NCPI Workmark
Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

Search Results


103 results for "Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts"
Currently viewing results 16 - 30
Previous
PAGE OF 7
Next
Record #:
27859
Author(s):
Abstract:
John Bivins, Jr. served ten years as editor of the Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts. In memory of John, this issue presents several of his editorial commentaries and articles he wrote for The Luminary newsletter.
Source:
Full Text:
Record #:
27862
Author(s):
Abstract:
Joseph-Pierre Picot de Limoëlan de Clorivière was a miniature portrait artist who fled to Georgia from France after conspiring to assassinate Napleon Bonaparte in 1800. Joseph-Pierre became a pastor and had a pivotal influence on the spirituality, curriculum and architecture of the Visitation Monastery in Georgetown, D.C. New accounts of his work are stored at the monastery and at the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Source:
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
21906
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article examines the production and use of upholstered furniture by the Moravians of North Carolina during the mid-18th to mid-19th century.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
27856
Author(s):
Abstract:
Frank Horton established the Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts in 1975 to disseminate research and collections by the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. This issue is a biography of Frank, his accomplishments, and contributions to the decorative arts.
Full Text:
Record #:
27854
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina organized the Index of Early Southern Artists and Artisans, which is published in five issues. The index contains every artist and artisan documented by MESDA since 1985 and their records of southern material culture. This issue covers artisans with the last names beginning with P through S.
Record #:
27855
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina organized the Index of Early Southern Artists and Artisans, which is published in five issues. The index contains every artist and artisan documented by MESDA since 1985 and their records of southern material culture. This issue covers artisans with the last names beginning with T through Z.
Record #:
27852
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina organized the Index of Early Southern Artists and Artisans, which is published in five issues. The index contains every artist and artisan documented by MESDA since 1985 and their records of southern material culture. This issue covers artisans with the last names beginning with D through H.
Record #:
27853
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina organized the Index of Early Southern Artists and Artisans, which is published in five issues. The index contains every artist and artisan documented by MESDA since 1985 and their records of southern material culture. This issue covers artisans with the last names beginning with I through O.
Record #:
27848
Author(s):
Abstract:
Robert Wellford was the leading composition ornament maker during the Federal period, and the single supplier to North Carolina and southern states. His work constitutes one of the largest assemblages of neoclassical ornament and allegory in America. Motifs created by Wellford vary from purely ornamental arabesques and foliage to elaborate scenes drawn from history and mythology.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
27849
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) in Winston-Salem, North Carolina organized the Index of Early Southern Artists and Artisans, which is published in five issues. The index contains every artist and artisan documented by MESDA since 1985 and their records of southern material culture. This issue covers artisans with the last names beginning with A through C.
Record #:
27843
Author(s):
Abstract:
Cephas Thompson was one of Virginia’s most prolific portrait painters of the early nineteenth century. The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina examined Thompson’s Memorandum of Portraits in which he recorded over five hundred portraits. The paintings reflect the changes in American society and offer early biographical records of the early Republic.
Full Text:
Record #:
27844
Author(s):
Abstract:
During the first third of the nineteenth century, the sugar chest was a common piece of furniture among people of the upper and upper-middle class in parts of Tennessee and Kentucky. Sugar was safeguarded due to its high cost, relative scarcity and importance in entertainment customs. Sugar chests were also used in North Carolina, many of which were produced by John C. Burgner of Waynesville.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
21905
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article examines 18th and 19th century furniture collected by the Historic Hope Foundation that represents the style of the Roanoke River basin. This furniture documents an identifiable regional style that was adapted from Great Britain and metropolitan areas of the Lower Chesapeake.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
27838
Abstract:
The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina researched the history of the Southern Porcelain Company. The company was created in 1856 and utilized white clay from the Edgefield pottery district of South Carolina to produce a variety of wares. Most of its products were never marked, but some earthenware was marked “S.C.P.Co., Kaolin, S.C.”
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
27839
Abstract:
The Elk Ridge Furnace was a significant example of the iron industry in eighteenth-century Maryland. The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina researched the history of the furnace. Documents of the furnace and its maker, William Williams, offers insight into its history, workforce and colonial southern iron industry.
Full Text: