Welcome to iShopGalesburg.com!

********************************************************************************************


'width' is a duplicate attribute name. Line 1, position 36.
Antique Dealers
Antique Corporation
674 E. Main St.
Galesburg, IL
309-342-9448
Attic Antique Shop
161-175 E. Waters St.
Galesburg, IL
309-342-7956
Antiques of Other Times and Clock Repair
1347 West Main St
309-342-0602
Hawthorne Centre Craft Mall
2188 Veterans Dr.
Galesburg, IL
309-344-2818
Rail City Antiques
665 E. Main St.
Galesburg, IL
309-343-2614
Rug Beater Antiques
Knoxville, Illinois 61448
Call first to make sure someone
will be there.
309-343-2001
Rug Beater Antique
The Galesburg Antique's Mall
349 E. Main St.
Galesburg, IL
309-342-8571
The Galesburg Antique's Mall

What's it worth?
Even though we take many things for common and assume the items we have in our homes aren't worth that much. You maybe surprised like the lady in the following video.
Antique tips: before you repair antique furnitureBefore repairing your antiques, check these important points. Tips for beginners, and ideas for fixing valuable old furniture.
Some antiques need very special care when you repair them. A few shouldn't be repaired at all. It's important to know what's safe to repair on your antiques, how to fix it, and what should be left alone. First, research your furniture. Know what era it is from, and the materials, techniques, and finishes of that time period. Find out how valuable it is, and why. Is the item worth thousands of dollars? If so, take no chances; have it professionally repaired or restored. Even if it is worth a few hundred dollars, you may want to hire an expert. Get some estimates. The cost may be lower than you expect. If the piece isn't extremely valuable, this may be a fine way to learn furniture repair. But, whether you're repairing an 18th-century table or a 1930s kitchen chair, there are questions to ask yourself before you pick up a screwdriver or wood glue. IS IT WISE TO REPAIR IT? Sometimes, what looks like damage actually makes an antique valuable. As with vintage cars, the original paint or finish on an antique desk might be prized, no matter what its condition. Original hardware is almost always important to the value of antique furniture. In fact, sometimes the hardware--even badly broken--is more valuable than the furniture that it is on. Be sure not to damage the furniture or the hardware if you remove it. A badly worn or discolored varnish should probably be removed. But, if the finish is shellac, it should be restored or left "as is," never stripped or replaced. If you aren't sure which is on your antique table or desk, find out before you touch it with a stripper. LEARN ABOUT THE WOOD Most antique furniture is made primarily of wood. Study the wood in the item that you'd like to repair. Soft woods should be handled differently from hard woods. Veneers and inlays require special treatment as well. Unless the wood has been damaged by insects or repeated wear, you probably won't be repairing the wood itself. Wood is one of the longest-lasting materials in household items. Many ancient Egyptian furnishings and Scandinavian churches remain in excellent condition after hundreds or even thousands of years. However, if surface damage is a problem and it's safe to strip the item, research paint and varnish removers. Some are safe, some are not, and some work well on only a limited range of surfaces. START WITH EASY FIXES When you begin repairing antique furniture, it's smart to learn with simple projects. For example, a loose stretcher on a chair is a good place to start. Broken hardware can also be an ideal project for a beginner. If you're going to replace it with identical reproduction hardware, the repair can take just a few minutes. Always try to learn with "reversible repairs." This means a process that can be reversed with little or no damage to the furniture. You can always remove a screw if its head looks too new against older wood. But, if you've pried wood veneer off a table and--too late--realized that the veneer was important, it can be impossible to restore it. REPAIRING JOINTS Furniture joints are usually held together with glue, pegs, wedges, screws, nails, or sometimes a combination of these. They're usually the first thing to fix on a chair or table. This is a good project for a beginner, and it often prevents further significant damage to your furniture. If a piece is broken, you can usually replace it. This is especially true when a dresser drawer guide (also called a glider) is missing; that's one of the most common repairs to antique furniture. Remove the broken piece. If it can be glued back together, do so. With less valuable furnishings, many auction houses use hot glue for this purpose. For other jobs, wood glue and some reinforcements may be necessary. And, in a few cases, you'll use a specialized glue that's correct for the time period of the furniture. If a broken or missing piece cannot be fixed, a local carpenter or woodshop can probably make a replacement piece for you. But, take the broken piece to a home improvement store first; many of them carry standard wooden shapes and sizes that fit popular styles of furniture. To repair loose joints, disassemble the pieces, sand off the old glue, and apply fresh glue. If the parts need to be held in place for hours while they dry, be sure to use a clamp that won't leave a mark on the furniture. Many antiques shops use a special web clamp; this is a smart investment if you expect to repair much furniture. Otherwise, nylon rope or long strips of cotton (about