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| Albany Institute of History & Art
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125 Washington Avenue |
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Albany, New
York
12210 |
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518-463-4478 |
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information@
albanyinstitute.org |
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| Upcoming Exhibitions
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CAST WITH STYLE: 19th Century
January 26 - May 25,
2008 |
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| This exhibition,
drawn from the museum's well-known collection will include 30 stoves
complemented by prints, drawings, photographs, stove catalogues, and
advertising materials. During the nineteenth century Albany and
Troy, New York manufacturers were considered to be among the largest
producers of cast-iron stoves in the world. Stoves made in these two
upstate New York cities were renowned for their fine-quality
castings and innovations in technology and design. The strategic
location of Albany and Troy, located nine miles apart on opposite
banks of the Hudson River afforded easy and inexpensive
transportation of raw materials to the foundries, and finished
stoves to worldwide markets.
Cast-iron stove making reached its
highest artistic advent of the cupola furnace permitted more
elaborate designs and finer-quality castings. Stove designers
borrowed freely from architectural and cabinet-makers design books,
a process that resulted in the use of Greek, Roman, Egyptian, and
Rococo revival motifs; patriotic symbols, and Franklin, box, dumb,
base-burner, parlor, cook stoves and ranges and parlor cook stoves.
However, the stoves that attracted the most attention and helped to
secure the reputation of stoves produced during the 1830's and
1840's. These stoves were a focal point for a Victorian parlor
because the overall designs incorporated current tastes in
architecture, furniture and other decorative arts. |
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Dumb Stove Representing a Full-length
Classical Female Figure
Alonzo
Blanchard
1843
Albany,
New York
Cast
Iron; ht. 48 3/4"; w. 14 d.9
Rockwell
Fund, 1992.8 |
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George Washington Dumb Stove
Alonzo
Blanchard
1843
Albany,
New York
Cast
Iron; ht. 48 3/4"; w.15 d.9
Rockwell
Fund, 1992.7 |
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Baker Stove Store
circa
1886, N.E Corner of Green St. and Norton St.
Photographer, Stephen Schreiber
Albany
Institute of History & Art Library,
S10B374 |
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Two Column Parlor Stove
E.N.
Pratt & Co/Albany
1837 -
1844
58" x
341/4" x 15 1/2"
Collection of John I. Mesick, Schodack, New
York | |
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