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I cleared out all the boxes of fabric under the worktable. A new spot for my puppy and hubby too!

Isaac Smith (1719–1787) - 1769

 

Artist: John Singleton Copley (American, 1738–1815)

 

John Singleton Copley’s portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Smith, set in gilt frames that only the richest Bostonians could afford, capture the image of wealthy Americans on the eve of the Revolutionary War. Isaac Smith, the uncle of Abigail Adams, and thus by marriage of Founding Father John Adams, was a successful Boston merchant who sold wine and other imported goods. Wearing a powdered wig and an elegant plum-colored suit with gold buttons, he sits at a worktable, preoccupied with the papers at hand. Elizabeth Smith gazes directly out at the viewer. She holds grapes in her lap, perhaps a subtle allusion to her husband’s business. Luxury is evident everywhere, from the armchair upholstered in yellow damask, to the pearls in her hair and around her neck and the rich silk of her dress and robe. Copley provided his sitters with images that are simultaneously realistic and idealized—recording not only how the Smiths actually looked but also the way in which they wanted to be perceived.

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Yale University has been collecting American art for more than 250 years. In 1832 it erected the first art museum on a college campus in North America, with the intention of housing John Trumbull’s paintings of the American Revolution—including his iconic painting The Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776—and close to 100 of his portraits of Revolutionary and Early Republic worthies. Since then, the collection of the Yale University Art Gallery has grown to include celebrated works of art from virtually every period in American history. Encompassing works like an exquisite 18th-century watercolor-on-ivory memorial portrait of a bride, paintings of the towering grandeur of the American West in the 19th century, and jazz-influenced abstractions of the early 20th century, the Gallery’s collection reflects the diversity and artistic ambitions of the nation.

 

Superb examples from a “who’s who” of American painters and sculptors—including works by Benjamin West, John Singleton Copley, Ralph Earl, Albert Bierstadt, Hiram Powers, Frederic Church, Frederick Remington, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, George Bellows, John Singer Sargent, Joseph Stella, Gerald Murphy, Eli Nadelman, Arthur Dove, Thomas Hart Benton, Edward Hopper, Alexander Calder, and Stuart Davis—bring the complex American story to life. Now these extraordinary works of art are in a new home—the elegantly restored galleries in Street Hall, the magnificent Ruskinian Gothic building designed in 1867 by Peter Bonnett Wight to be the first art school in America on a college campus. Rich in architectural detail and nobly proportioned, these breathtaking spaces allow the American collections to “breathe,” to present new visual alliances, and to create multiple artistic conversations. Under soaring skylights, the uniqueness of vision that generations of American artists brought to bear in the service of their art will be on full display.

 

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artgallery.yale.edu/collection?f%5B0%5D=on_view%3AOn%20vi...

 

The early years of the 20th century were characterized in the visual arts by a radical international reassessment of the relationship between vision and representation, as well as of the social and political role of artists in society at large. The extraordinary modern collection at the Yale University Art Gallery spans these years of dramatic change and features rich holdings in abstract painting by artists such as Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and Wassily Kandinsky, as well as in paintings and sculptures associated with German Expressionism, Russian Constructivism, De Stijl, Dada, and Surrealism. Many of these works came to Yale in the form of gifts and bequests from important American collections, including those of Molly and Walter Bareiss, B.S. 1940s; Stephen Carlton Clark, B.A. 1903; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, B.A. 1929; Katharine Ordway; and John Hay Whitney.

 

Art from 1920 to 1940 is strongly represented at the Gallery by the group of objects collected by the Société Anonyme, an artists’ organization founded by Katherine S. Dreier and Marcel Duchamp with Man Ray. This remarkable collection, which was transferred to Yale in 1941, comprises a rich array of paintings, drawings, prints, and sculptures by major 20th-century artists, including Marcel Duchamp, Constantin Brancusi, El Lissitzky, and Piet Mondrian, as well as lesser-known artists who made important contributions to the modernist movement.

 

The Gallery is also widely known for its outstanding collection of American painting from after World War II. Highlights include Jackson Pollock’s Number 13A: Arabesque (1948) and Roy Lichtenstein’s Blam (1962), part of a larger gift of important postwar works donated to the Gallery by Richard Brown Baker, B.A. 1935. Recent gifts from Charles B. Benenson, B.A. 1933, and Thurston Twigg-Smith, B.E. 1942, have dramatically expanded the Collection with works by artists such as James Rosenquist, Ed Ruscha, and Wayne Thiebaud.

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Yale University Art Gallery is the oldest college art museum in America. The Gallery’s encyclopedic holdings of more than 250,000 objects range from ancient times to the present day and represent civilizations from around the globe. Spanning a block and a half of the city of New Haven, Connecticut, the Gallery comprises three architecturally distinct buildings, including a masterpiece of modern architecture from 1953 designed by Louis Kahn through which visitors enter. The museum is free and open to the public.

