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Earrings from Morgan Hill's 'Classics' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist.
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Out of stockYellow Line Vessel, Porcelain, underglaze, glaze. 8" H x 5" W x 3.5" D https://www.robertamassuch.com/ Created by WEM Artist-in-Residence Roberta Massuch, this one-of-a-kind ceramic vessel was inspired by elements of Esherick's Studio. Learn more about the Roberta Massuch: Artist-in-Residence exhibition, which features new site-specific works that reflect Roberta's sensitive and slow observation of Esherick’s idiosyncratic home and studio over the course of many months. Member discount cannot be applied. ITEM# RAM-WEM4
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Out of stockStruck from W.E.’s original woodblock; printed on Torinoko paper; comes unmatted & unframed.
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Out of stockEarrings from Morgan Hill's 'Classics' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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Out of stockEarrings from Morgan Hill's 'Classics' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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http://www.staceyleewebber.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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Out of stockEarrings from Morgan Hill's 'Classics' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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Out of stockhttp://www.staceyleewebber.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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Out of stockBrooch from Morgan Hill's 'Cremations' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist.
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Earrings from Morgan Hill's 'Cremations' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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Out of stockhttp://www.staceyleewebber.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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Wharton Esherick: The Journey of a Creative Mind is the first and only comprehensive look at the colorful life and work of this seminal artist-craftsman. Written by Esherick's son-in-law, it is rich in biographical detail. Lavishly illustrated, it features photos from the Esherick archive in combination with photographs taken expressly for this book of the woodland studio that Esherick designed, built, and furnished for himself over the course of several decades. Now a historic house museum, preserved as Esherick left it, this remarkable structure and its contents, almost all of which he made by hand, are testament to the warmth, poetry, and passion of the one of America's most influential and celebrated artist-craftsman.
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Earrings from Morgan Hill's 'Classics' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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Earrings from Morgan Hill's 'Cremations' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist.
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Out of stockEarrings from Morgan Hill's 'Cremations' series. https://www.morganhillcreative.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist.
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Handmade candle sticks by Philadelphia based woodworker, Colin Pezzano. Pezzano was a featured artist in our "Home As Stage" exhibition in 2022. http://www.colinpezzano.com/
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http://www.staceyleewebber.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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A rich collection of imagery explores the actual homes of three of the most esteemed wood artist/craftsmen of the modern era: Wharton Esherick, Sam Maloofi, and George Nakashima. Tour the private homes of these masters and compare their innovation and vision through the medium of their own homes, gardens, and work areas. Step into their environments, where aesthetics are most accurately realized. You’ll delight in Esherick’s humble mountaintop home where straight lines were purposefully forbidden, and Maloof’s sprawling California home that expresses his inexhaustible creativity and industriousness. Nakashima‘s home is a harmonious marriage of Japanese influences with Pennsylvania’s rich natural resources. This book is a must-have for devotees of these artists, as well as aspiring woodworkers who want tutelage from the top.
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Live at The Museum for Art in Wood 10/14/2022 Colin Pezzano & Sam Gasparre. Recorded by Kevin Keenan http://www.colinpezzano.com/Run Time: 9:49 Composed and Performed by
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An intimate and revealing collection of photographs of astonishingly beautiful, iconic, and undiscovered mid-century interiors. Among significant mid-century interiors, none are more celebrated yet underpublished as the homes created by architects and interior designers for themselves. This collection of newly commissioned photographs presents the most compelling homes by influential mid-century designers, such as Russel Wright, George Nakashima, Harry Bertoia, Charles and Ray Eames, and Eva Zeisel, among others. Intimate as well as revelatory, Williamson’s photographs show these creative homes as they were lived in by their designers: Walter Gropius’s historic Bauhaus home in Massachusetts; Albert Frey’s floating modernist aerie on a Palm Springs rock outcropping; Wharton Esherick’s completely handmade Pennsylvania house, from the organic handcarved staircase to the iconic furniture. Personal and breathtaking by turn—these homes are exemplary studies of domestic modernism at its warmest and most creative.
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http://www.staceyleewebber.com/ Photo courtesy of the artist
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In 1922, Wharton Esherick showed a copy Rhymes of Early Jungle Folk, which he had illustrated with woodcut prints, to Harold Mason, owner of the Centaur Bookshop in Philadelphia. Impressed by what he saw, Mason asked Esherick to illustrate Walt Whitman’s Song of the Broad-Axe, which Mason published in a limited edition in 1924. Inspired by the woodcuts, Esherick created a hand-bound prototype book of Whitman’s poem, using prints made directly from his blocks and hand-lettering it in Esherick’s own calligraphic style. Illuminated letters were used to begin paragraphs, and spaces at the end of lines were filled with blue and yellow drawings that reflect the content of the verses. The result of this labor of love was a work of art, 17x12 inches, with pages of handmade paper, folded and uncut. This book is a reproduction of Esherick’s prototype, authorized by the Wharton Esherick Museum. Though this edition is smaller than the prototype book, the original was carefully scanned and printed to provide as true a reproduction as possible. It faithfully captures the artist’s vision and skill and, for the first time, makes this wonderful work available to the general public. It will be appreciated by all admirers of Esherick, Whitman, and lovers of fine books.