About The Decorative Arts Trust Bulletin
Formerly known as the "blog,” the Bulletin features new research and scholarship, travelogues, book reviews, and museum and gallery exhibitions. The Bulletin complements The Magazine of the Decorative Arts Trust, our biannual members publication.
The Goldfinch
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and has received “rave reviews from antiques folks” for its tale of an orphaned boy who is drawn into the art world by a captivating painting that reminds him of his deceased mother. (Little, Brown & Co., 2013, $30)
The Hare with the Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance
Edmund de Waal chronicles his inheritance of Japanese netsuke figurines that testify to his family’s trails in Nazi-occupied Austria. The curator of ceramics at the Victoria & Albert Museum, de Wall brings a insider’s prospective to this “funny and elegant” memoir. (Picador, 2011, $16)
Up and Down Stairs: History of the Country House Servant
Up and Down Stairs: History of the Country House Servant by Jeremy Musson is a “great read” and a “perfect primer for those venturing to Winterthur” to see the Downton Abbey costume exhibition. (John Murray, 2010, $15.95)
Vermeer’s Hat: The Seventeenth Century and the Dawn of the Global World
This “quick, evocative book” by Timothy Brook uses a selection Vermeer’s paintings to “observe the emergence of the modern, interconnected world.” (Bloomsbury Press, 2008, $18)
Killer Stuff and Tons of Money: An Insider’s Look at the World of Flea Markets, Antiques, and Collecting
This book by Maureen Stanton was recommended as a “quick and fun read [that offers a] good look in the trenches of the antiques market.” (Penguin, 2012, $16)
At Home: A Short History of Private Life
At Home: A Short History of Private Life by Bill Bryson “gives a history of all of the domestic objects that we take for granted” and is a “great mix of popular and accessible material culture” with “some really insightful nuggets” for those in the field. (Anchor, 2011, $15.95)
Swan Thieves
Swan Thieves by Elizabeth Kostova weaves art history and painting together in fine fashion in a novel that describes a psychiatrist and amateur artist who provides care to a renowned painter convicted ofattacking a canvas at the National Gallery of Art. (Back Bay Books, 2010, $15.95)
The Architecture of Diplomacy: The British Ambassador’s Residence in Washington
Anthony Sheldon and Daniel Collins describe the beautifully wrought building that is the capital’s “closest thing to Downton Abbey.” (Flammarion, 2014, $65)