Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: literature (Page 17 of 39)

Old days Art.

It is amazing to me the beautiful results that can be created with parallel lines, when it’s done by a talented person. I’m not sure exactly how the old “etching” and engraving process worked, but the images found in older books, magazines, and newspapers employed the process until technology provided a way to reproduce photographs. The parallel line technique is still employed in some of the Wall Street Journal’s pages.

Unfortunately, the advent of new technology caused quality to suffer even if the quantity of printed pictures greatly increased. Newspapers used to use a dot process they called “half-tones.” Details were tossed out with the space between the dots.

It’s a beautiful thing here at the bookstore when the lunchtime dishes are washed, giving me time to tackle the office mess (again). An organized, clean, and efficient back-office would be a great thing, I’m thinking. But my space tends to be more like some people’s garages – so full of this and that – that no room remains to park the car.

While moving this and that to here and there, I ran across a grouping of pages containing some poetry and some engravings. A little research revealed that the pages are from an 1885 issue of The Magazine of Art.

According to Wikipedia:

The Magazine of Art was an illustrated monthly British journal devoted to the visual arts, published from May 1878 to July 1904 in London and New York by Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co. It included reviews of exhibitions, articles about artists and all branches of the visual arts, as well as some poetry, and was lavishly illustrated by leading engravers of the period such as William Biscombe Gardner.

The engraving I’ve included is by an artist named Jules Frederic Ballavoine, who lived from 1855 to 1901, and received his formal art training at the L’Ecole de Beaux-Arts under historical painter Isidore Alexandre Augustin Pils (1813-1875). Ballavoine exhibited widely across Europe and won medals in a number of juried exhibitions. His works are held by both museums and private collectors.

He was a young man of thirty when he finished the woman penning the note – an expressive work that doesn’t translate well to the computer age. In fact, I tried to reduce the size of the image, but the computer algorithm used to shrink a picture has trouble with the narrow parallel lines. They come out sort of drunken-looking.

So I hope whatever device you’re using will allow you to click on the image for a closer look at the style of artwork that appeared during the days of your great-great-granny. (Add as many greats as required.) The second image is an example of Ballavoine’s oil on canvas work.

In this day when a “selfie” can be snapped and posted within minutes, it is almost unimaginable the amount of work that went into sharing an image with others back in the day.

My neighbor Alisa at Your Design (in the Rose District) can frame your etchings and engravings quite beautifully, and you’ll find a section of books on art and artists here at the shop, so –

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St. Broken Arrow OK!

The Do-it-Yourself Dream.

I can see him sitting at the kitchen table like it was yesterday – my dad with a pencil in his hand working at a piece of grid-lined graph paper. I was high school age, old enough that I realized that he was in the middle of something I had never before witnessed. I was breezin’ through the room toward the door.

What’cha doing? I wanted to know.

Well, he answered. He was designing a house. Drawing up a floor plan.

That surprised me. I glanced down at the perpendicular lines and assorted box-shapes. Huh. I was even more surprised. It sure looked like the floor plan of a house. I’d just finished 10th grade drafting, so – of course – I was an expert. On the other hand, there was no stretch of the imagination in which I could picture my dad as having association with any part of home construction. Even paperwork parts.

You see, I knew for a fact that he was a little bit “tool challenged.” I’d been in the garages of my friends, where their fathers had tool collections filled with exotic repair-paraphernalia.

Not my dad. He owned a pair of pliers. A hammer. One screwdriver of each type. He had acquired a telephone lineman’s leather belt-pouch with a wire-bender and needlenose pliars – a couple of specialty tools that have little-to-no use in the average home repair. That sparce collection was stored in a small metal box in a lower kitchen cabinet. Next to the little tin of sewing machine oil.

My dad was not a handyman.

(He did replace the light switch in the bathroom, a project of which he was so proud he actually called me in to look it over. It was crooked. I didn’t mention it. Hey. It worked, after all.)

My friends razzed me about being the son of a head-shrinker until I convinced them I had inherited certain mind-control powers that allowed this son of a psych-degree-practitioner to make them do embarrassing things in public against their will. (Okay, that last part isn’t exactly true, but they did eventually lighten up when their teasing failed to get a rise out of me. Hey. I couldn’t deny that my dad did that sort of thing. For a living.) The tools he worked with every day were those kept somewhere besides a toolbox. No skill-saws. No jackhammers, mitre-boxes, socket wrenches, hand awls, or die-punches. He worked an adjustable brain-wrench, I guess.

I asked him about the floor plan. Was he planning to build a new house?

No, he answered. It was just something he enjoyed doing. Designing plans.