 

artgallery.yale.edu

 

www.archdaily.com/83110/ad-classics-yale-university-art-g...

 

Yale University’s School of Architecture was in the midst of pedagogical upheaval when Louis Kahn joined the faculty in 1947. With skyscraper architect George Howe as dean and modernists like Kahn, Philip Johnson, and Josef Albers as lecturers, the post-war years at Yale trended away from the school’s Beaux-Arts lineage towards the avant-garde. And so, when the consolidation of the university’s art, architecture, and art history departments in 1950 demanded a new building, a modernist structure was the natural choice to concretize an instructional and stylistic departure from historicism. Completed in 1953, Louis Kahn’s Yale University Art Gallery building would provide flexible gallery, classroom, and office space for the changing school; at the same time, Kahn’s first significant commission signaled a breakthrough in his own architectural career—a career now among the most celebrated of the second half of the twentieth century.

 

The university clearly articulated a program for the new gallery and design center (as it was then called): Kahn was to create open lofts that could convert easily from classroom to gallery space and vice versa. Kahn’s early plans responded to the university’s wishes by centralizing a core service area—home to the stairwell, bathrooms, and utility shafts—in order to open up uninterrupted space on either side of the core. Critics have interpreted this scheme as a means of differentiating “service” and “served” space, a dichotomy that Kahn would express often later in his career. As Alexander Purves, Yale School of Architecture alumnus and faculty member, writes of the gallery, “This kind of plan clearly distinguishes between those spaces that ... house the building's major functions and those that are subordinated to the major spaces but are necessary to support them.” As such, the spaces of the gallery dedicated to art exhibition and instruction are placed atop a functional hierarchy, above the building’s utilitarian realms; still, in refusing to hide—and indeed, centralizing—the less glamorous functions of the building, Kahn acknowledged all levels of the hierarchy as necessary to his building’s vitality.

 

Within the open spaces enabled by the central core, Kahn played with the concept of a space frame. He and longtime collaborator Anne Tyng had been inspired by the geometric forms of Buckminster Fuller, whom Tyng studied under at the University of Pennsylvania and with whom Kahn had corresponded while teaching at Yale. It was with Fuller’s iconic geometric structures in mind that Kahn and Tyng created the most innovative element of the Yale Art Gallery: the concrete tetrahedral slab ceiling. Henry A. Pfisterer, the building’s structural engineer, explains the arrangement: "a continuous plane element was fastened to the apices of open-base, hollow, equilateral tetrahedrons, joined at the vertices of the triangles in the lower plane.” In practice, the system of three-dimensional tetrahedrons was strong enough to support open studio space—unencumbered by columns—while the multi-angular forms invited installation of gallery panels in times of conversion.

 

Though Kahn’s structural experimentation in the Yale Art Gallery was cutting-edge, his careful attention to light and shadow evidences his ever-present interest in the religious architecture of the past. Working closely with the construction team, Kahn and Pfisterer devised a system to run electrical ducts inside the tetrahedrons, allowing light to diffuse from the hollow forms. The soft, ambient light emitted evokes that of a cathedral; Kahn’s gallery, then, takes subtle inspiration from the nineteenth-century neo-Gothic gallery it adjoins.

 

Of the triangulated, concrete slab ceiling, Kahn said “it is beautiful and it serves as an electric plug." ] This principle—that a building’s elements can be both sculptural and structural—is carried into other areas of the gallery. The central stairwell, for example, occupies a hollow, unfinished concrete cylinder; in its shape and utilitarianism, the stairwell suggests the similarly functional agricultural silo. On the ceiling of the stairwell, however, an ornamental concrete triangle is surrounded at its circumference by a ring of windows that conjures a more elevated relic of architectural history: the Hagia Sophia. Enclosed within the cylinder, terrazzo stairs form triangles that mimic both the gallery’s ceiling and the triangular form above. In asserting that the stairs “are designed so people will want to use them,” Kahn hoped visitors and students would engage with the building, whose form he often described in anthropomorphic terms: “living” in its adaptability and “breathing” in its complex ventilation system (also encased in the concrete tetrahedrons).

 

Given the structural and aesthetic triumphs of Kahn’s ceiling and stair, writing on the Yale Art Gallery tends to focus on the building’s elegant interior rather than its facade. But the care with which Kahn treats the gallery space extends outside as well; glass on the west and north faces of the building and meticulously laid, windowless brick on the south allow carefully calculated amounts of light to enter.

Recalling the European practice, Kahn presents a formal facade on York Street—the building’s western frontage—and a garden facade facing neighboring Weir Hall’s courtyard.

His respect for tradition is nevertheless articulated in modernist language.

