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I had an opportunity to see Krenov along with a number of other well
known makers at an exhibition at the Boston MFA last year. The museum has a large collection of early American furniture which we also viewed. At roughly the same time frame we went to a John and Thomas Seymour exhibit at PEM in Salem Ma. I have visited a number of Shaker museums(Ok I'm retired so I have time to do this) along with other exhibits contain some Maloof, Nakashima, Frank Lloyd Wright, Art Deco Furniture (A real surprise that I enjoyed the Art Deco so much) and many others. One problem with seeing these at an exhibit is that the really bad or common stuff which also exists is weeded out so that you are looking at the best of a particular class of furniture. It is probably unfair to draw a judgment on seeing one or two pieces live but I was very disappointed in Krenov. The craftsmanship was excellent but viewed at the same time as other well made pieces and compared to the early American I was under whelmed. I have seen many pictures of his work and it reminds me of an old joke about the classical composer Antonio Vivaldi. Some critic wrote that he didn't write 200 concertos but that he wrote one concerto 200 times. I don't remember the exact number but you get the idea. I never meet him but from what I read he is a wonderful person and educator and has probably had a great effect on a number of his students. As I look back on people who had the most positive influence on me I realize that some of them were not as knowledgeable or technically competent as I once though they were but they all have that wonderful ability to teach and guide you to do your best work. I would guess Krenov fits this category which is why he is so well thought of. Personally, I don't think it's do to the design of his own work, which, without the craftsmanship evolved might have trouble standing on its own. On 17 May 2005 10:08:59 -0700, "Olebiker" wrote: I know I may be really stepping into it, but what is it that impresses folks about Krenov? I mean, how many variations on those trinket cabinets can a guy make? What is it that people like about them anyway. The legs are out of scale with the box and the clunky-looking-thicker-at-the-bottom design of the legs reminds me too much of my old bell bottoms I wore back in the 70s. (What were we thinking?) Somebody 'splain it to me. Dick Durbin |
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