As usual, Joe, a very varied and interesting items from different types of places, that bowl with the decorated interior was a really hard thing to spot!!…easily overlooked, very cool find, also liked the other pottery items shown (I also watch Dr Lori…. but must have missed your appearance 🫢)….Marvellous last find !!!,…thanks to detective work!!….But still like the bowl with the decorated interior best, because it was hard to realise it value …and that is so difficult 👏👏👏…Sue (UK)
Steps in Time would look great in a gallery wall in the lower right edge, and the rest of the wall would be expressions from your dream home. So it would represent the steps going up to the property. Then use various textures, sizes and content to rep the rooms/vibes of the home.
My favorite was the painting of the stone steps. I'm drawn to paintings that are a) done well and b) don't have a cliche subject matter (mountains, trees, happy little clouds, zzzz.)
Another instructive & surprising video, thanks. My fave is “The Vigilante”-the Daniel Monfort statuette. It has some personality & like how its rough lines (if that’s the term) kept it from being too polished & idealized. Even though I don’t think of myself as one who is routinely drawn to cowboy sculptures, this one was immediately pleasing. Bill Coleman’s “Amish” landscape also had immediate appeal to me-even from afar when I at first thought it was a painting or colored drawing. Its quiet symmetry seems to still & pull in the viewer & reminds me of Russell Chatham. Thanks for the tour!
I like the first one, the small picture, I also have great luck on those picture shelves in good will ! Always finding valuable things there ! Thank you for your great show! I look forward to it always ! BOB
Great video as always. I agree about looking at the small frames. I found an 8x10 watercolor in a crappy plastic frame signed N.E. Green, who was an English artist who died in 1899. It was $6 and I have it listed over $400. People don't realize what they are giving away. BTW, I liked the last painting you showed.
I am just starting out with treasure hunting and your two video I have watched so far have been very helpful!! Thank You P.S I liked the Alabaster sculpture best.
Studio pottery is pottery made by individual artists, or sometimes a small group of artists under a company name. Art pottery is made by companies such as Hull, Haeger, Roseville, Rookwood, etc. I think one of the easiest ways to tell them apart is whether the piece is signed or initialed or not. Many art pottery companies have distinct markings instead of being hand signed. Hope this helps and thanks for the comment!
Besides just admiring your catches (well, most of them) & your analysis (always), your comments made me reflect think a bit more about two things: One: That chips on a good piece of pottery should not necessarily be a dealbreaker. I wonder if you have a standard about this-when are chips a dealbreaker for you & when are they not? Two: It’s interesting to me that the potent mid-century glob at the end of the video has real value despite lacking a signature. That makes complete sense to me. If a piece is distinctive-& potent-should its value be overdetermined by whether it has a tiny signature (which is not even part of it is first seen & judged)? Of course, I’d be appreciate if every gripping piece of art I found had a signature (esp. a legible one!), but that is hardly the case. (Esp. with regards to folk art?) My take is that the market is (maddeningly) inconsistent on this: Sometimes a special piece will be highly coveted by the market despite the lack of a signature. Sometimes a piece that should be highly coveted is not-despite being stirring & rare. Am I missing something here? Do you see it differently? Happy Hunting!
Hi Marc. Regarding pottery, small chips usually won't deter me from buying something, unless it compromises a focal point of the piece (hope this makes sense). I usually pass on any pottery that is cracked or repaired unless it's antique. To your second point, I honestly don't think signatures matter too much unless the piece is signed by a notable artist. Most people buy art because they like the artwork. Of course there are still collectors that know much more about art compared to the general public. I've noticed that signed folk art is often made by more well-known artists who have made a name for themselves (especially with items like duck decoys). And I agree 100% on the inconsistency of the market. Often I will list something and think it will sell quickly, but doesn't. Other times I think something will be in my store for a while, and sells right away. Thanks for the insightful message and happy hunting!
My favorite was sergios painting, I want to start a collection that focuses on Latin America/ Hispanic artists. Thats a great one.
As usual, Joe, a very varied and interesting items from different types of places, that bowl with the decorated interior was a really hard thing to spot!!…easily overlooked, very cool find, also liked the other pottery items shown (I also watch Dr Lori…. but must have missed your appearance 🫢)….Marvellous last find !!!,…thanks to detective work!!….But still like the bowl with the decorated interior best, because it was hard to realise it value …and that is so difficult 👏👏👏…Sue (UK)
Thanks for watching Sue! It's always nice to hear from you.
A year later, but my favorites were the small Japanese print and the large alabaster free form. Both are stunning pieces.
Steps in Time would look great in a gallery wall in the lower right edge, and the rest of the wall would be expressions from your dream home. So it would represent the steps going up to the property. Then use various textures, sizes and content to rep the rooms/vibes of the home.
My favorite item was the last one by Pedro Ladron de Guevara painting 👏🤞
I loved the first painting. Tiny paintings are a particular favourite of mine especially when all on a wall together.
