THE COLLECTOR 
                To define the collector 
                Is there a typical collector 
                male/female 
                young/old - rich/poor 
                What motives ? 
                selfish/competitive 
                learning/research 
                When did it start ? 
                How did it develop ? 
                What will happen to it ? 
                bequest or sale or destruction 
                Can a corporation collect ? 
                Methods of collection 
                sources 
                rituals 
                the power of the hunt 
                finding versus dealers 
                 
            
            
               
              THE COLLECTION 
            
              
                To define the collection. 
                What is collected and why ? 
                two dimensional 
                three dimensional 
                alive/dead 
                Limits to budgets ? 
                Is it to be complete ? 
                Methods of storage 
                Methods of classification 
                Private or Public 
                The Psychology of Collecting 
                 
                
                 
                 
                Attempts at definition ;
            
            
"To define a collectable is a daunting task - one is tempted 
              to say it is anything people collect. - but as that would also embrace 
              old master paintings and property portfolios, it is far too vague. 
              Let us say that in general, for a subject to become collectable, 
              it usually possesses a tangible timeliness, a design that represents 
              an era. In addition, a collectable is generally affordable ; it 
              is sufficiently common for a collection to be attainable yet elusive 
              enough for the thrill of the hunt...." Pearce, op cit p.7 
            
"What makes men collect modern art ? Acquisitiveness? Financial 
              speculation ? Social or cultural prestige ? Competition with other 
              collectors ? The pleasure of arousing envy ? The excitement of feeling 
              in the avant-garde? The satisfaction of annoying one's conservative 
              friends ? The noblesse oblige or richesse oblige to serve as a patron 
              of the arts for the beenfit of artists and the community ? Perhaps 
              even the love of art ?" Alfred H.Barr, Sale Catalogue, The 
              Collection of Twentieth Century Paintings and Sculpture Formed by 
              the late G.David Thompson of Pittsburgh, Parke-Bernet Galleries, 
              New York, 1966 
            
  What do we learn from collectors and collecting ? ; "To live 
              over other people's lives is nothing unless we live over their perceptions, 
              live over the growth , the change, the varying intensity of the 
              same - since it was by these things they themselves lived. " Henry
              James, William Wetmore Story and his Friends 1903, quoted in Haskell
              beneath. 
            
  The collector greets the objects ; "When I started to collect 
              avant-garde Russian art I found that no-one knew when it began or 
              ended or even which artists were really members of the movement...Gradually 
              as I began to understand my material I realised what I considered 
              essential for my collection. In addition to the ten or twelve names 
              suggested by others, I soon had forty five or more. And it is now 
              clear that by widening my scope, I have discovered for my purposes 
              larger purposes and meanings in the avant garde as a whole. ...There 
              is a special relationship between a collector and his collection. 
              The collection - at least for me - is an organism. I have often 
              felt the impulse to go to one of my paintings and caress it, give 
              it a smile, or somewhat like a Chukchi tribesman exhale smoke upon 
              it as a sign of love..." George Costakis, op.cit. 
            
  The habit starts ; "I had the collecting fever ever since I 
              was a child. When I was at Eton, we weren't allowed money - the 
              currency was cigarette cards - and when I left school, I had more 
              cards than all the other students together.." Peter Opie in
              Cott, op.cit p.286. 
               
              Below Charles Sawyer of the California Barbed Wire Collectors .
"I grew up in a poor neighbourhood. As kids we used baseball 
              cards like money. If someone had something you wanted, you'd offer 
              him baseball cards for it. I was lucky because my father owned a 
              candy store. ..." Irving Lerner, collector quoted in Steve
              Clark, The Complete Book of Baseball Cards ,Grosset 
              and Dunlap, New York 1977.
             
" I passed too through a Meccano period, adding box to box 
              each Chrsitmas, But I had little skill as an engineer....I collected 
              cigarette cards too and for a very brief period because somebody 
              gave me a special item for them, postmarks but these I found rather 
              abstract and there was no Stanley Gibbons catalogue to indicate 
              whether Penang was more valuable than Angmering. Crests and postcards 
              too had their appropriate albums...." Graham Greene, A 
              Sort of Life , Penguin 1979 , pp37-8. 
            
"...if I was to save the wrappers, tins and bottles from every 
              product I bought, collectively they would represent a social history 
              of life in Britain." Robert Opie, Sweet Memories, Pavilion 
              London 1988 
            
  Showing the collection; "The owner of a collection who, no 
              matter how willingly he shows it, must yet show it more often than 
              he would like, cannot help becoming a little malicious, be he never 
              so mild and good-hearted. He sees total strangers making snap judgments 
              on objects familiar to him. ... Since this collection came into 
              my possession, I have met only one man who did me the honour of 
              believing that I know how to judge the worth of my own things. He 
              said to me ; I do not have much time; let me see the best, the most 
              remarkable and rarest object in each section. I thanked him and 
              said that he was the first to make such a request; and I trust he 
              did not regret his confidence in me; at least he seemed to go away 
              fully satisfied." Gage op cit p.44. 
            