two inches wide) can be tied, tourniquet style, to hold the parts in place while drying. BROKEN HARDWARE If you plan to replace broken antique or vintage hardware, remove it carefully. Don't throw it out; store it where you can find it easily. If possible, wrap it and label the package, and keep it in a drawer in the item. If you can't find a suitable replacement for the original hardware, some metal shops can cast an identical piece for you. But, "old house" dealers carry reproductions of the most common styles of antique hardware. You may also find replacement parts at antiques shops and auctions. Consider buying a similar piece of furniture--in worse condition--for parts. LARGER REPAIRS Before tackling a large repair, especially one that's going to be prominent when the furniture is displayed, be sure that you've practiced on easier pieces. If you're restoring veneer or inlay, or even paint or varnish, experiment with several less valuable pieces first. Also, check your public library or bookstores for manuals that explain construction and repair of the kind of furniture you own. Many of them provide useful tips. Above all, learn all that you can before you start any repair, particularly if the furniture has sentimental value. Start with easy fixes, and practice to build your knowledge and confidence before attempting big or tricky repairs. No antique furniture will look "like new" again, and in most cases, it shouldn't. But, if you treat your antiques well, they will become more valuable each year, and be treasured by each generation that owns them. |
Art as Everyday Life
By C.L. Sebrell
Art has not always been relegated to a two-dimensional frame. It is only within the last 500 years or so that we have extracted art from our everyday lives and placed it in museums. Before that there was not always a clear distinction between an object and an object d’art. A pipe, a tapestry, a vase, a candlestick: they were not just useful things. They were imbued with religious, social, and moral symbols. In other words, they were art.
Matières de Rêves: Stuff of Dreams from the Paris Musée des Arts Décoratifs, which opens at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut, June 1, gives us 100 masterpieces of this form of art from the famous museum in Paris.
“They certainly were things that were used and meant to be used,” said. Linda Roth, the Charles C. and Eleanor Lamont Cunningham Curator of European Decorative Arts at the Wadsworth. “But what was the impetus for the craftsman not to be satisfied? Very early on there was some motivation to transform utilitarian objects into something more.”
That “something more” the artists were looking for was the ability to communicate. Be it through mythological images, religious or political symbols, reflection of the owner’s personality and history, or through the sensual and thought-provoking presence of Beauty herself, this form of art gets powerful messages across. Like dreams, they send us these messages indirectly through images.
To have some of the most exquisite and critical pieces of this collection come to New England is a testament to the pulling power of the Wadsworth. The exhibition is organized by the Portland Art Museum in conjunction with the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, a museum that occupies a wing of the Louvre in Paris. The opening of this exhibition is particularly unusual because the Musée has been and will remain closed for renovation for at least another two years.
“These objects are just so wonderful,” Roth said. “And this is a great opportunity to see them.”
Statuettes And Figurines
Clearly defined Classical revivals have taken place in the West every couple of hundred years, most notably in the Renaissance, in the 17th Century, and then again in France one hundred years later. A thread of mythological themes and the representation of life and movement in inanimate objects weaves through this entire exhibition. These items move and are moving.
Like things in dreams, nothing is static. A candelabrum, for example, which was designed by Juste-Aurèle Meissonnier in 1734, looks like liquefied silver. A bronze faucet from the mid-18th Century, seems to be growing from its source. A tear rolls down the cheek of a fawn on a circa-1890 glazed stoneware statuette by Jean-Joseph-Marie Carriès. Even a simple watering can, made in 1896 by Boucheron, is turned into something magical. With leaping fish and an organic handle, the sun-flower shaped spout seems to grow toward its intended plants. In the decorative arts, vines grow, lions roar, and fish slither through unseen water. They jar us from the etherized state of everyday business and wake us up into the mythical.
According to Roth, the artists in this exhibition were no different than those in other forms of art. “Mythology just always has been an important source for all artists,” she said. “Clearly the people designing decorative arts were very much open to using mythological themes. It is not any different from when a painter chooses a subject.”
But as much as the artists were like other artists, those who used these objects were not like other people. They were wealthy, learned, and at times decadent. It was the communication between the artist and the owner that gives these pieces a depth other, more public art forms often did not have.
“The whole aristocracy were educated with these stories. They would have been second nature to them, and certainly an alternative to a religious theme,” Roth said. “And for the artists too. If you want to create some sort of message, do it through mythology.”
