The Wolfsonian Collection

Have you ever heard of the Wolfsonian Collection?  To be honest, neither had I until today.  And to think, it’s located right here in my back yard.. Miami, Florida.

Actually, Wolfsonian is a part of the Florida International UniversityIt’s a museum located in the heart of historic Miami Beach, within easy walking distance of the world-famous Art Deco hotels.

I was primarily attracted to 1939 Worlds Fairtheir Worlds Fair and Exhibitions section where they say:

Another central element of the collection is materials produced for or exhibited in world’s fairs and expositions since 1851. The Wolfsonian collection remains unique as an all-inclusive compilation of world’s fair materials, encompassing catalogs and rare books, furnishings, sculpture, paintings, and ephemera (such as scarves, postcards, pamphlets, toys and ashtrays). Imbued with nationalistic implications, these objects stand out as some of the best examples of their kind in the world.

Having originally come from New York, this 1939 Worlds Fair poster caught my eye both for its location, and the design of the poster itself.

Along with that poster, the Wolfsonian also exhibits this vintage post card, also from the 1939 Worlds Fair.  It’s described on the site as

NY Postcard

The Theme Center was the central display of the Fair. Designed by the architecture firm of Harrison and Fouilhoux, the structure was a symbol not only of the Fair itself, but also of modernism.

Using huge, unadorned geometric forms, the Theme Center dominated the grounds and clearly established the Fair’s overriding message – that a positive future was possible thorough modern technology.

When the design was first presented to the Fair’s president Grover Whalen, he commented: “We promised the world something new in Fair architecture and here it is – something radically different and fundamentally as old as man’s experience…We feel that simplicity must be the keynote of a perfectly ordered mechanical civilization.”

“Simplicity a keynote of perfectly ordered mechanical civilization” … hmmm, let me mull over that a while.  In any event, have a click over to the Wolfsonian.  If the Worlds Fair’s are not your thing, perhaps something else will catch your eye.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the encore it deserves.

Tom
Take a look at my current Bonanzle items or
Visit my storefront.

Technorati tags: Bonanzle, Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, The Ephemera Network, Florida International University, Wolfsonian, Worlds Fair

The Emergence of Advertising in America: 1850-1920

The Duke University Library has a very interesting exhibition currently on their website titled as is the title of this article.

The exhibit presents over 9,000 images, with database information, relating to the early history of advertising in the United States. The materials, drawn from the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library at Duke University, provide a significant and informative perspective on the early evolution of this most ubiquitous feature of modern American business and culture.


Ellis Stoen Beauty Shop
The project was made possible by Duke’s Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising & Marketing History which has been active in building research collections in its topic fields since 1992 and was funded in part by grants to the University from Ameritech.

The items are from eleven categories dating from the mid 1800s to the 1920s as follows:

  • Advertising Ephemera Collection
  • Broadsides Collection
  • Nicole Di Bona Peterson Collection of Advertising Cookbooks
  • Early Advertising Publications
  • J. Walter Thompson Company “House Ads”
  • Ellis Collection of Kodakiana
  • Lever Brothers’ Lux Soap (Flakes)
  • R. C. Maxwell Company Collection
  • Pond’s
  • Scrapbooks
  • Tobacco Advertising

If you have any interest in vintage advertising, as I do, then this collection will surely be worth viewing.  The ad shown to above (click any picture to enlarge) is perhaps as pertinent today as it was back in 1921.  It’s a color pamphlet from the Keeley Institute in BankersGreensboro, SC and the caption reads “The Beautiful Romance of life never blooms in the morass liquor or drug addiction”.  Inside the pamphlet were several sewing needles and a needle threader.

Perhaps equally as interesting today is the ad on the left which reads in part: “The widespread and rapily increasing defalcations among trusted bank officers and employees emphasizes the fact that banks everywhere need the protection offered by United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company of Baltimore, Md.

ImpotencyI’ll leave you finally with this ad which speaks for itself.  It claims that it is “specially made for the cure of the weakness peculiar to Men” and “electricity rightly applied produces marvelous results”.  I’ll take their word for it!

You can visit the Duke Library by clicking here.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the encore it deserves.

Tom
Take a look at my current Bonanzle items or
Visit my storefront.

Technorati tags: Bonanzle, Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, The Ephemera Network, Duke University Libraries, Advertising in America, John W. Hartman

Fading of Negro Baseball Leagues In America

An article today in “Live Auction Talk” is about the Negro National Baseball League which offered blacks their only shot at playing organized ball in 1920.