  To store or to show ? "There may be two fundamental approaches 
              to the collecting of drawings, the first a print lover's and bibliophile's 
              approach in which drawings are kept in mats and boxes, systematically 
              arranged and and often concentrating on a single country or school. 
              The second approach devolves rather from a taste for paintings. 
              I am I think this second type - a painting collector manque if you 
              wish." Ian Woodner exhib catalogue,op.cit. 
              Public or Private ; [England] has no centralised dominant collection
              despite all the acquisitions made by its private citizens. who
              have naturally retained them for their private enjoyment. What
              is the result ? The riches are scattered through every country
              house; you have to travel in every county over hundreds of miles
              to see these fragmented collections..." Quatremere de Quincy, 1796, quoted 
              in Gervase Jackson-Stops op.cit p. 50, in F.Haskell, "The British 
              as Collectors". 
            
  The frustration of failure; "David Salle brought out a painting 
              entitled Dusting Powder and Elliott remembers shouting "Oh 
              Oh I want it". Castelli however had the painting in mind for 
              someone else. Elliott recalls saying Leo I don't want any other 
              painting in the studio. He also recalls having chest pains. Four 
              days later Elliott checked into a Chicago hospital for quadruple 
              by pass surgery. `As they wheeled me into the operating room I kept 
              thinking I'll miss that painting, I'll miss that painting.'..." the
              collector Gerald Elliott, in Benezra op.cit. 
            
  The satisfaction of anticipation "One day, years ago, I asked 
              him (the collector G.David Thompson] if he liked the work of Alberto 
              Burri, at that time rather little known even in Rome. His reply 
              was characteristic. He disappeared into a closet and emerged with 
              his arms full of painted-and-sewn burlap compositions. Twice more 
              he repeated this performance until there were a dozen or more works 
              by Burri standing around the walls." Alfred H.Barr, Sale Catalogue,
              as quoted above. 
               
               
              Finding specimens ; "I began collecting labels about 16 years 
              ago. In my search for the unusual used and vintage clothing, I would 
              find a piece that was in some way distinctive but badly damaged. 
              At that point I'd take the label since it was the only salvageable 
              part of the garment." Thomas W.Oatman, op.cit 
"I really don't know how I started to collect children's books. 
              It must have been twenty odd years ago that I thought it would be 
              fun to give my husband an illustrated book about Davy Crockett or 
              Daniel Boone. He was already engrossed in his hobby - which was 
              and is making reproduction Kentucky flintlock rifles. In some kind 
              of a vague way I must have been looking for an interest that would 
              keep me as busy and fascinated as he was...." Betsy Beinicke
              Shirley, from her introduction to exhib.catal Read me a 
              Story - Show me a Book, Yale 1991. 
            
" I have hunted butterflies in various climes and disguises; 
              as a pretty boy in knickerbockers and sailor cap; as a lanky cosmopolitan
 expatriate in flannel bags and beret; as a fat hatless old man in 
              shorts.... Few things indeed have I known in the way of emotion
 or appetite, ambition or achievement, that could surpass in richness 
              and strength the excitement of entomological exploration. ..." Vladimir
              Nabokov, Speak Memory, Weidenfeld and Nicholson
              London 1967. 
            
  Taking risks ; "..it's more fun to be where you're floating 
              outside your knowledge, where only your stomach tells you, or your 
              groin, that a photograph is good." Sam Wagstaff, collector,
              in Pultz, op.cit 
              Finding a collection whole ; " The story of the Byrom collection 
              begins with the purchase of a house in Salford in August 1965... 
              In January 1969 when central heating was being installed, plumbers 
              made two unexpected discoveries. The chimney flues at the back were 
              found to be vast cavities... and under floorboards at the back of 
              the house one workman discovered a chamber with a flight of stone 
              steps disappearing into a brick wall.. Researches led me to the 
            Byrom collection of geometrical drawings.." Hancox op cit. 
            
  The naturalist Charles Waterton went to Germany to buy, Maratti's 
              portrait of Saint Catherine. "Waterton duly met the old man 
              and spent the whole day looking at his paintings. He learned to 
              his surprise that they were being offered for sale and decided to 
              buy the lot; 156 old masters. ... Dozens of canvasses joined the 
              museum of natural history which was slowly spreading through the 
              downstairs entrance hall and up the wide staircase." in Julia
              Blackburn's Charles Waterton, Century London 1989 
              .
            
  Inherited impulses to collect ; "They have what is probably 
              the greatest private collection of everything related to children
  and childhood - toys, dolls, rocking horses, marbles, children's medicines,
  clothes pegs, rattles, prams etc... The Opie's son Robert is probably the most
  imp[ortant collector of packaging in the world..Their other son James is one
  of the leading collectors of Britain's lead soldiers." 
            
