...yes, paper.
It was only after confirming a Thursday morning appointment that I realized, September's almost here. Like, in-twenty-four-hours here. I don't understand how three months vanished in (what seemed to be) three minutes...wasn't it just Memorial Day?!
For those that aren't quite ready to give in to Fall, the Springfield Art Association is the place to enjoy what some consider the last weekend of summer. This Labor Day, celebrate the work of artists from around the country in the Gallery's latest exhibition, "PULP: Fact, Fiction and Fantasy." This show had an incredible turnout for its opening last Friday, and we know why: It is an incredible array of work that defies everything you think you know about paper. From chambers to dresses, curling sculptures to artist books, "PULP" is a multidimensional must-see of handmade paper. The exhibition runs through October 2nd. Contact the SAA Office for more information and hours.
See our article, an IT! Pick, in the Illinois Times' Fall Guide here.
...promoting and supporting the arts & educational opportunities in our community
Monday, August 30, 2010
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Household Help: 19th Century Servants at Edwards Place
Helen Edwards was not raised to do housework. Her father died when she was just a child, leaving her mother to raise the children in a series of boarding houses on the East Coast. She was never required to cook a meal, do washing, or undertake any of the endless, onerous tasks that went with household management in the 19th century.
All that changed when Helen moved into Edwards Place as a young wife and mother in 1843. Servants in Springfield were nearly impossible to find, so the Edwardses had brought a hired woman up from St. Louis. This woman, however, was so "intemperate," as Helen recalled, that "in less than a year I was obliged to discharge her and my troubles in housekeeping began." Suddenly she was responsible for everything that went with maintaining a two-story, six-room brick house (the house wasn't enlarged to its present size until the late 1850s): cooking meals, tending fires, sewing clothes, cleaning, milking the cow, making soap and candles...everything.
It wasn't easy, to say the least. Helen later told the story of standing "in agony over the churn and the butter that apparently never would come, the tears streaming down her face and into the cream - crying the more because she was sure her husband would notice the extra salty flavor and make stern comment on it.
Next Helen tried hiring “farm girls,” but none of them knew how to keep house very well, nor did they “know their place” – some insisted on sitting at the table with the family, which Helen just couldn’t have. At one point they had an indentured servant, but Helen found her more trouble than she was worth. When she and Benjamin tried to discipline her, this girl would scream and yell. Helen was glad to be rid of her.
She finally found a steady supply of servants when the construction of the Illinois and Michigan canal and local railroads brought a flood of Irish immigrants to central Illinois. Just because Helen had servants didn't mean her housekeeping troubles were over, however. Later she would tell her granddaughter that having servants to manage often times just made more work for her.
Helen's letters to her daughter during the 1860s and 1870s are full of the trials and tribulations of managing servants. At one point she complained that her good was wasteful; another time she was irritated with a servant for talking back and called her "a provoking piece of humanity," still later she felt obliged to nail down sections of carpet herself because her hired man was "not at all particular about these matters," and still another time she recorded that "I dismissed my house girl on Monday morning, and yesterday took in, a brand new girl, from the Emerald Isle."
Still, despite Helen's "servant problems," domestic help was necessary to the maintenance of Edwards Place. At any one time the household would have a cook, parlor maid, and hired man. Additional help was also brought in for sewing and washing. Helen was not alone in needing servants, either. The onerous nature of household management in the era before electricity and running water meant that practically every middle class household had at least one domestic servant in its employ. They were meant to stay invisible, working in kitchens and sleeping in attics or back rooms, yet it was through their hard work that houses such as Edwards Place were able to shine so magnificently.
All that changed when Helen moved into Edwards Place as a young wife and mother in 1843. Servants in Springfield were nearly impossible to find, so the Edwardses had brought a hired woman up from St. Louis. This woman, however, was so "intemperate," as Helen recalled, that "in less than a year I was obliged to discharge her and my troubles in housekeeping began." Suddenly she was responsible for everything that went with maintaining a two-story, six-room brick house (the house wasn't enlarged to its present size until the late 1850s): cooking meals, tending fires, sewing clothes, cleaning, milking the cow, making soap and candles...everything.
It wasn't easy, to say the least. Helen later told the story of standing "in agony over the churn and the butter that apparently never would come, the tears streaming down her face and into the cream - crying the more because she was sure her husband would notice the extra salty flavor and make stern comment on it.
Next Helen tried hiring “farm girls,” but none of them knew how to keep house very well, nor did they “know their place” – some insisted on sitting at the table with the family, which Helen just couldn’t have. At one point they had an indentured servant, but Helen found her more trouble than she was worth. When she and Benjamin tried to discipline her, this girl would scream and yell. Helen was glad to be rid of her.
She finally found a steady supply of servants when the construction of the Illinois and Michigan canal and local railroads brought a flood of Irish immigrants to central Illinois. Just because Helen had servants didn't mean her housekeeping troubles were over, however. Later she would tell her granddaughter that having servants to manage often times just made more work for her.
Helen's letters to her daughter during the 1860s and 1870s are full of the trials and tribulations of managing servants. At one point she complained that her good was wasteful; another time she was irritated with a servant for talking back and called her "a provoking piece of humanity," still later she felt obliged to nail down sections of carpet herself because her hired man was "not at all particular about these matters," and still another time she recorded that "I dismissed my house girl on Monday morning, and yesterday took in, a brand new girl, from the Emerald Isle."
Still, despite Helen's "servant problems," domestic help was necessary to the maintenance of Edwards Place. At any one time the household would have a cook, parlor maid, and hired man. Additional help was also brought in for sewing and washing. Helen was not alone in needing servants, either. The onerous nature of household management in the era before electricity and running water meant that practically every middle class household had at least one domestic servant in its employ. They were meant to stay invisible, working in kitchens and sleeping in attics or back rooms, yet it was through their hard work that houses such as Edwards Place were able to shine so magnificently.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Back to School...
When I was little, I loved shopping for schools supplies. I remember opening the mail each August to find the big “School Supply” list from my new teacher (2 boxes of tissue, 1 pencil box, zero hot pink pens) that my mom and I would then take to the store and check as we placed items in the cart. When the first day of school came, I was more excited about what was in my backpack than who was in my class. Even in college, my best friends and I would take the luxurious, scenic drive from DePauw University to Avon, Indiana, for its Super Target, and fill at least two carts with new folders, binders, and black felt tip pens (my favorite!). It sounds silly, but going out for school supplies was my emotional equivalent to going up a roller coaster; it was the tangible start towards something new and exciting…even if the first day jitters were along for the ride.
But, in the case of the SAA’s School of Art, ‘back to school’ takes on slightly different meaning. Instead of new spiral notebooks and color-coded folders, we count canvases, sort brushes, and take an inventory on acrylic paints. We hang artwork and prepare the Gallery for a new exhibition (“Pulp: Fact, Fiction and Fantasy” opening this Friday!). Later on, we will also prepare the grounds for our 22nd Annual Edwards Place Fine Art Fair, a wonderful display of art in our community from across the nation, with more than 80 artists displaying and selling their incredible works in diverse media. We have also done a lot of work to our website, www.springfieldart.org, with information on all of these creative offerings.
So check it out, maybe join one of our ceramics or jewelry-making classes, and head out to the store for some school—or art!—supplies to make your back-to-school experience a fun-filled rollercoaster!
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Spotlight on Benjamin Edwards
Benjamin Edwards was born June 3, 1818 in Kaskaskia, Illinois, to a distinguished family. His father, Ninian Edwards, was then serving as the territorial governor of Illinois. Benjamin was the youngest of three sons. His oldest brother, Ninian W. Edwards, would go on to a distinguished career in state government. His middle brother, Albert Gallatin Edwards, would serve as assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury under Abraham Lincoln and would later found the brokerage firm A. G. Edwards.