At the time, I was thinking that – as a hobby – there was a spectrum of activities that might be more rewarding. I mean, even if he completed a single paint-by-number velvet Elvis (Google it), he could frame it and put it on the wall. (Not any wall in our house, I’m betting. Maybe his doctor’s office waiting room.) If he constructed little ships in bottles he could hire someone to build a mantle in our house on which to display them.

He could pretend to golf like a lot of other dads, and just drive around the course in a cart on Sunday afternoons.

No.

But, I guess building and construction in the DNA is to blame. Unfortunately, after the death of his grandfather (who built a trio of side-by-side homes in Parsons, Kansas that are still standing and looking fine) that particular part of the code pertaining to actual handiwork became a recessive gene. It still hasn’t reappeared – bless my great-grandfather’s pea-pickin’ heart.

Embarrassingly, I’ve just changed channel from the PBS show This Old House to the Do-it-Yourself (DIY) network’s Rehab Addict program. If there is such a thing as an Old Age crush, I have one on Nicole Curtis, the woman who buys derelict homes and restores them to as close as original condition as possible. Man. (Or, should I say, Woman.) She knows her stuff.

I’m not at the kitchen table drawing floor plans, but here I am watching home repair television. If anything – at least my father was producing something tangible. I’m no more actively involved in construction than a museum patron is an artist.

As a bookseller, I don’t see myself ripping up a linoleum floor to reveal a vintage hardwood underneath, just waiting for a sanding and a coat of varnish. Oh, I’ve got the tools to handle most projects – but it is a little like a stamp collector comparing himself to a postman.

There are those that do it. And those that admire the talent and job well done.

If I had only possessed the foresight to ask my dad for one of his sketched-out floor plans maybe one of my little granddaughters could build it one day. That construction-strand of the DNA is bound to reappear one of these generations.

Find a woodworking book when you Come Visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St. Broken Arrow OK!

What? Who?

“Glory is fleeting,” Napoleon is supposed to have said, “but Obscurity is forever.” Fame is a lot like glory in that respect. You can’t be too well-known if people don’t remember who you are.

Some time back, a younger person was asking who the Beatles were, and the explanation came back that it was Paul McCartney’s band before he joined Wings. (It wasn’t my answer…)

Ouch. I would have figured the Beatles as beyond forgetting. But what about their predecessors, popular singers like Eddie Cantor and Paul Anka? I’ll admit I can’t name even one Eddie Cantor song, and at the moment, I’m drawing a blank on Anka as well.

Elvis is remembered, I guess. I haven’t done any surveys. I was nervous about buying a Marilyn Monroe book collection for fear that no one remembers her anymore, and I’d be stuck with them. (I’ve pretty much sold them all.) Napoleon is supposed to have finished his Fleeting Glory saying with: “I choose obscurity.” Ironically, the French military leader maintains his fame more than two-hundred years later.

A research project had me going through the archives of Billboard magazine, a trade publication that has been in print for over a century. Most people have heard of the Billboard music charts, but the magazine actually reports on a myriad of entertainment fields. One of the covers from the 1940s caught my attention.

The slim fellow behind the microphone was so well known in his time, that he could be identified just by his initials – N.T.G. – sort of like presidents JFK and FDR.

Inside the magazine is an item serving as a caption to the front cover, and the final line reads: Nils Thor Granlund is one of the great showmen of our time.

And I bet you’ve never – ever – heard of him.

For those of us looking the article over from a distance of more than half a century, even the accomplishments attributed to the showman are obscure.

“It was NTG who conceived the elaborate movie premiere, with lights, news-cameras and personal appearances of stars. It was NTG who exploited and advertised the first full-length motion picture in this country. When radio began to gain a foothold it was NTG who brought Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor and Harry Richman to the listening public. He also presented radio’s first amateur program.”

The item goes on to point out that Granlund was born in Lapland and by age eighteen had already made his mark as a race car driver, an aviator, and press agent – then went to work for movie pioneer Marcus Loew.

“His greatest fame, of course, has been gained in the night club field,” claimed the Billboard writer. “The famed Paradise Restaurant in New York was also his creation.”

A lot of “fame” being thrown around there, but all these years later, his name, his restaurants, and his night club adventures are lost to memory. Granlund’s name was largely forgotten by the public at the time of his death, in a 1950s car accident. His was a rags to riches to rags story. Fame is fleeting. Obscurity is forever. When no one can even recall your name, it doesn’t matter how famous you once were.

And NTG was at the top of the heap in his time.

The Billboard item starts: “No history of show business could be complete without a long chapter devoted to the incomparable NTG, star-maker, pioneer, and precedent-setter extraordinary.”

Wow.

Maybe the most famous person you’ve never heard of.

Somebody ought to write a book about the guy!

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St. Broken Arrow OK!

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