Decoshow V 1 1 9 Fr Serial Port
Gagnon230024el.jpg Naomi Murdach is a 33-year-old pottery store with 1,800 teapots from around the world. We need some shots of Naomi's collection of teapots, obelisks and other items in the store and in Naomi's nearby apartment, as well as shots of the outside of the store and the inside of the store and apartment. The store specializes in pottery made in the United States from 1900 and 1945 with 20,000 to 30,000 pieces. In addition, Naomi has vintage Bauer oil jars, pitchers, dinnerware and other items. A water pitcher, designed by Russel Wright (no relation to Frank Lloyd Wright) for his American Modern line of dinnerware (1936) was on exhibit in last year�s Art Deco retrospective at the Palace of The Legion of Honor.
3/14/05 in San Francisco. Eric Luse / The Chronicle Ran on: Naomi Murdach, above, owner of Naomi's Antiques to Go in San Francisco, holds the first teapot he bought. It's a miniature working teapot in simulated walnut from the Yixing province, which he acquired as a child in the 1930s during a visit to China. His pottery collection includes the American Modern Water Pitcher from 1956-58 by Russel Wright, below left, and a Pacific Pottery Art Deco teapot from the 1930s, below right, used for heating syrup.
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Ran on: Ran on: Ran on. Gagnon230065el.jpg Russel Wright shite American Modern Water Pitcher from 1956-58 for $495.00. He does carry off white colors that range from $95-$125. Naomi Murdach is a 33-year-old pottery store with 1,800 teapots from around the world. We need some shots of Naomi's collection of teapots, obelisks and other items in the store and in Naomi's nearby apartment, as well as shots of the outside of the store and the inside of the store and apartment. The store specializes in pottery made in the United States from 1900 and 1945 with 20,000 to 30,000 pieces.
In addition, Naomi has vintage Bauer oil jars, pitchers, dinnerware and other items. A water pitcher, designed by Russel Wright (no relation to Frank Lloyd Wright) for his American Modern line of dinnerware (1936) was on exhibit in last year�s Art Deco retrospective at the Palace of The Legion of Honor. 3/14/05 in San Francisco.
Eric Luse / The Chronicle Ran on: Naomi Murdach, above, owner of Naomi's Antiques to Go in San Francisco, holds the first teapot he bought. It's a miniature working teapot in simulated walnut from the Yixing province, which he acquired as a child in the 1930s during a visit to China.
His pottery collection includes the American Modern Water Pitcher from 1956-58 by Russel Wright, below left, and a Pacific Pottery Art Deco teapot from the 1930s, below right, used for heating syrup. Ran on: Ran on: Ran on. Gagnon230036el.jpg Pacific 1930's deco style teapot for heating syrup.
Decoshow V 1 1 9 Fr Serial Port Charlotte
Naomi Murdach is a 33-year-old pottery store with 1,800 teapots from around the world. We need some shots of Naomi's collection of teapots, obelisks and other items in the store and in Naomi's nearby apartment, as well as shots of the outside of the store and the inside of the store and apartment.
The store specializes in pottery made in the United States from 1900 and 1945 with 20,000 to 30,000 pieces. In addition, Naomi has vintage Bauer oil jars, pitchers, dinnerware and other items. A water pitcher, designed by Russel Wright (no relation to Frank Lloyd Wright) for his American Modern line of dinnerware (1936) was on exhibit in last year�s Art Deco retrospective at the Palace of The Legion of Honor. 3/14/05 in San Francisco. Eric Luse / The Chronicle Ran on: Naomi Murdach, above, owner of Naomi's Antiques to Go in San Francisco, holds the first teapot he bought.
It's a miniature working teapot in simulated walnut from the Yixing province, which he acquired as a child in the 1930s during a visit to China. His pottery collection includes the American Modern Water Pitcher from 1956-58 by Russel Wright, below left, and a Pacific Pottery Art Deco teapot from the 1930s, below right, used for heating syrup. Ran on: Ran on: Ran on. Gagnon230011el.jpg Naomi with his Donut Shape Hall Teapot from, 1939 Naomi Murdach is a 33-year-old pottery store with 1,800 teapots from around the world. We need some shots of Naomi's collection of teapots, obelisks and other items in the store and in Naomi's nearby apartment, as well as shots of the outside of the store and the inside of the store and apartment.
The store specializes in pottery made in the United States from 1900 and 1945 with 20,000 to 30,000 pieces. In addition, Naomi has vintage Bauer oil jars, pitchers, dinnerware and other items. A water pitcher, designed by Russel Wright (no relation to Frank Lloyd Wright) for his American Modern line of dinnerware (1936) was on exhibit in last year�s Art Deco retrospective at the Palace of The Legion of Honor. 3/14/05 in San Francisco.