Death Personified
The message mythology allows an artist to send is often powerful, as many objects in this exhibition illustrate. For example, a model of the tomb of Pastor Langhan’s wife is a lyrical homage to one man’s sorrow. Made for his wife, who died in childbirth the day before Easter, the tomb shows a woman and child caught in the fluid space between life and death. There is a grim urgency to it: either their fragile flesh breaks from the stone tomb, or those doors will slam down on them forever.
Not only did this mythical image communicate to Pastor Langhan, it caught the attention of the public at large “sometimes we forget how harrowing the prospect of childbirth once was”and became a pilgrimage destination. The powerful story it tells either gave hope to fearful mothers-to-be or soothed fathers-who-could-have-been.
Beds as Vehicules
The theme of a child being carried over into another world is also seen in a ceremonial cradle of the Duc de Bordeaux. Understanding that the voyage both into life and away from it can be imagined as one and the same, royalty often placed their children in cradles shaped as fragile boats.
The notion of being carried in sleep to another place or guided into another realm is also used for adult beds (we see this today with “sleigh beds”). One gigantic example is the bed of Emile Valtesse de la Bigne. Made around 1875, this ornate lit de parade, or ceremonial bed, even has two flaming lamps at the foot that mark the place where everyday life ends and the world of Aphrodite, that goddess of pink light, begins.
Fragility
Life and love are not the only things known to be fragile. So too are material things. An egg-and-snake teapot exemplifies this theme. The egg form highlights the fragility of the fine porcelain teapot but the real tension created by the image of this object comes from the uncertainty over whether the snake is protecting the egg or gearing up to devour it, or somehow doing both.
Hubris is a common mythological theme, and a tray depicting a woman bending down, her hair spread out before her woven into a spider web shows us how one artist at the time perceived it. The tray, which was made in the early 20th Century by François-Rupert Carabin, looks like it was taken from the story of Arachne. Arachne, a mortal, was sentenced to a life of spinning webs for her audacity to weave more beautifully than the goddess Minerva herself. Her boastful arrogance brought her an eternity of hanging on the end of a thread, and this object captures the horror of that punishment. Her hair a web, there is no extricating herself from her fate as a spinner of webs. Her hair is brought forth almost like an offering. It is easy to imagine a wealthy woman in the early 1900s taking off her earrings, placing them in the tray, and being reminded that she should not presume herself more lovely than Aphrodite nor to flaunt her wealth and prestige.
Sometimes the dream-like state of decorative arts is created by something less mythological and more narcotic. This trend is demonstrated by a pendant that depicts a woman’s face surrounded by opium poppy flowers. Made by the famous René Lalique in the last years of the 19th Century, the pendant is an Art Nouveau design dedicated to a theme linking nymph-like woman and the natural world in which she lives.
This tiny object, measuring just four inches, is just as powerful and packed with symbolism and meaning as the many huge objects in this exhibition. That is one reason why actually seeing the show may make a stronger visual impact than looking at photographs of the objects.
“Experiencing them in person, you are able to understand more their scale. The beds are huge, other objects are tiny, and you just want to get closer to them,” Roth said. “I think it is going to be very exciting to walk through this space and experience so many of these wonderful objects at the same time.”
Esoterica
While Greek myths were common knowledge to most of those who were educated, more obscure and esoteric ideas such as alchemy, astrology, Buddhism, and other concepts in Eastern thought were available to a select few, even among the wealthy. Mystical groups steeped in Eastern thought viewed themselves as an elite, enlightened group, and secret societies dedicated to a mix of science with theology spread throughout Europe – perhaps the most famous led by Madame Blavatsky herself. At least one object in this collection reflects that trend.
Created by English painter James Tissot in the late 19th Century height of the esoteric movement, a model for a monument depicts symbol on top of symbol, piled upon each other. Anchored by a turtle representing Patience, the monument has a large blue globe covered with astrological signs. Three human figures represent the personified ideals of Fortune, Love, and Ambition. They are joined by snakes, lotus blossoms, pomegranates, and yin/yang symbols. The moral of the tale these symbols together tell, which is ultimately about patience and selfishness. “All Things Come to Those Who Wait,” which is even inscribed around the base. To drive the point home, the inscription “Wait and Win” encircles the winged Victory at the top.
Tea pot, tray, candelabra, tomb, bed: all transformed from utilitarian object to art. “That is what the exhibition is all about,” Roth said. “That is one of the great things about decorative arts. In many cases you get two for the price of one. And they are truly works of art.”
Courtisey of
"The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles"