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The
Museum in the "Bungle House"
by David Cathers
In East
Aurora, a woodsy small town about 20 miles southeast of Buffalo,
N.Y., the Roycroft Campus faces east onto Main Street. The rectangular
Campus is bounded on one side by South Grove Street, site of the
Roycroft Inn. Its western edge is a stretch of Oakwood Avenue, and
one long block of Walnut Street defines its northern border. Number
46 Walnut Street is in the middle of this block. It is a part shingle-sided,
part half-timbered house with a large skylight and is the former
home of one of the most gifted and best-known painters ever to work
for Elbert Hubbard's Roycroft -- Alexis Fournier.
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Originally
a barn where carriages were kept, the structure was converted into
a house in about 1903 by a team of Roycroft carpenters. It stands
on land that Hubbard gave Fournier as part of his campaign to persuade
the painter to settle in East Aurora and take on the role of Roycroft
artist-in-residence.
Behind
the house is a small wood frame structure that was once a chicken
coop and blacksmith shop. Remodeled by the Roycroft carpenters,
it became Fournier's studio. About 1910 he expanded it further,
adding snug but comfortable living quarters on the first and second
floors and affixing wooden trellises to the outside walls.
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Color-drenched
flower gardens fronted Fournier's cottage, vines climbed the
trellises and wreathed his studio skylight and an apple tree
grew through the opening that he cut in the roof of his porch.
As the art historian Laurene Buckley has written, Fournier
named this idyllic but somewhat haphazard little building
the "bungle-house," because, he said, "it didn't deserve to
be called a bungalow." After his death in 1948 the bungle-house
gradually declined.
In the
mid-1990s Boice Lydell bought the ailing building and began
to bring it back to life. Though restoration is an ongoing
job, today Alexis Fournier's modest Arts and Crafts studio/cottage
has a new identity: it is the home and central repository
of what Boice has named the Roycroft Arts Museum.
This is
his private assemblage of more than 100,000 historic Roycroft
and Roycroft-related objects: books; furniture; copper and
other art metalwork; paintings, drawings and graphic works;
leatherwork; pottery; sculpture; photographs; and what seems
like an endless amount of archival materials, ephemera and
memorabilia. How this unparalleled collection came to be is
in part a story about families, and it is also a story about
a young boy's innate predisposition that grew to become his
all-consuming passion.
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To
Grandmother's House
Roycroft
is literally in Boice Lydell's blood. His great-uncle, Ernest
Simmons, began his Roycroft career as Elbert Hubbard's secretary
and became the firm's chief salesman after Hubbard died in
the 1915 sinking of the Lusitania. For about 20 years, Simmons
traveled back and forth across the country, calling on retailers
and selling Roycroft goods. He loved his job and, says Boice,
"He loved the Roycroft."
Beginning
in the 1940s and continuing until the 1960s, Simmons collected
products once made by the now-defunct firm. Looking back,
Boice says, "I remember being in his house when I was a little
boy and loving the Roycroft books and all the other Roycroft
things." More recently, because of a lucky find, Boice learned
that his maternal grandfather, M.G. Schneckenburger, was a
local professional photographer whose clients included the
Roycroft. Schneckenburger
was also a hobbyist cabinetmaker, and an example of his work,
a Roycroft-like fall-front desk with actual Roycroft hardware,
is now in Boice's collection.
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These
were not his only family connections to the Roycroft. Growing
up he and his parents visited his grandmother in East Aurora
about every two weeks. The route to her house went past the
Campus, and he vividly recalls that he could not stop looking
at the big, dark stone "Gothic-like" Roycroft buildings
that this little boy found irresistibly "exciting and
intriguing." Like
many children who grow up to become antiques collectors, he
was naturally drawn to old artifacts from a very young age,
even if he didn't know exactly what they were or understand
quite why he liked them.
Boice's
grandmother died when he was 14, and he asked his parents
if he could have some of the things that he had found in her
house. And so he inherited the beginnings of a collection:
a few pieces of Roycroft copper, some Roycroft books and a
Roycroft piano bench.
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The most
fascinating object of all, though, was a book written by Elbert
Hubbard and published by the Roycrofters in 1899. It was called
Ali Baba of East Aurora, a "biography" of Anson
Blackman, the rough-hewn hired man and horse handler who worked
for Hubbard and was dubbed "Ali Baba" by Hubbard's
oldest son, Bert. Reportedly, a thousand copies of that book
were printed but this one was unique. It had originally been
Ali Baba's personal copy and he had inscribed his name in
it.
