Celebration of Folk | Architectural Digest


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Frank Maresca's Art Collection

This article profiles Frank Maresca's impressive collection of American folk art, showcasing its unique blend of mystery, magic, and cultural significance. The collection, housed in a converted loft, features a diverse range of items including human and animal figures, decoys, weathervanes, trade signs, paintings, sculptures, and circus artifacts. Maresca views each object as possessing cultural and aesthetic significance and notes that his gallery and publications have helped elevate folk art into mainstream American art.

Connection to Modern Art

Maresca sees a continuous thread between his folk art collection and modern art movements. He draws parallels between his 19th-century peacock, made from repurposed furniture parts, and Picasso's assemblages. His game boards are compared to Russian Constructivism and Kandinsky's works, while a Maytag washing machine sign is linked to Lichtenstein's pop art. A weaver's shuttle weathervane echoes Claes Oldenburg's style, and a tramp art chest made from dynamite crates is compared to 1980s Transformers robots.

Historical Significance

The article highlights the historical context of the collection, tracing Maresca's interest to the 1976 'Folk Sculpture USA' exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum. He owns two pieces from that show, demonstrating the collection's connection to pivotal moments in folk art recognition.

Key Pieces

  • A carved wood sculpture of Eve with the serpent
  • A carved wood sculpture of a bowler-hatted man
  • A late-19th-century peacock made from repurposed furniture
  • Four late-19th-century game boards
  • A 1940s Maytag washing machine sign
  • A weathervane in the form of a weaver's shuttle
  • A circa 1900 tramp art chest made of dynamite crates
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Mystery and magic—not only good design—are what I look for in an object," says Frank Maresca, the esteemed dealer in American folk, self-taught and outsider art. And indeed those are the qualities exuded by the human and animal figures, the decoys and industrial molds, the whirligigs and weathervanes, the trade signs and stimulators, the paintings and sculptures, and the circus and carnival artifacts that literally—which here, more often than not, means figuratively—form his personal collection. It is both a wonder and no wonder that almost every object stands possessed of cultural as well as aesthetic significance, for through the gallery in Chelsea that Maresca runs with Roger Ricco, his business partner of 27 years, and through the six books they've written together, he has helped to boost traditional folk art and visionary vernacular art into the constellation of mainstream American art forms.

The collection is housed just a few blocks up from the gallery, in a musicians' rehearsal studio that Maresca has converted into a loft for himself. It's furnished with such midcentury-modern icons as Eames, Nelson, Noguchi, Warren McArthur, Vladimir Kagan and Ward Bennett. The bleached-oak floors and atrium-white walls set off the strangely compelling pieces that, well, people the place. "I don't think of them as inanimate," Maresca freely admits. "Every single thing here is very much alive to me."

It was the 1976 landmark show at the Brooklyn Museum, "Folk Sculpture USA," that kindled his interest and kicked him into collecting. "I'd never before seen such fresh depictions of the human form," he recalls, proudly adding that today he possesses two objects from that magic first exhibition: a carved wood sculpture of Eve with the serpent, and another of a bowler-hatted man sitting with his legs crossed.

For Maresca, beyond the sustaining beauty of the artifacts he's accumulated there is a larger, complex appeal—that they reflect and even reify what he calls "the art-historical continuum." He points out that the late-19th-century peacock he owns—with its neck and tail made of table legs, its feet and beak of piano-stool legs, and its comb of a fragment of Victorian hinge—could profitably be mistaken for some circa 1912 Picasso assemblage. His four late-19th-century game boards—all variations on Parcheesi boards—convey to him no less the essence of the modern movement: "They predate Russian Constructivism, and they're as good as the best Kandinsky." Better yet, a Mondrian is what the game board in the entrance hall calls resoundingly to mind: the great Broadway Boogie Woogie, which was painted a half century later.

And the continuum continues. Maresca's 1940s steel sign advertising a Maytag washing machine is, he reckons, "just about as Lichtenstein as you can get," while his weathervane in the form of a monumental weaver's shuttle, which held sway over one of the big New England mills, "you could call late-19th-century Claes Oldenburg." And what he sees prefigured in his circa 1900 tramp art chest—made of dynamite crates labeled in bold capitals "Explosives Dangerous!"—is, of all things, a 1980s Transformers robot.

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