Benjamin was sent to Yale in 1836, where he received a general education and attended law school. In 1839 he became the first person born in Illinois to graduate from Yale Law School. While in New Haven he met and married Helen Kissam Dodge.
The young couple decided to settle in Illinois, where they had both been born. They chose Springfield because Ninian W. was by that time an established attorney and politician and one of the most prominent men in that town. They stayed with Ninian and his wife Elizabeth for a few weeks after arriving in Springfield, and there they met Elizabeth's vivacious younger sister Mary Todd. Eventually they moved to their own home at the corner of Fourth and Monroe Streets.
Benjamin finished his law education in the office of Stephen T. Logan (who would become Abraham Lincoln's second law partner). In 1841 he went into practice with Edward D. Baker, a silver-tongued, rising politician. Two years later Benjamin formed a partnership with John T. Stuart, Mary Todd Lincoln's cousin and Abraham Lincoln's first law partner. This partnership would last more than forty years, until Stuart's death in 1885.
Benjamin was extremely active in the community. He was an advocate of the public school system, served on the board of the Springfield Library Association, and was extremely active in the Temperance Movement. In fact, during the 1850s he joined forces with Springfield's city attorney, Shelby Cullom, to prosecute all the liquor crimes in town.
Although he was not particularly interested in holding political office, Benjamin nevertheless had many political friends. He, like Lincoln, was a Whig until the mid-1850s. But whereas Lincoln joined the Republican party after the Whig party dissolved, Benjamin cast his lots with the Democrats, supporting Stephen A. Douglas over Lincoln for Senate in 1858 and for President in 1860.
Benjamin Edwards was said to be an upright citizen. Although he could occasionally get blustery, and one person remembered him as being "as fastidious as any woman," he was also known as a loving father and a kind friend. Although it has been more than 120 years since death took him from Edwards Place, his grand mansion still carries echoes of the life he lived. Stop by for a tour to learn more about him!
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Tea Party Birthday Parties at Edwards Place
Edwards Place has a history of hosting tea parties that stretches back over more than a century and a half. Before the Civil War the parlors would be filled with hoop-skirted wives and daughters of the city's most prominent citizens. After the Civil War, Helen Edwards's daughters joined her in hosting parties for the "young folks." Toward the end of the nineteenth century the Edwardses granddaughters would send over to Maladaner's for snacks and have their friends over to tea. And during the first half of the twentieth century white gloved ladies, hatted and heeled, gathered at Edwards Place to drink tea and discuss art.
Now Springfield's little ladies (and gentlemen) have the chance to experience the grandeur of Edwards Place for their very own tea party birthday parties! Tea is served at a beautiful table with china cups and silverware in the formal parlors of the historic mansion. You provide the snacks (menu suggestions are provided), we provide the fun!
You can choose between two party packages. The first includes a brief guided walk through Edwards place, tea in the parlor, a selection of tea party- and Victorian-themed games, a guided walk through Edwards Place, and your choice of craft (possibilities include painting a parasol, decorating a fan, making a bonnet, decorating a jewelry box, or painting a flower pot). The cost for this package is $130 ($100 for members of the Art Association).
The second package includes a full guided tour of Edwards Place, dress-up with jewelry and hats, tea in the parlor, a selection of tea party- and Victorian-themed games, a teacup painting craft, and a tea party book as a favor. The cost for this option is $150/$125 members.
Call the Art Association today to schedule your party!
Now Springfield's little ladies (and gentlemen) have the chance to experience the grandeur of Edwards Place for their very own tea party birthday parties! Tea is served at a beautiful table with china cups and silverware in the formal parlors of the historic mansion. You provide the snacks (menu suggestions are provided), we provide the fun!
You can choose between two party packages. The first includes a brief guided walk through Edwards place, tea in the parlor, a selection of tea party- and Victorian-themed games, a guided walk through Edwards Place, and your choice of craft (possibilities include painting a parasol, decorating a fan, making a bonnet, decorating a jewelry box, or painting a flower pot). The cost for this package is $130 ($100 for members of the Art Association).