In his
mischievous writings in the Roycroft magazine The Philistine,
Hubbard often "quoted" Ali Baba. On the printed
page he transformed this unremarkable family employee into
a colorful and largely fictitious local character who, among
other things, was said to be a deep thinker, witty iconoclast,
pungent philosopher and "head of the Motto Department."
Some of the attention-grabbing and at times racy phrases that
Hubbard used to spice up his prose were said to come straight
from Ali Baba's mouth, though in fact they came from Hubbard
himself, or, anonymously, from some of Hubbard's buddies.
As one of Ali Baba's supposed sayings had it, "Every
man is a damn fool for at least five minutes every day. Wisdom
consists in not exceeding the limit." When he inherited
his copy of Ali Baba of East Aurora, Boice learned that Anson
Blackman was his great-great uncle. That signed book, and
the realization that he descended from Roycroft family, set
the course of Boice Lydell's life: at the age of 14 he vowed
to create the ultimate Roycroft collection.
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Antique-Worthy
Home
When Boice
was 15 he started dealing in antiques. He set up shop in Ashville,
a small town near Lake Chautauqua in the southwestern tip
of New York State, and began stocking up on merchandise found
at local house sales. Long before the current Arts and Crafts
revival got under way, he was buying Roycroft books for 25
cents apiece, Roycroft hammered metal bookends for 75 cents
and Roycroft candlesticks for, at most, a dollar. Seasoned
dealers mocked his foolishness: "What are you buying
that junk for?" they would ask. "Nobody wants that!"
Boice
in fact bought all sorts of things and soon established himself
as a successful general-line antiques dealer. He narrowed
his focus in about 1990, and still buys and sells Victorian
furniture and also 19th-century American folk art and painted
country furniture; in his own home he lives with antique painted
furniture. He continues to deal in and collect antique Oriental
art objects and he also owns a huge collection of hand-forged,
early American tools. But during his years of general-line
dealing Boice was always on the lookout for Roycroft.
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By the
mid-1980s Boice's Roycroft collection had grown so vast that
it exceeded his capacity to house it. So he began collecting
buildings. He first bought the former Roycroft shipping building,
erected on the Campus in 1918-19, and stored his collection
there. But he hadn't become a collector just to keep things
packed away. So he bought Fournier's bungle-house and created
room settings to display many of the Roycroft art objects
he had amassed over the years. Boice now owns five of the
Campus' 13 National Historic Landmark buildings and he is
working to retrieve Roycroft artifacts original to this site
and get them back into Campus buildings. Recently, on the
day he describes as the second most exciting day of his life,
he found and bought the woodworking machinery -- including
a tenoner, shaper, ripsaw and two planers -- that hummed in
the Roycroft furniture shop during Hubbard's day. He is now
making plans to reinstall this machinery, get it running and
bring in craft workers to put it to use.
Because
Boice has always lived near East Aurora, he has often been
able to buy Roycroft objects from their original owners and
in many cases from the descendants of Roycroft artisans. Being
local has given him an enviable edge, but, more importantly,
it has broadened and deepened his appreciation of all things
Roycroft and honed his keen collector's eye. As he says, few
Arts and Crafts enthusiasts today are able to examine a Roycroft
piece and discern the hand of the person who made it. This
leads to the common assumption that "Roycroft is simply
Roycroft," though Boice quickly counters that easy generalization
with an emphatic "Not really!" It is true that Elbert
Hubbard was the charismatic mastermind and astute consumer-products
marketer who brilliantly exploited the Roycroft brand. But
it was his highly skilled, individual artisans who created
the firm's distinctive handicraft wares.
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Roycroft
Family
In pursuit
of building his collection, Boice has been able to track down
a few of these Roycroft workers, or, more usually, their descendants.
For instance, he bought pieces from the family of Henry Unverdorf,
once the Copper Shop's chief spinner, and the descendants
of the copper worker Henry Wilson sold him Wilson's tools
as well as the pieces Wilson left unfinished. Some things
in Boice's collection came from the family of the designer
and head of the Modeled Leather Department, Frederick Kranz.
In the 1980s Boice interviewed Helen Willson Ess, then the
last surviving Roycroft leather modeler. She explained the
exact steps that she and the other members of her department
followed when they cut and modeled leather and she agreed
to deposit her original leather-working tools in the museum's
collection. (Part of this interview is reproduced on page
102 of Head, Heart and Hand.)
Also in
the 1980s Boice bought original artwork from Dard Hunter II,
whose famous father, the designer/artisan Dard Hunter, nearly
single-handedly shifted the Roycroft visual vocabulary away
from its Gothic-inspired roots and toward the clean-line,
cutting-edge aesthetics of early-20th-century Austrian designers.
Over the years Boice has been able to acquire extremely rare,
often one-of-a-kind examples of Hunter's artistry: a copper-and-leaded-glass
cylindrical wall sconce made for the Roycroft Inn, more than
30 of Hunter's drawings and several examples of his hand-wrought
jewelry. He even owns some pieces of the molded pottery Hunter
made at the Roycroft; fewer than 20 of these highly coveted
vases are known to survive today.
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It was,
however, Boice's contacts with the children of Roycroft metalworker
Walter Jennings that has had the greatest impact on him. This
phase of his collecting began in early 1998 when he bought
a Roycroft bench that Jennings had converted into a worktable
to use at home. His curiosity piqued by this purchase, Boice
began buying vases, porringers and desk sets made by Jennings
and was then able to acquire Jennings' tools at an estate
auction held by the master metalworker's children.
Still
not content, he bought two notebooks filled with photographs
of Jennings' work -- after buying them he discovered that
the photos were shot in M.G. Schneckenburger's studio -- and
then he bought 13 loose-leaf volumes of Jennings' drawings
of his own designs. "Probably my most exciting day as
a collector," says Boice, "was the day I opened
Walter Jennings' notebooks. I had in my hands his drawings
of every piece he ever made and his notes on when he made
them and where he sold them. The information there was a historian's
dream come true. Heaven on earth."
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Boice
confesses that he is passionate about Walter Jennings, and
this passion has pushed him to reassemble Jennings' entire
home workshop: drawings, photography, jewelry and metalwork,
tools, toolbox, wooden molds, the cigar boxes Jennings kept
bits and pieces in, work gloves and, of course, the work table
that sparked his fascination with Jennings in the first place.
His collection includes not just an unparalleled number of
superbly handcrafted Jennings-made vases, but many unique
pieces as well. These include a pair of bookends on which
Jennings, who had not yet begun signing his own work, inscribed
"I made these in 1913."
The collection
also includes an exquisite silver bowl that he made for one
of his daughters and decorated with the words "Isabel
Warren Jennings Her Bowl 1916" delicately hand-embossed
around the rim. On its underside, the bowl is signed "W.J."
and "By Daddy." Boice can authoritatively say, "Walter
Jennings was the best chaser -- detailer -- in the Roycroft
metal shop." By collecting and studying not just Roycroft
products but also searching out and studying primary source
materials such as Jennings' notebooks and workshop, Boice
has almost certainly learned more about the working processes
of Roycroft artisans than anyone alive today. "Collecting
the information," he says, "has become just as important
as collecting the objects."
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Collecting
in Depth
And yet
collecting the objects is probably what Boice does best. The
depth of this collection may be what most sets it apart. Though
the trove of archival materials and ephemera cannot be captured
in a photograph, for instance, it seems almost endless. But
it is the sheer jaw-dropping uniqueness of so many objects
in this collection -- the realization that there are things
here that you'll never see anywhere else -- that makes a visit
to Fournier's former bungle-house such a dazzling experience.
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A few
examples prove this point. Any collector would be thrilled
to have one of the printed bookplates that Dard Hunter designed
for Elbert Hubbard; Boice owns the original pencil drawing
that Hunter did for that bookplate. The Roycroft edition of
Ralph Waldo Emerson's Nature, with its Dard Hunter title page,
would be an equally exciting addition to any Arts and Crafts
collection; Boice has that original pencil drawing, too.
He has
not only a wide-brimmed Stetson that shaded Hubbard's head
when he went out riding on his horse, Garnet, he also has
the Stetson that Hubbard's daughter Miriam wore when she rode
beside her father. Like many collectors, Boice owns modeled
leather bookends, table mats and other leather wares made
and marketed by the Roycrofters; yet he also owns the gorgeous,
one-of-a-kind tooled leather frieze panel made specially for
the office of Hubbard's wife, Alice.
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A Roycroft
Morris chair is another object that many collectors covet;
usually constructed of oak or mahogany those chairs rarely
come onto the market. Boice owns something much rarer: one
of perhaps five bird's-eye maple Roycroft Morris chairs made
solely for the Roycroft Inn (though Hubbard may have had a
few more made for special friends), this one with its original
velour cushions still intact.
There
is another side of Boice Lydell that not many people know
about. He is a passionate expert in martial arts and has a
black belt in karate. Martial arts may seem far removed from
the world of antiques but not so: successful collecting is
hardly ever a contact sport, but like karate it requires intensity,
focus, strength, constant practice, physical and mental agility
and an ever-competitive spirit. "I love collecting,"
Boice says, and no one could doubt him.
Period
images courtesy Boice Lydell
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