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New Signs for Blue Hills at Round Top, TX

We are back home in Santa Fe enjoying the fabulous Fall weather here in New Mexico.  I was looking through all the photos that we took of our time in Texas at the Blue Hills @ Round Top Antique Show, and found these photos of the great new signs that show promoter  Michael Peters has had made so that we can all find our way around the show.  There were several of these big PARK signs to show everyone where to park.  (Don’t forget that there is an enormous field at the back of the show for parking, big trucks, RVs and trailers have lots of space to turn around).

We also offer a shipping service for our pieces.  We have specially designed boxes for shipping antique maps, original artwork and antique prints.

New Sign - MAPSandART

Talking of signage, here is a picture of the sign that is in front of our booth, right outside Barn A.  See you next Spring (show dates are March 23rd thru April 6th 2013).

 

Blue Hills at Round Top Fall 2012 is OPEN!

We are open at Blue Hills at Round Top Fall 2012 on Highway 237 just north of Round Top, TX.

This is a couple of days earlier this year, Micheal Peters, the show promoter just can’t get enough of us!

The show looks great – and there are some new ammenities for us all…

There is additional parking on Highway 237 just north of the Blue Hills field (follow the great big red “PARK” signs on the road.  This should help a lot with parking congestion.  There is still oodles of parking for cars, big trucks and trailers at the back of the show (follow the big red signs “PARK”).

Wonderful news – Roll’en Hills is now on-site for all your shipping needs.  They are located in the tent between Barn A and the Methodist Men’s BBQ.

The Methodist Men’s BBQ will be open this Wednesday and Thursday Sept 26th and 27th 2012 with a limited menu, the full menu will be available from Friday.

Remember the new tent running along the north side of the show?  Well, it’s doubled in size.  Lots more space for dealers to bring even more furniture and finds.

There are some new dealers and returning favorites too and everyone has booths that are packed to the max with fabulous treasures.

If you need any original art, antique prints or antique maps we are the people to come and see.  You can see a selection of our pieces on our website www.MAPSandART.com.  For the best selection, come to our booth in Barn A at Blue Hills at Round Top where we have thousands of pieces for you to enjoy.

Happy Hunting.

Natasha

Map of Blue Hills at Round Top

Here is a map of Blue Hills that we made to show you your way around Blue Hills at Round Top.  Our booth of original artwork and antique prints and maps is located in Barn A (in red on the map).  Notice that there is plenty of parking for oversize vehicles in the back field (yes you can park your RV/Penske Truck/Trailer).  WCs are also located at the back of the show.  Don’t forget to grab a bite to eat at the Methodist Men’s BBQ and to visit all the great dealers at Blue Hills at Round Top.
Please note that the layout of the show may change.  This map is of the Spring 2012 show.
If you just can’t wait for Round Top do visit our website mapsandart.com where we have over 2000 pieces of art and maps available for purchase.

Before and After: Packing up After a Show

MAPSandART at Blue Hills at Round Top - before and after

 

End of the show Blue Hills at Round Top - before and after

Here are some pictures of before and after the antique show at Round Top, TX, well actually during the show and packing up the show.  When we arrive we are always so excited to start setting everything up that I never remember to take a picture of the empty booth!

We arrive at Blue Hills to an empty pole barn with gravel floors.  During the show we have walls, lights, flooring and thousands of original pieces of art, antique prints and old maps. Packing up after a show like Round Top Texas is not easy and usually takes us 2 days (it takes us even longer to set up!).   It all goes back into our cargo trailer at the end of the show.  We are always sad to come to the end of another Round Top, but tired as well.  It won’t be long before the next show – only 5 months to go!

Right now it’s time for a vacation ;))

New Up and Coming French Artist

Yann Masseyeff - Ceramic Artist

We have had the pleasure over the years to follow the artistic development of a very talented French artist of Vietnamese descent, Yann Masseyeff.  With many years working in art and antique markets he took the brave step to reinvent himself as a professional ceramic artist by entirely retraining himself.

Immense discipline allowed him to learn and practice the intricacies of a difficult art form.  Having explored the magic of clays, glazes and fire he decided to take yet another turn or rather explore further down his creative path by blending his expertise in over two decades of the study and trade of ethnographic art with painting and sculpture.

Yann Masseyeff is now taking off after in depth exploration of his artistic abilities to deliver a stunning blend of the tribal element with modern art, of painting and sculpture.  Take a look at his website to see what we are talking about at www.yannmasseyeff.com

As for many artists on the rise so do their prices… So you may think of snatching a piece before he starts exhibiting to a larger market.

Old Santa Fe Trail

Collecting antique maps can take you to unusual places.  A few days ago I took some time off to hike around a fabulous section of hills and mountains that surround Interstate 25 East of Santa Fe, close to the Old Santa Fe Trail.