The second package includes a full guided tour of Edwards Place, dress-up with jewelry and hats, tea in the parlor, a selection of tea party- and Victorian-themed games, a teacup painting craft, and a tea party book as a favor. The cost for this option is $150/$125 members.
Call the Art Association today to schedule your party!
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
SAA: Springfield's Amazing Art (Classes)
Did you know the Springfield Art Association has:
- a Metals Lab for jewelry and enameling?
- a Ceramics Lab for pottery classes?
- the Condell Studio, the largest studio space in the city
- the oldest house in Springfield on its original foundation?
...if you said no, don't worry, you're not alone.
I probably shouldn't confess this, but when I was hired as the Education Coordinator, I didn't know anything about the SAA (alright...I knew I wanted to work there, but honestly that was it.) The closest I had come to its programming was Art Outreach, and I had seen the Edwards Place home (you honestly can't miss a large pink, Italianate mansion on North 4th Street!) before, but that was about it. Boy, what a year it's been.
I have been at the SAA for almost a year now, and have compiled 4 class schedules, 6 sessions of Summer Camp, and have sent 71 Art Outreach portfolios into almost 50 schools. To say we have a lot to offer the Springfield community is an understatement. Not only do we have our School of Art that offers dozens of classes in different media throughout the year, but we also have a Gallery of Art that showcases original exhibitions of artwork throughout the county and country.
With summer (almost) behind us, the SAA is gearing up for its fall line of educational programming. Perhaps most exciting for the Education Department is the presentation of the SAA's Fall Schedule of Classes that debuts August 23rd. Registration will run through September 22nd, and the School of Art will begin its fall session the week of September 27. Most of our classes are eight weeks in length; jewelry runs nine, but there are plenty of shorter-term offerings, studios and workshops. There are also some seasonal weekend workshops, including Pumpkin Decorating and other autumnal art projects.
Be sure to bring back Springfield Art, and take advantage of all of our classes. To join our mailing list, please e-mail: Education@SpringfieldArt.org.
- a Metals Lab for jewelry and enameling?
- a Ceramics Lab for pottery classes?
- the Condell Studio, the largest studio space in the city
- the oldest house in Springfield on its original foundation?
...if you said no, don't worry, you're not alone.
I probably shouldn't confess this, but when I was hired as the Education Coordinator, I didn't know anything about the SAA (alright...I knew I wanted to work there, but honestly that was it.) The closest I had come to its programming was Art Outreach, and I had seen the Edwards Place home (you honestly can't miss a large pink, Italianate mansion on North 4th Street!) before, but that was about it. Boy, what a year it's been.
I have been at the SAA for almost a year now, and have compiled 4 class schedules, 6 sessions of Summer Camp, and have sent 71 Art Outreach portfolios into almost 50 schools. To say we have a lot to offer the Springfield community is an understatement. Not only do we have our School of Art that offers dozens of classes in different media throughout the year, but we also have a Gallery of Art that showcases original exhibitions of artwork throughout the county and country.
With summer (almost) behind us, the SAA is gearing up for its fall line of educational programming. Perhaps most exciting for the Education Department is the presentation of the SAA's Fall Schedule of Classes that debuts August 23rd. Registration will run through September 22nd, and the School of Art will begin its fall session the week of September 27. Most of our classes are eight weeks in length; jewelry runs nine, but there are plenty of shorter-term offerings, studios and workshops. There are also some seasonal weekend workshops, including Pumpkin Decorating and other autumnal art projects.
Be sure to bring back Springfield Art, and take advantage of all of our classes. To join our mailing list, please e-mail: Education@SpringfieldArt.org.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Treasures of Edwards Place: Giant Teacup
The Edwards family drank their fair share of tea at Edwards Place, but it is safe to say they never consumed 23 gallons at one sitting - yet in one of the upstairs bedrooms is a giant teapot big enough to hold nearly 400 cups of tea!
