Luther Conover on the bottom and a mystery table on the top. Jerry Glaser, Hal Fromhold and Robert Maxwell Here's a closer look at the Jerry Glaser bowl and that magnificent carving. Hal Fromhold
Arthur Umanoff for Shaver-Howard, with original paint. Cream and tangerine Dora De Larios wall sculpture from the mid-1960s. Isabel Parks Signed by Edward Killingsworth
Back at my favorite vista point on the way back from the Bay Area. This time with a Robert Hanley for Modern Color Inc. floor vase. La Gardo Tackett Stan Bitters stool, Dean Santner jewelry boxes and a ceramic puzzle sculpture that opens up like a Russian doll. Victor Bisharat, Stan Hawk, Dora De Larios, Harrison McIntosh Irving Harper tray and some Euro stuff. Harvey Probber desk set and Carl Aubock Summerset Lounger
On my recent trip to New York I was able to see Taking Shape:The Akari Light Sculptures of Isamu Noguchi exhibition curated by Adam Edelsberg for Wright . The auction already happened and was a major success. There was also a wonderful catalog produced. It written by Glenn Adamson, with an intro by Edelsberg. The collection included examples of the earliest Akari lamps produced from the 1950's through the 1970's. The fact that any of these early paper shades have survived is incredible. How Adam was able to assemble this many is a major testament of how good he is at what he does. Isamu Noguchi traveled to Gifu, Japan in 1951 where he visited the Ozeki lantern factory. He then started working on his own designs utilizing the craft. In 1954, Chuo Koron Gallery in Tokyo held the first exhibition of Noguchi’s Akari designs. Over the next decades Noguchi designed an incredible number of base and shade variations. The earliest Akari mark with just the sun and moon. Later ...
Timo Sarpaneva Saturnus CBS logo textile by William Golden, NIB Design Line lamp by Bill Curry and books William Golden Source: AIGA Houston La Gardo Tackett