Friday, February 28, 2025

What a Gem!

 Is what you'll say when you see this joyous, jewel-encrusted purse from Texas designer Enid Collins.




The terrific tote also has a sturdy wood bottom. 


Born in 1918 and growing up in San Antonio, Enid majored in fashion design at Texas Woman’s University. She married Frederic Collins, a sculptor, in 1941. After World War II, they purchased a ranch near Medina, Texas. The first purses Enid designed were leather and brass creations made as gifts for friends or as souvenirs for local dude ranches. In 1946, Neiman Marcus began to carry the bags. Two years later, the company "Collins of Texas" was incorporated. The all-leather bags were pricey, so Enid also began producing more affordable canvas totes trimmed in leather. As orders poured in, in 1959, the Collins opened a factory in Medina. In the early sixties, Enid introduced a unique purse made from a wooden box. Her whimsical designs featured bright silkscreened images garnished with glittering jewels, golden coins, and gleaming brass. 

All of the purses designed by Enid feature her name or her initials, "EC," as found on this bag.

 

In 1970, the Collins divorced and Enid sold her copyrighted designs to the leather company, Tandy. Although Tandy continued to make bags through the 1970s, the company used only the "Collins" name or "C."

All posted items are for sale at Next-to-New, but things can sell quickly!

57-1875




Sunday, February 16, 2025

Golden Glow

This handblown art glass vase seems to glow with a golden light. This type of iridescent glass is called favrile glass and it is created by adding metal oxides to molten glass. The process was patented by Louis Comfort Tiffany in 1894. Unlike other iridescent glass of the time, the glowing colors were incorporated in the glass and the piece would not lose its luster. Tiffany won a grand prize at the 1900 Paris Exposition for his favrile glass.

The unusual undulating shape is called jack-in-the-pulpit, because it resembles a flower of the same name. Although Tiffany did not create the shape, he called it jack-in-the-pulpit in his catalogs and the name came to be used for all similarly-shaped vases.


This piece is not by Tiffany, but modern American artist Steven V. Correia. Born in 1949 in San Diego, Correia has been an important figure in contemporary American art glass. In 1973, he founded Correia Art, a family-owned studio renown for using traditional glass-making techniques to create new innovative designs. In addition to his handblown glass pieces, Correia also has experimented with large-scale environmental kinetic light sculptures combining laser light, movement, and illusion. His art glass works are found in private and public collections throughout the world, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Corning Museum, the Smithsonian Institution,  and the Chrysler Museum of Art. In 1984, he was honored for his extraordinary accomplishments as an artist with the naming of Steven V. Correia Junior High School in San Diego. 

Under the vase's base is Correia's round paper label, as well as his etched signature. Some earlier owner also added a handwritten note "Correia Vase."


All posted items are for sale as Next-to-New, but things can sell quickly!

16883-3

Thursday, February 13, 2025

An Artistic Encounter

This signed and numbered golden brass plaque is entitled "Encuentro," or, in English, "meeting." It is mounted on an easel of gray velvet, which is impressed with both the title of the work and the name of the artist, Lorraine Pinto.

 

The bas relief abstract image shifts and changes with the light.

The plaque is not only signed by Pinto, but is also dated "2002."

It is furthered numbered, indicating that it is the 65th of a limited edition of 100.


Lorraine Pinto was born in New York in 1933, moving to Mexico City twenty years later. There she became a figure in an artistic movement experimenting with technology and incorporating light, sound, and movement. Pinto organized the Experimental Kinetic Art Laboratory (Laboratorio Experimental de Arte Cinético) in 1964, a workspace for artists to explore technical innovations. She was a pioneer in the use of unconventional materials, such as acrylic, plastic, and neon lights. Her 1968 artwork entitled "The Fifth Dimension," which consisted of two acrylic bubbles housing multicolored acrylic blocks that pulsated with light in response to a musical composition, won the National Sculpture Award. In the 1980s, Pinto moved her focus to sculpture, drawing, and painting. She taught design at the Faculty of Architecture of UNAM and mentored students at her workshop in Mexico City.

Her works are in numerous private and public collections. Among her best known public works are her bust of diplomat and museum director Fernando Gamboa in front of the Tamayo Contemporary Art Museum in Mexico City and her 1994 "Caribbean Fantasy," a fountain featuring giant seashells and starfish in the center of Cancun. Pinto has received the Elías Sourasky Award, which is given annually to recognize persons who have made outstanding achievements in Mexican sciences, arts. and letters.

All posted items are for sale at Next-to-New, but things can sell quickly!

516-4109


Thursday, February 6, 2025

Spaghetti Western

"Spaghetti Western" generally refers to a genre of films featuring a mythical American Old West filmed in Italy during the 1960s and 70s. But here in our trove, we have  our own version of the Spaghetti Western, a pair  of beautiful vintage chairs by the famed Italian furniture design company Potocco recently re-upholstered with vivid images of cowboys and cattle. And, this being Next-to-New, you won't need  "A Fistful of Dollars" to purchase them!



Of beautiful wood tinted in warm tones, the clean lines and graceful curves of these chairs will suit every decor from contemporary minimalist to mid-century modern.


Founded in 1919 by Domenico Potocco, Potocco is still a family-owned business, now in the fifth generation.  Located in Manzano,  Potocco manages all stages of production at its Italian facilities, from the weaving of the fabrics to the selection and shaping of the wood. Renown for its award-winning designs featuring undulating lines and soft colors, Potocco continues its legacy of producing fine indoor and outdoor furnishings.


All posted items are for sale at Next-to-New, but things can sell quickly!
9138-502