The Negro League was a black monopoly that became the largest of its kind in the country. It was also one of the last times blacks controlled their own major league sports organizations.

Nashville Elite Giants

On March 6, Hunt Auctions of Exton, Pa., featured a selection of photographs, posters, banners, game tickets and other ephemera from the Negro League era in its Sports Memorabilia and Cards auction.

The picture to the right is of five uniformed players of the Nashville Elite Giants from 1935 and sold at Hunt Auctions for $805.

Some other items sold were:

  • Satchel Paige photograph; autographed; Paige pitching in Cleveland Indians uniform; black-and-white; 8 inches by 10 inches; $805.
  • Ticket stub; National Colored All Star Baseball Game; Sept. 10, 1933; $1,265.
  • Souvenir program; Negro World Series; played between Cleveland Buckeyes and New York Cubans; 1947; $1,725.
  • Photographic broadside; Satchel Paige; Negro All Stars game; game between Paige’s Negro All Stars and Louisville Black Colonels; cardboard; circa 1930s; 11 inches by 17 inches; $4,485.

You can read the original article by clicking here.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the encore it deserves.

Tom
Take a look at my current Bonanzle items or
Visit my storefront.

Technorati tags: Bonanzle, Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, The Ephemera Network, National Negro League, Live Auction Talk, Satchel Paige, National Colored All Star Baseball Game, New York Cubans

Tattered and Lost

Ephemera

In my ongoing surfing of the web, I continue to run across some wonderful blogs about our favorite subject… Ephemera.

Today I ran across Tattered and Lost, which unfortunately does not indicate who the author is.  The site is about some of the items in or her collection which she says includes letters, postcards, menus, magazines, greeting cards, paper dolls and many other odd things found in her house.

DelMonteGiven my interest in vintage magazine advertising, it’s this ad that perhaps caught my eye the most.  Talk about politically incorrect!  The author’s comments are worth repeating:

I think it’s hard for younger people today to really grasp how far we’ve come. This ad for Del Monte pineapple juice is from a 1937 Better Homes and Gardens. I don’t really think I need to make any comment. Each person will bring what they want to it. It’s like a scene from one of those 1930s Hollywood musicals where the women were bejeweled and white like snow and the servants were always black and spoke broken English. Even the height difference between the two women was calculated.“  Click on the image to see the larger version.

TeperetteThe other ad that caught my eye was this one for Taperette – a device use to “taper, shape and thin your hair – safely, easily and at home“. Click it to enlarge.

I don’t know much about the product itself, but the ad, and the history of the Richard Hudnut family (his daughter was married to Rudolph Valentino, while Valentino was still married to another woman) are very interesting to read.

The blog author has taken the effort to point us to a bit of history of Mr. Hudnut who is regarded as the first American to enter the cosmetics field in a major way. Hudnut’s company eventually was bought out and is today what we know as Pfizer.  It formerly was Parke-Davis and before that the Warner-Lambert Pharmaceuticals Co.

If you’d like to take a look at this fine blog, and see numerous other interesting Ephemera items, click here.  If only we knew who the author of this site was…

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the encore it deserves.

Tom
Take a look at my current Bonanzle items or
Visit my storefront.

Technorati tags: Bonanzle, Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, The Ephemera Network, DelMonte, Pfizer, Taperette, Hudnut, Tattered Ephemera

You need a passion for antiques & collectibles…

… in order to succeed in antiques & collectibles.  And we certainly find that to hold true to the collecting of Ephemera.

That’s the message in a recent online Collectors Quest post by By Deanna Dahlsad

Her post talked about the cover on the February 2, 2009 edition of Antique Week that had three basic tenets:

  • Though times = more education
  • Knowledge is power
  • Nowhere, perhaps, does that time-honored adage ring as true as in the world of antiques.

EducationDeanna turns most of her attention to one specific article in that issue titled: People turn to education when times are tough.  While she does not question the need for education, she makes the point that “it takes more than two years of in-depth college education to cover the centuries of antiques and collectibles”.  And that is where passion comes in.  And to be successful as an antique or collectible dealer, it takes a passion for collecting, not just a passion for selling or making money.

Deanna’s blog, which you can find here, as well as the online edition of Antique Week are well written and informative… and I recommend you take a look.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the encore it deserves.

Tom
Take a look at my current Bonanzle items or
Visit my storefront.

Technorati tags: Bonanzle, Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, The Ephemera Network, Collectors Quest, Antique Week, Deanna Dahlsad

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Site last updated December 11, 2011 This page last updated May 3, 2009