Me too! Thank you for watching
My favorite was the painting of the stone steps. I'm drawn to paintings that are a) done well and b) don't have a cliche subject matter (mountains, trees, happy little clouds, zzzz.)
Absolutely. I think that's why I like surrealism and abstract art so much. Thanks for watching!
Another instructive & surprising video, thanks.
My fave is “The Vigilante”-the Daniel Monfort statuette. It has some personality & like how its rough lines (if that’s the term) kept it from being too polished & idealized. Even though I don’t think of myself as one who is routinely drawn to cowboy sculptures, this one was immediately pleasing.
Bill Coleman’s “Amish” landscape also had immediate appeal to me-even from afar when I at first thought it was a painting or colored drawing. Its quiet symmetry seems to still & pull in the viewer & reminds me of Russell Chatham.
Thanks for the tour!
I like the first one, the small picture, I also have great luck on those picture shelves in good will ! Always finding valuable things there ! Thank you for your great show! I look forward to it always ! BOB
Thanks Bob! Art has always been my favorite thing to search for. Thanks for watching!
The last painting is absolutely stunning!!! My favorite 🤩 price it high it will sell.
I hope you're right haha! Thanks for watching
Love the white sculpture. Thanks for your videos!!!!
Thanks for watching!
I am pottery fan and like abstract stuff too. Faves were abstract studio pottery bowl and alabaster abstract sculpture. Nice finds!
Thank you!
I really like your videos. The Amish photo was my favourite.
Glad you like them, thank you!
Favorite item was the first small print by the Japanese artist. Very cool. Love your videos!
Awesome! Thank you!
Hi Shelley! You won the first giveaway! Congrats! Email me your address at joe@salvagedbeautyart.com.
@@TreasureHuntingDad will do! Thanks!!!!
Great videos! I liked the photo with the Amish scene.
Thank you!
Great video as always. I agree about looking at the small frames. I found an 8x10 watercolor in a crappy plastic frame signed N.E. Green, who was an English artist who died in 1899. It was $6 and I have it listed over $400. People don't realize what they are giving away. BTW, I liked the last painting you showed.
Wow nice find! I definitely agree that people don't know what they have. Thanks for watching, Frank!
I am just starting out with treasure hunting and your two video I have watched so far have been very helpful!! Thank You P.S I liked the Alabaster sculpture best.
p.s BOB again, also love the long picture I find a lot of good art work in the Clearfield goodwill in Pennsylvania. Again , BOB. Clearfield pa
great find! hang in there :)
Thank you! Will do!
I like the black bowl with the abstract design.
What’s the difference between studio and art pottery? How do you recognize the pieces?
Studio pottery is pottery made by individual artists, or sometimes a small group of artists under a company name. Art pottery is made by companies such as Hull, Haeger, Roseville, Rookwood, etc. I think one of the easiest ways to tell them apart is whether the piece is signed or initialed or not. Many art pottery companies have distinct markings instead of being hand signed. Hope this helps and thanks for the comment!
You need to get certified to be able to get that kind of money! And put it in live auction or auction with credibility!!! FYI
Besides just admiring your catches (well, most of them) & your analysis (always), your comments made me reflect think a bit more about two things:
One: That chips on a good piece of pottery should not necessarily be a dealbreaker.
I wonder if you have a standard about this-when are chips a dealbreaker for you & when are they not?
Two: It’s interesting to me that the potent mid-century glob at the end of the video has real value despite lacking a signature.
That makes complete sense to me. If a piece is distinctive-& potent-should its value be overdetermined by whether it has a tiny signature (which is not even part of it is first seen & judged)?
Of course, I’d be appreciate if every gripping piece of art I found had a signature (esp. a legible one!), but that is hardly the case. (Esp. with regards to folk art?)
My take is that the market is (maddeningly) inconsistent on this: Sometimes a special piece will be highly coveted by the market despite the lack of a signature.
Sometimes a piece that should be highly coveted is not-despite being stirring & rare.
Am I missing something here? Do you see it differently?
Happy Hunting!
Hi Marc. Regarding pottery, small chips usually won't deter me from buying something, unless it compromises a focal point of the piece (hope this makes sense). I usually pass on any pottery that is cracked or repaired unless it's antique. To your second point, I honestly don't think signatures matter too much unless the piece is signed by a notable artist. Most people buy art because they like the artwork. Of course there are still collectors that know much more about art compared to the general public. I've noticed that signed folk art is often made by more well-known artists who have made a name for themselves (especially with items like duck decoys). And I agree 100% on the inconsistency of the market. Often I will list something and think it will sell quickly, but doesn't. Other times I think something will be in my store for a while, and sells right away. Thanks for the insightful message and happy hunting!
Hi. Saw you on the Dr.Lori class showing the alabaster sculpture. Seeing it on your video now is so, how shall I say it, smooth. Thanks.
Wow that's really cool! I love Dr. Lori's classes. Especially getting to see all the variety of things people find. Thanks for watching!
Can you share the auction link where you found the items please?
I will see if I can find it
Muted tone.