That particular pot never graced the Edwards's tea table, however. It was a originally belonged to Benjamin H. Ferguson, husband of Benjamin and Helen's daughter Alice. He was a glass and china merchant whose store in downtown Springfield did more than $40,000 worth of business annually. One of his suppliers, Alfred Meakin of Tunstall, England, sent him this teapot as a promotional item in 1893. It was meant to sit in Ferguson's store and attract attention to boost sales.
The teapot is 37 inches tall and 73 inches in circumference. It features hand-painted flowers and gold lustre lettering which proclaims "Presented by Alfred Meakin Tunstall, England, to B H Ferguson, Springfield, Ills. U.S.A." Somewhere along the line its handle was broken, but we still have the pieces and hope to have it restored at some point.
Meakin probably created a dozen or so of these teapots and sent one to each of the leading china wholesalers in the United States. Today only three are known: this one, one at Hohnecker's Gifts in Dubuque, Iowa made for Little, Bruce & Co., and one at the Cincinnati Museum Center made for the Dean and Kite Company.
Stop by Edwards Place for a tour between 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. and see this rare treasure for yourself!
That particular pot never graced the Edwards's tea table, however. It was a originally belonged to Benjamin H. Ferguson, husband of Benjamin and Helen's daughter Alice. He was a glass and china merchant whose store in downtown Springfield did more than $40,000 worth of business annually. One of his suppliers, Alfred Meakin of Tunstall, England, sent him this teapot as a promotional item in 1893. It was meant to sit in Ferguson's store and attract attention to boost sales.
The teapot is 37 inches tall and 73 inches in circumference. It features hand-painted flowers and gold lustre lettering which proclaims "Presented by Alfred Meakin Tunstall, England, to B H Ferguson, Springfield, Ills. U.S.A." Somewhere along the line its handle was broken, but we still have the pieces and hope to have it restored at some point.
Meakin probably created a dozen or so of these teapots and sent one to each of the leading china wholesalers in the United States. Today only three are known: this one, one at Hohnecker's Gifts in Dubuque, Iowa made for Little, Bruce & Co., and one at the Cincinnati Museum Center made for the Dean and Kite Company.
Stop by Edwards Place for a tour between 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. and see this rare treasure for yourself!
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Calling all Little Leaguers!
Bring your Little Leaguers to an event that is sure to be a home run for everyone in your family at the Springfield Art Association! Tomorrow, August 4, from 4 to 8pm, the SAA will open its studio doors to host a night of arts and crafts, to celebrate the “Play Ball” Exhibition (through August 21). This invitational is a first, but a sure hit of hands-on art activities for the family to enjoy together. You can even meet former MLB White Sox player Ron Kittle, as well as local player Jon Knoeldner, who will be here to sign autographs! Make your own baseball card, stitch a foam mitt; even paint with baseballs! Try your hand at carnival games and check out the wonderful line-up of art in the show while listening to music that’s sure to remind you of yesteryear’s trips to the ballpark!
Activities will be guided by Springfield Art Association faculty, staff and volunteers. Refreshments will be served and all children must be accompanied by an adult. No reservations are necessary. All activities held at the SAA campus, located at 700 N. Fourth Street in Springfield.
Bring the whole family and enjoy this triple play of art, fun and baseball at the SAA Park—what’s more, every Little Leaguer dressed in uniform will get a free hot dog! For additional information contact Katie Rasmussen, Education Coordinator, at 523-2631, or by e-mail: education@springfieldart.org.
Activities will be guided by Springfield Art Association faculty, staff and volunteers. Refreshments will be served and all children must be accompanied by an adult. No reservations are necessary. All activities held at the SAA campus, located at 700 N. Fourth Street in Springfield.
Bring the whole family and enjoy this triple play of art, fun and baseball at the SAA Park—what’s more, every Little Leaguer dressed in uniform will get a free hot dog! For additional information contact Katie Rasmussen, Education Coordinator, at 523-2631, or by e-mail: education@springfieldart.org.
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