Sunday 13 March 2011

Artifacts

I thought I'd show you my latest find at yesterday's flea-market. It's an iron flint-striker, and dates from sometime around the late 17th or early 18th century by the look of it. Maybe it is obvious, but it was used for striking against a flint over tinder by people out on the road who needed fire for whatever reason. I think it was found by a metal-detector not too far away from here.

It is a really nice thing to hold and quite an historic little thing. I won't be keeping it for long (in fact I've already agreed to sell it again), but it is nice to have it around to look at for a week or so.

I don't know what sort of bracket I fall into, because I'm not a collector and I'm not a dealer, and I have become much more acquisitive over the last 10 years or so. I don't like parting with things, but I don't like hanging onto them either.

When I was a kid, I always wanted to have my own museum, and persuaded my father to get me a glass cabinet which was put in my bedroom. In it, I put various bits of rubbish ( a few fossils, a cow-bone (which was sold to me in 'The Lanes' in Brighton as 'dinosaur' by an unscrupulous shop-keeper), some old coins, a few WW2 bomb fragments - a load of mismatched and unrelated objects which, for some reason, held a fascination for me.

I wanted my museum to be along the lines of an old Victorian one, like the British Museum in London was at the time. If only I had seen the 'Pitt-Rivers' museum in Oxford when I was young - I would have been in heaven. Have you ever been there? It is crammed with innumerable objects in cabinets and shelves, as well as a multitude of unmarked drawers which you have to open in order to find out what is inside. Here and there, there is an empty cabinet which has a label saying something like, "This cabinet used to contain a shrunken human head of the **** tribe, but has been given back to them as a mark of respect for their ancestors".

Another wonderful place to visit if you you are in London is the Sir John Soanes museum in Lincolns Inn Fields. It is an entire, 18th century house which is stuffed with artifacts from all over the ancient classical world, and it is completely free to get into. The landings around the huge stairwell are so crammed with Greek heads and Egyptian items stacked on shelves, that two people cannot pass on them. You can look down into the basement and see a massive Egyptian sarcophagus made from a single slab of alabaster - it must weigh about 3 tons, and there are contemporary prints of how they got the thing down there, all those years ago.

I miss these ramshackle displays these days. All the big museums have gone in for smart presentation, and there are usually more things in the archives than they have on display. Whole businesses have grown up which sell presentation systems which involve humidity controlled cabinets with integral lighting, video projection with sound equipment, etc.

Places like the Pitt-Rivers are under threat for want of funding, but will probably survive if they are attached to a university of some sort. The little country museums are always good - like the one in Devizes. I instantly go back to my childhood when I wander around them.

Meanwhile, I am always on the hunt for something that will quicken my heart for a brief period, before I sell it on to some other old fool.

15 comments:

  1. I love the Victorian idea of a 'Cabinet of Curiosities'. There is a classic one in Brighton Museum (complete with Cow Bones!).

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  2. A "picker" is someone who goes round to garage sales and flea markets and estate sales and even to peoples homes when there is a whiff of them moving or downsizing. They find little treasures and, like yourself, keep some-sell some-usually at a profit. I do believe you are a "picker" Tom.

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  3. why not open your own museum?
    but be careful when you spy a pretty barmaid and ask her to come and see your "curios!"

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  4. When last in the UK, I went to the Tate Modern Museum and saw 2 things that stick in my mind. One was art exhibit shrowed with curtains on masturbation, the other was a display in drawers of all the bits and pieces that they dredged from the Thames. Old spoons, rings, door knobs, bottles. It was a fantastic display and I loved it. I, like Cro, enjoy that Cabinet of Curiosities, of which there is an interesting book by the same name.

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  5. I imagine that Brighton used to have many Victorian side-shows, Cro.

    In the antiques trade (lower end of), these people are called 'knockers', because they actually knock on doors, mbj. There is a fabulous collection of Georgian drinking glasses here in Bath that was acquired by a 'knocker' who gained access to people's houses whilst selling insurance. He badgered them until they sold items to him. There are also the 'house-clearance' merchants, and I have had some great stuff from them.

    I've left it a bit late for that, John - on both counts.

    Sounds like a fascinating show, Raz... The Thames 'mudlarks' continue to pull out fantastic things, including large quantities of candlesticks, daggers, etc. etc. These days, there are only a handful of mudlarks left. I have had many things from the Thames in the past, including an 18th C. 'bollock-dagger', so named not because you stabbed people in the testicles with it, but the dual lobes of the guard at the end of the blade.

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  6. I've been to John Soanes' museum and can definitely recommend a visit. Absolutely amazing is "Snowshill Manor" in the Cotswolds. You have to see it to believe it.

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  7. I'll have to look that up, Iris.

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  8. Tom, you should set up an online shop and sell them to us, the commenting fools.

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  9. You lot didn't even want my giveaways, so I can't see you paying hard-earned cash for this stuff.

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  10. That is the sort of thing which is a joy to hold and to think about its usefulness in the past. We love old things like that too and have them scattered about the farm and the house - we still have our very old ploughs and much of our equipment from the days of horses.

    Re your thoughts on the fox and fox-proof fencing - our hens are total free range - we only have about twenty and I have bred about half of them myself - some are twelve years old and don't lay many eggs but they do love to roam around the fields and go two or three fields away from home, coming back to their hut at dusk to be shut in for the night. I do seriously have mixed feelings about killing the fox - I think shooting it is far preferable to it being killed by the Hunt, which I seriously dislike.

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  11. Oh, I see, Weaver. Chickens with any sense will roost in a tree if out in the open at night, but I don't recall meeting many chickens with any sense. Foxes just do what foxes do, and I don't think they have much of an idea that they are taking farm livestock, so I would imagine they are a bit perplexed as to why everyone is trying to kill them all the time. They say that if you don't punish a dog with about 20 seconds of the misdemeanor, then it has no idea why it is being punished at all, making the punishment futile.

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  12. I agree with you Tom. The Pitt-Rivers and Snowshill used to be favourite places to visit. Sadly both have been tidied up, Snowshill national trussed with neat tablecloths and the like in Charles Wade's outhouse, which used to be sparse and dark and magical. At the Pitt-Rivers I loved the trading cases of British made plastic 'cowrie shells', fine examples of our dishonest approach to trading!
    My father kept game birds and they did, indeed nest high in the trees at night. Weasels taking the eggs on the ground were a real problem however.

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  13. Himself has just said, 'weren't they stoats?" I've told him that weasels are weasily recognised but stoats are stotally different.

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  14. It's taken me a while to recognise a weasel too, Cher - thanks to one that regularly visits me at my workshop (and rips up the nests of the tits on a low level).

    I love the phrase, 'National Trussed'!

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  15. I also love the notion of low-level tits.

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