Hiking from a major transportation route is not usually my favored destination, however this section is in proximity of much older routes.  In the same pass where vehicles speed by on I-25 are the remnants of the old original Santa Fe trail which linked over a 100 years ago Franklin, Missouri to Santa Fe, New Mexico.

The trail was established to trade goods with Santa Fe which was a major outpost of Northern Mexico.  The trail crossed Indian lands to link the US to Santa Fe through what is today’s Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and New Mexico.  It started in 1821 after the independence of Mexico from Spanish colonial rule until the arrival of the railroad in the 1880s and was then still used by travelers on horseback.

Map of Old Santa Fe Trail

My hike took me to a volcanic ridge over-looking the interstate and the old Santa Fe trail to the North.  To the West opened up the Rio Grande valley with the 400 year old city of Santa Fe spreading ever further from its historical center at the feet of the Sangre de Cristo mountains, which themselves are the Southern most point of the Rockies.

Looking East the Rocky mountains taper down to some lower hills and plateaus.  This flatter area is the very reason the Santa Fe trail followed where it did as the terrain North through the mountains is impracticable for travel.  From my vantage point one could clearly see the obstacles that hindered travel and to this day vehicles follow the easiest path to the Great Plains to the East by hugging the Southern most reaches of the great mountains of the Rockies.

I have been familiar with the trail having sold hundreds of old maps depicting the Santa Fe trail when that trail was actually being used.  This historical first hand knowledge brought much insight to my hike and led me to wander off in thoughts of US western expansion and of their fight with other colonial powers in claiming the West.

Truly a great hike in which the peaks of the Rockies, the city of Santa Fe and the great open expanses to the South and East can be seen.

Go visit our online gallery at www.MAPSandART.com and follow your heart’s desire.

Jim Ford’s Historical Realism

James Ford - Bronze Sculpture

Last weekend during the visit of Natasha’s father from England we had the opportunity to visit the bronze foundry of Shidoni in Tesuque, NM just North of Santa Fe.  A great deal of Santa Fe artists are present  at this establishment producing casts of molten metal to create their exceptional bronze sculptures.

While viewing their sculptures I could not but help thinking of another artist whose capability to give motion and feeling to the inanimate out-shined many of the works we were viewing at Shidoni Foundry that day.  I would say that his themes surround the concept of Historical Realism, so do not expect any abstract or modern art in his bronzes.  His name is Jim Ford.  He signs his work James Ford and can be seen at www.jamesaford.com

His works are a collection of America’s native past showing elements of American Indian culture and their early contacts with Europeans.  As James Ford puts it:

“All of my work has its nascent beginnings in the pages of some book I have been reading, if not a specific person then a composite of many characters to give the sculpture an overall theme of the period I’ve been reading. Once I have determined the subject matter then each sculpture matures through a process that combines the love I have for the figure, pose and ethnic diversity.”

When you get a chance take a look at his works at JamesaFord.com

 
 

The new website is almost ready!

Natasha and I have spent a very long time working on getting a new website going.  It has been quite a journey, but we are finally getting close to having a functioning website where you can actually buy an antique print, map or artwork.

It all started with the persistent requests of our loyal customers asking us to create a website with some items they could buy in between our shows.  A great idea, but how do you make a website?  Natasha had created a few webpages and a very nice site where one could follow our show schedule and see our happy faces.

Then we bought a book that promised to reduce our work load.  It was a book about work efficiency called “The 4-Hour Workweek” by Tim Ferriss in which it was suggested we outsource the website development.  So we did and we were certainly going to spend more than 4 hours a week on this project…

We interviewed a great deal of web developers, some in Eastern Europe, a few in the Philippines and many in South Asia, mainly India and Pakistan.  Ever so frugal we opted for a lad in Pakistan who promised us the world, his name was Shazad.  Two months later Shazad gave us a website with an ugly presentation and a website full of bugs.  We fired him.

It seemed that a bigger company was required so we tried our luck with another kind gentleman by the name of Puneet.  With a twelve hour time difference we often found Puneet laying on his bed video conferencing with us about the in and outs of our future website.  It was going to be a gem.

However, with every day, week and then months that passed we were very slowly coming to have a functioning website although full of bugs and a presentation that was prehistoric by web standards.  Having spent a fairly large sum of money we were not ready to let Puneet and Co in India go and fire him.  There was a small detail that did bring us to do just that: fire him.  He could not program us a shopping cart!

We had no way to sell our products, all 2500 of them, which we took pictures of, uploaded and wrote descriptions of.  We were back to square one and decided to go “local”.  We hired Jim, another gentleman, this time from South Carolina.  He promised us a quick fix, but disappeared with the deposit.

Never abandoning a project.  Natasha and I went against all the recommendations of our famous 4-hour Workweek book and contracted a very local company:  right here in Santa Fe.  Within 2 months from the signature of the contract we have a new website and it works.  Not a single bug.  The cost was a third of our amigo in India, Puneet, and it looks professional.

Yes, it has been a long journey.  A two year journey… We threw away the book and are BUYING LOCAL.