, in those days, bluebonnets had not yet become such a pervasive thing, but were still a quaint element in our Texas mystique.

The shop did well, and that is where we met another Texas legend to be; Milburn S. Cox, “Stuart” to a few and just “COX” to the rest of us. A long time employee of the TDC, he would swagger up on his unreliable, polio ridden legs, in his gray uniform and wacky-bent straw cowboy hat, smiling from ear to ear. Stuart would go out and shmooze with the poor black folk in the country and buy whatever he could from them, then try to sell the stuff to my mom. She would tell him the kinds of things she wanted, and he would find them. Cox had a happy, country demeanor, and a disarming charm, that served him well in buying and selling. Of proud German decent, he was somewhat of a craftsman with wood, and had an impressive wood shop in his garage. There is no telling how many warehouses you could fill with the great stuff he scavenged over the years.

Cox and I shared an interest in old saddles, spurs and other western memorabilia, and he sold me some of my most prized possessions… stuff I love too much. He kind of tricked me into repairing some of his broken and cracked stoneware, which led me into that field through the back door. He contacted me about it, since I was making pottery on the potter’s wheel at the time, and he thought his vessels could be repaired with clay. That was over my head, but I could repair them convincingly with epoxy, and about half the time the repairs turned out quite satisfactory. It felt good to give the old cracked pots new life, wholeness and beauty again.

It never occurred to me that anyone would see this as something contemptible. All of my life, my mother and I had refinished and repaired furniture, paintings and figurines. Collectors actively restored old cars, motorcycles, coke machines, juke boxes, radios and whatever. But I found out soon enough that there are those that hate restoration, and vilify those who do it. And this is understandable, as it makes collecting anything more complicated, when you have to watch out for that, as it affects the value.

Over the years I have taken up collecting barbed wire (really!), early soda bottles, old advertising signs, daguerreotypes and other early images, cowboy memorabilia, waterfowl decoys and of course Texas stoneware. As cute little boys, my brother and I got treated like young princes, as the antique dealers encouraged us, gave us incredible bargains, and indulged us like grandchildren. But invariably, whenever I entered a market as an adult into one of these areas of specialty, I encountered arrogant, territorial, ruthless, cliquish, condescending gatekeepers that did not want me there.

I’ll never forget the first time I presumed to sell some of my restored decoys on eBay. I ran into a hornet’s nest of Yankee wizards of waterfowl who attacked my credibility and intelligence based on the fact that they did not know me. How dare I show up in their little pond and offer my wares? Their restorers of choice had already been crowned. I was new to the whole thing, very excited about my projects, and very disappointed, foolishly hoping I would meet a bunch of cool sportsmen who were glad to share the hunt. What I found is what I have always found; little boys being ugly in the sandbox. Bullies playing king of the mountain.

Too many collectors I see are just self-serving hunters after a prey, predators gobbling up bargains, competing like big game hunters for the big trophy… for what? To prove their superiority, and so they snag the latest find and go stuff their garage with yet another thing they have no real use for. In most cases, it will lay there dead to mankind, its story lost upon the next generation who will dispose of it at an estate sale. I meet so many trophy hunters in this business, the antithesis of everything I believe in, who never the less are my best customers. Like wolves on the hunt, they hustle into my shop with that hungry look on their faces, ready for that fix, wanting a deal on a real trophy, scanning the room like the Terminator, barely able to make conversation. “Can you make me a deal on this?” They sigh, feigning boredom and detachment. It is their game and they think they are good at it...

“No…” I hesitate…

“Hell no,” I say,

“I’ve got way too much in that!”

Way too much… like fifty years hunting, purchasing, cherishing, educating and dealing with such junkhounds, who want desperately, and on top of that need to win to get their fix, and that means beating me in the process. It is a clash of titanic wills, theirs to acquire and mine to find worthy stewards. Instantly I recall all that relentless hounding at my doorstep as a kid… and then I bristle. Ain’t gonna’ happen!

I’d rather sell it for less to somebody who has less greed in their eyes. And that is my demon.

So now having revealed my collecting, selling, tormented inner soul, I am going to do a magnanimous thing for a "dealer". Before the wolves lap up all the remaining great stuff for glory or profit, I’m going to share all kinds of antique info, which I used to imagine was a precious commodity: My knowledge. Knowledge that could equip you in your own search for the truly unusual, historic and iconic. I’m hoping to help fire up a whole new bunch of collectors… for the right reasons of course.

Look forward to a series on Texas antiques, and collecting them, where I will attempt to explain the soul of it. The yeng and the yang of it. I’m hoping this series will interest anyone who wants to know more about Texas, her history, her peoples and products, her charm and her complexities. I have found that it is through the things of this culture that we learn and tell our stories, and pass them on from one generation to another.

You see it is not the things that are so important. It is the lives and stories they illustrate.

So I will introduce you to some of those treasures which speak volumes, if you know the language…

Next time, on the Navasota Current.