Eric Luse / The Chronicle Ran on: Naomi Murdach, above, owner of Naomi's Antiques to Go in San Francisco, holds the first teapot he bought. It's a miniature working teapot in simulated walnut from the Yixing province, which he acquired as a child in the 1930s during a visit to China. His pottery collection includes the American Modern Water Pitcher from 1956-58 by Russel Wright, below left, and a Pacific Pottery Art Deco teapot from the 1930s, below right, used for heating syrup. Ran on: Ran on: Ran on: Ran on: Murdach owns a teapot known as the Donut, made by Hall c.
What started as a hobby developed into a passion - some might say obsession - and became a successful business for one collector. Reining in several collections and finding a place for everything in a small living space can be a challenge, one that met 32 years ago when he opened his San Francisco store, Naomi's Antiques to Go, specializing in vintage dinnerware and art pottery. 'The store is really an extension of my living room and my life,' said Murdach, an octogenarian who started collecting teapots as a child and now has more than 1,800 of them. Today, the functional and well-made pieces are sought after by new generations of collectors for their innovative forms and exuberant colors. A pair of curvaceous vases from Pacific Pottery depict maidens in relief, and a post-Art Deco coffee server, also by Pacific Pottery, is as streamlined as a Packard automobile.
Bauer Ring Ware spice and cookie jars and dinner plates - known for their raised, concentric rings - are glazed in eye- opening orange, yellow, cobalt blue and jade green. The Los Angeles company Bauer Pottery 'began a Depression-era craze for solid-colored, durable, mix-and-match dinnerware with California Colored Pottery,' said, author of 'Beautiful Bauer: A Pictorial Study With Prices' (Schiffer Publishing, 192 pages; $40). Other California companies such as Pacific Pottery; Gladding, McBean & Co.; and Vernon Kilns quickly followed suit as expensive formal dinner styles gave way to informal buffet dining. 'Consumers sought pottery that was inexpensive yet presentable and durable.
The glaze colors preferred were bright and uplifting during hard times,' Snyder said. Fiestaware, manufactured by the and originally sold in Woolworth's stores around the country, had much the same impact, according to Murdach. But because the line is in production again and is available in department stores such as Macy's, he doesn't carry it. The current renaissance in modern architecture and furnishings has sparked a renewed interest in 20th century domestic wares. Two museum shows - 'California Pottery: From Missions to Modernism,' sponsored by the in 2001, and the more recent Art Deco retrospective, sponsored by the - showcased examples from Murdach's collection. 'The Victoria and Albert purchased a water pitcher for their Art Deco show, and then it made its way back to San Francisco when the show opened here last year at the Palace of the Legion of Honor,' Murdach said. The pitcher, designed by Wright in 1936 and manufactured by, is as perfectly formed as a calla lily and typifies the prolific designer's biomorphic approach.
'Primary to him were that form and function must be related; no surface detail beyond shape; no distraction from a lean line,' wrote in the 'Collector's Encyclopedia of Russel Wright' (Collector Books, 301 pages; $30). 'Wright recolored the rainbow with the new colored glazes of American Modern. Almost muted, softly glowing, the glazes have an underlying textural feeling,' Kerr said.
More than that, 'he really started a revolution in popular design with everything from furniture and lighting to metal and dinnerware,' Murdach said. 'When his line for American Modern went back on sale at Gimbel's in New York just after World War II, people lined up for blocks to buy it, and several were hurt in the rush. 'People from all walks of life are collecting nowadays.
Some of them come into the store, and they might see a pattern they remember or a teapot their aunt or grandmother had, and it brings back fond memories for them,' he said. Prices range from around $18 for a cup and saucer to several hundred dollars for colorful Bauer oil jars that were intended as embellishments for Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial houses of the 1920s and 1930s. Rare specimens, such as a black-glazed fruit platter by Wright, called Manta-Ray, fetch thousands of dollars.
Murdach's one-bedroom apartment above the store is in a well-preserved circa-1908 building on Polk Street near Washington Street. Predictably, it's packed to the coffered ceilings with American-made pottery, mostly teapots, but there are also miniature Chinese teapots, Chinese ceramic headrests and an abundance of obelisks.
The original mantelpiece in the living room serves as a display area for colorful Pacific Pottery teapots in various styles, while glass-doored shelves, above, display smaller Bauer pots. Automobile-shaped teapots, by Hall, rest on top of a gas heater. 'Any port in a storm,' Murdach said. A narrow den off the living room is outfitted with portable shelves displaying yet more teapots, including the so-called Donut design by Hall, and wooden-handled coffee and tea servers by Bauer that were first shown at the 1935 California-Pacific Exposition in San Diego's Balboa Park. Even the sky- lit bathroom is a display area with a floating shelf that houses an overflow of obelisks. As enthusiastic as he is about his accumulations - and the many friends he's made who share his enthusiasm for American pottery - Murdach said, 'In my next life, I think I'll come back as a collector of toothpick holders or salt dips. They don't take up nearly as much room, and you don't have to worry about packing and shipping.'
For now, though, he's ever on the alert for a tantalizing new piece to add to his collection.
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