 

Despite their visual refinement, the materials used in the gallery’s glass curtain walls proved almost immediately impractical. The windows captured condensation and marred Kahn’s readable facade. A restoration undertaken in 2006 by Ennead Architects (then Polshek Partnership) used modern materials to replace the windows and integrate updated climate control. The project also reversed extensive attempts made in the sixties to cover the windows, walls, and silo staircase with plaster partitions. The precise restoration of the building set a high standard for preservation of American modernism—a young but vital field—while establishing the contentiously modern building on Yale’s revivalist campus as worth saving.

 

Even with a pristinely restored facade, Kahn’s interior still triumphs. Ultimately, it is a building for its users—those visitors who, today, view art under carefully crafted light and those students who, in the fifties, began their architectural education in Kahn’s space. Purves, who spent countless hours in the fourth-floor drafting room as an undergraduate, maintains that a student working in the space “can see Kahn struggling a bit and can identify with that struggle.” Architecture critic Paul Goldberger, who studied at Yale a decade after Kahn’s gallery was completed, offers a similar evaluation of the building—one echoed by many students who frequented the space: “its beauty does not emerge at first glance but comes only after time spent within it.”

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Can you name all of the animals in this photo? The two magazines were delivered today and I found it all so funny

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Included in the album titled: 4th floor walk-up Penthouse apartment

can you believe i ever got anything done working here? I did and after 7 years only the materials have improved but it's still an awful mess.

The group worktable, with a ton of people around it as usual.

Killerton House, Killerton, NT, Broadclyst, Exeter, Devon. A rosewood work table, English, circa 1840, the hinged flaps with scroll supports beneath and flanking a frieze drawer, a pleated basket below, on gadrooned column with concave-sided platform base and scroll feet with hidden castors

Nothing's square on a boat! Tucking a washer into a space under the worktable is an interesting project...

Woodworkers Table Saw Machine

Description:-

Angle range of saw-spindle can lean 0-45degree

 

Max thickness of perpendicular cutting 95mm

 

Motor power of lining-saw 0.75kw

 

Height of lining-saw can move 0~5mm

 

Max thickness of 45°leaning cutting 65mm

 

Length of sliding worktable 3000/3200mm

 

Motor power of main saw 4~5.5kw

 

Revolving speed of lining-saw spindle 8000rpm

 

Revolving speed of main saw spindle 4200/5500rpm

 

Diameter of lining-saw disc 120mm

 

Diameter of main saw spindle 30mm

 

Max diameter of main saw disc 350mm

 

Diameter of lining-saw spindle 22mm

There'll be a loft in the bell tower at furthest. A library's worth of stuff under wraps. My temporary presentation worktable.

My drawing board, converted to worktable

30 1/2 x 21 x 16 1/4 in. (77.5 x 53.3 x 41.3 cm)

 

medium: Mahogany, mahogany and birch veneers with white pine, mahogany

 

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY 18.110.40 1918

John Stewart Kennedy Fund, 1918

www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/10001

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Clean, ready worktable...

several pieces in the works plus a big pile of papers to be sorted into finished pieces, things to keep working on, scraps to paste into sketch book for future reference, and recycle.

Skil "XBench" worktable. Neato!

For the stories behind the images visit www.lagalog.com

• Foodtrip with us at www.happyfoodies.com

Fixed Worktable Large Travel Video Measuring Machine

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My greenhouse potting shelf currently doubles as a crafting table! It can get a bit warm at times :D but I can play here and make a mess and no one cares! Kewl!

IMG_2643

Missing: 3 designer worktabes + Tools, 2 other 10' trees like the one to the right side of picture.

From the museum label: In this painting, Giacometti depicts a corner of his studio that he used for forty years: a small, damp and unheated ground-floor room, in a working-class area of southern Paris. Several of his sculptures of standing or walking figures are on the worktable, while some busts rest on the floor. Like his portrait paintings, Giacometti renders this familiar scene as if dissected by his eye, quickly reconstructed on the canvas through bundles of energetic lines. He said: 'Figures were never for me a compact mass but like a transparent construction.’

Our worktables

2-14-19 View from my worktable

Vintage Kitchen Worktable

 

Bring a touch of nostalgic charm to your kitchen with this mesh Vintage Kitchen Worktable, featuring a rustic wooden table, stoneware crocks, and classic cooking utensils. The crocks are available in six vintage-inspired colors, making it easy to coordinate with your space.

 

* Land Impact: 5

* Permissions: Copy

 

Includes: Worktable, crocks, & cooking utensils (static decor)

 

Pair it with other pieces in the Vintage Kitchen Collection for a fully styled retro look.

 

Explore the Full Vintage Kitchen Collection:

 

* Vintage Kitchen Worktables – Available in 7 stoneware crock color sets

* Vintage Kitchen Sink – Includes towel with a 9-color change menu

* Vintage Kitchen Stove (2 versions) – Each comes with stovetop decor and a towel with a 9-color menu

* Vintage Kitchen Fatpack – Includes both stoves, the sink, and all 7 worktables in one discounted bundle

 

Mix and match or collect the full set to create your perfect vintage kitchen space.

 

Purchase it here!

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