Jim Linderman blog about surface, wear, form and authenticity in self-taught art, outsider art, antique american folk art, antiques and photography.
Showing posts with label bird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bird. Show all posts
Antique Folk Art Toy Bird Articulated 19th century Unusual Form?
A form of an early folk art toy I am not familiar with. It has the look and feel of a squeak toy, but in this case the bird is wired to pick his head up...essentially a very early example of the "pecking chicken" toy. Paper base is covered with a primitive printed wallpaper of the time. Any help identifying would be great! This was a manufactured object (while OLD) and likely other than embellishments, not one of a kind.
Antique Toy Bird with articulated movement, highly worn. Early 19th Century
Collection Dull Tool Dim Bulb
Feeding the Orphans 19th Century Folk Art Drawing
Anonymous folk art drawing titled on reverse "Feeding the Orphans"
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See also ECCENTRIC FOLK ART DRAWINGS
Creepy Homemade Bird Feather Victorian Postcards Extinct Practice Extinct Birds and the Most Expensive Feather
Gross handmade postcards from Borat land! Circa 1900 and circa disgusting! This year a single feather from the extinct Huia bird sold for nearly $7000.00 at an auction in Auckland. I don't think you can clone a bird from a feather, but maybe one day. Ritual objects of Native American Tribes containing eagle feathers are illegal to sell, and there are numerous other laws protecting the use of our animal friends in collectibles today, thankfully. I don't know the species here, or if the feathers match the paintings...but they are grisly and gross reminders of when Victorian "fashion" dictated the wholesale harvesting of feathers for silly hats. Not to mention post cards.
Four handmade Bird Feather postcards circa 1900 Collection Jim Linderman
Dull Tool Dim Bulb Books
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