Benjamin Franklin’s Philadelphia printing shop made plaster molds from pressed
sage leaves to create metal stamps for marking foliage patterns on
Colonial currency. The distinctive contours of leaf spines, stems and
veins were meant to thwart counterfeiters, and Franklin’s workers
managed to keep the casting technique a secret that has puzzled modern
scholars, too.
James N. Green, the librarian at the Library Company of Philadelphia
(founded by Franklin in 1731), had wondered for the last two decades if
any of Franklin’s actual metal leaf-printing blocks for the bills
survived. He had concluded that if one of these castings ever did
emerge, it would be “a really sensational discovery,” he said in an
interview last month.
Such a discovery has been made in a vault at the Delaware County Institute of Science
in Media, Pa. Jessica Linker, a historian who is studying early female
botanists, recognized the sage leaf patterns on one of Franklin’s metal
blocks when the institute staff opened the box it was stored in. The
block is now on loan to the Library Company, which is planning to
exhibit it with related printing equipment and currency. Its three
parallel sage leaves match images on Franklin’s 1760s shilling notes for
Delaware’s government; the bills bear the slogan “To Counterfeit is
DEATH.”
Hardly
any early American metal printing blocks survive; most were melted down
into raw material for new type. Fragments dating to the 1600s have been
excavated at Harvard Yard, and early-19th-century metal letters surfaced at the construction site for the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia. Colonial shillings on paper, however, are relatively common. They bring a few hundred dollars each at auction, as do antique counterfeits. Artifacts
from America’s centuries of battles against currency forgers have
become popular museum displays as well.
Mark Tomasko, a collector and historian who has collaborated with institutions including the Museum of American Finance and the American Numismatic Society on related shows, said that fake bank notes and the tools used to create and detect them were “a constant interest.”
He
has sought out material related to the American inventor Jacob Perkins;
in the 1790s, Perkins developed steel plates for printing currency that
were considered nearly impossible to fake. Perkins’s engraving plant
has been restored in Newburyport, Mass., and the Historical Society of Old Newbury is developing exhibitions there that are scheduled to open
in 2016.
ART TO GET A GRIP ON
Buyers
have been paying tens of thousands of dollars for hardware pieces as
ordinary as drawer pulls and doorknobs designed by celebrated architects
and artisans.
In April, a pair of sinuous bronze door handles from
the 1950s, by the Finnish Modernist Alvar Aalto, sold for about $31,000
(the high estimate was about $11,700), at Phillips auction house in
London. On Nov. 25, at Sotheby’s in Paris, some bronze and ivory handles designed by the French Art Deco master Armand Albert Rateau sold for just under $50,000. (The estimate was $10,000 to $15,000.)
A Samuel Yellin door pull, 1915. Credit Samuel Yellin Metalworkers
The
prices are relatively low, however, when compared with furniture from
the same tastemakers. Rateau’s metal lamps and chairs routinely bring
over $2 million each. Aalto’s signature birch cantilevered chairs have
sold for more than $45,000 each at auctions.
Buying
hardware gives collectors a chance to touch and use the products of a
major figure, rather than just hang them on a wall, Richard Wright, a
Chicago auction house owner, said in an interview. “You interact with
them,” he said. “It is a miniature expression of the architecture.”
Committed buyers sometimes actually adapt entire interior designs to fit these accessories, Peter Loughrey, an owner of Los Angeles Modern Auctions,
said. Given the potential challenges and expense of installation, he
added, “We tend to be a little more conservative when we estimate these
types of things.”
In October, at a Wright sale, a set of 1950s brass hardware
in the form of starbursts, by the Manhattan designer Tommi Parzinger,
sold for $3,250 to the architect David M. Sullivan. He is incorporating
the knobs and plates into doors and cabinetry for his clients. He finds
that the sculptural metal adds a sense of history and soulfulness to
rooms. “It just gives this other dimension,” he said.
An
especially enthusiastic subgroup of fans simply frame hardware for
display or keep it loose for easy handling, rather than mounting
anything on house parts or furniture, said Allen Joslyn, the president
of the Antique Doorknob Collectors of America. He is particularly interested in swirled designs that the architect Louis Sullivan had made for early office towers like the Guaranty building in Buffalo and the Chicago Stock Exchange. At
Mr. Joslyn’s home in New Jersey, hardware has accumulated, even atop
the furniture. “When you want to sit down,” he said, “you have to clear
the doorknobs first.”
Academic
studies of early-1900s luxury hardware are also underway, as parts of
books and exhibitions about the Philadelphia metalsmith Samuel Yellin
that the Leeds Art Foundation in Philadelphia (formerly the American
Decorative Art 1900 Foundation) is developing. Robber barons and elite
universities commissioned custom products from Yellin’s workshop, which
had hundreds of employees and took in millions of dollars a year.
Fantastical iron bestiaries and vines covered its products, from
candlesticks to staircases.
Yellin
called hardware “the salt and pepper of architecture,” said the
foundation’s curatorial director, Dr. Joseph Cunningham. Hardware
assignments gave the staff a chance to produce playful iron dragons and
foliage motifs on a small scale, and homeowners could always remove the
pieces if their tastes changed.
“You
can entertain a whim on a door handle,” Dr. Cunningham said. Because
Yellin’s clients would have touched the hardware often as they went
about their daily routines, he added, “it’s very impactful to live
with.”
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