  Specialities " Stuart Schneider and Roberta Etter are Halley's 
              Comet consultants based in Teaneck, New Jersey. They have published 
              articles on collectibles as well as a book on early fountain pens. 
              Another on antique flashlights is in the works. Schneider is a practising 
              attorney and Ms Etter the proprietor of a company that supplied 
              antique photographic items to collectors. Together they have formed 
              one of the largest collections of Halley's Comet memorabilia in 
            the world." Publishers puff on Etter and Schneider op.cit. 
            
  The search "Toy collecting is progressive - addictive. I was 
              overtaken by the mania. I became obsessed - a toy junkie, always 
              on some crazy search for the next toy fix. The greatest excitement 
              was in the search - running to flea markets, yard sales, tag sales 
              - checking out every antique shop and junk store - lingering long 
              hours at auctions only to see the toy go for an impossible price 
              - tracking down tips that might lead to a great find, sometimes, 
            maybe.... And now there's no end to it...." Ken Botto op.cit. 
            
  Of Thomas Nuttall, plant collector, " He worked away collecting 
              - not just plants, but rocks, fossils, many beetles and small animals, 
              including a new species of bat. He shipped them off by river boat, 
              but an old trouble that had long plagued American naturalists now 
              caught up with him. Indians rummaged through his boxes and drank 
              off the alcohol in which he preserved specimens " from J.Kastner, A Species of Eternity, Dutton New York 1969. 
            
"If you looked carefully you would see 7 women's heads on the 
              picture. When I had almost finished, I knew that there was lacking 
              something. I went into the Eilenriede, the town forest of Hanover, 
              and found there half an engine of a child's train. I knew at once, 
              that belonged on the picture and put it at the right spot. But where 
              was the other half engine ? I got quite uncomfortable, because I 
              could not finish the picture without having the other half. I went 
              in the opposite direction of the Eilenriede into the Masch, not 
              a forest, but meadows. The first thing I saw was the second part 
              , the opposite side of the same children's engine. Of course I don't 
              know what was the reason that I at all needed the ruins of the children's 
              toy, but there is a reason, and this reason made the composition 
              of spiritual values correspondent to the composition in colours 
              and to the composition in lines and black and white. You must feel 
              then that the picture is ready and is a construction for distinguished 
              ladies, eminent ladies. "Kurt Schwitters, from John Elderfield, Schwitters,
              Thames & Hudson 1987 
            
  Cataloguing the collection "And now for a short while I was 
              away from the crowd [around the deposed President's Palace] with 
              just one other person, a shy and absolutely thunderstruck Filipino. 
              We had found our way, we realised into the Marcoses' private rooms. 
              There was a library and my companion gazed in wonder at the leather 
              bound volumes while I admired the collection of art books all carefully 
              catalogued and with numbers on their spines. This was the reference 
              library for Imelda's worldwide collection of treasures. She must 
              have thumbed through them thinking : I'd like one of them, or I've 
              got a couple of them in New York, or That's in our London house." James
              Fenton, reported in John Carey (ed), The Faber Book 
              of Reportage, Faber London 1987 p 685. And then there's 
              always her shoes....... 
            
  Influencing others ; "When I started to collect postcards, 
              gas stations, eateries, tourist cabins and motels caught my eye 
              most quickly. I felt a direct relationship and connection with these 
              subjects . They fed off one another. I collected other images that 
              aroused my heart and eyeballs, but there was a reason for the roadside 
              material. On an unconscious level I perceived it was because as 
              a child I didn't have the opportunity to travel by auto and to experience 
              road culture...Allen Wright told me I created a fad with the gas, 
              food and lodging category. He said, People are coming up to me at 
              post card meets and asking for dinners and motels and gas stations... 
              They never used to do that. You really did something with your paintings 
              and your book." John Baeder, op.cit. 
               
"Ray Rawlings began to collect signatures, autograph letters 
              and manuscripts in 1930. Over the years he amassed some 30,000 items, 
              thus forming a collection that was widely recognised as the largest 
              of its type in private hands. Dubbed `the unofficial autographer 
              Royal" by one journalist, he did much to popularise the collecting
              of autograph material..." Sale Catalogue, 
              Sotheby's, June 1980 
            
              Hierarchy and Collecting 
             
            "I went to Oxford to see Dr John Johnson's Sanctuary of Printing 
              at the Oxford University Press. It is a unique collection of print, 
              still being sorted, mounted and documented. The printed ephemera 
              ranges from fine early proclamations to penny tickets for lavatory 
              and cloakroom. As the Doctor said, `Nothing is too humble'. This 
              part of the collection was appropriately called Jobbing in the Service 
              of the Community. Dr.Johnson started his collection in 1925 when 
              he became Printer to the University...." John Lewis ,Printed 
              Ephemera ,Cowell's Ipswich 1962. 
            
              The Collector's Shop ; 
             
            "For over 25 years a sanctuary and a retreat of infinite pleasures, 
              through many fluctuating phases of my life... The strong sense of 
              the past through these experiences, enhanced by the physical atmosphere 
              of the shop - autographed photos and drawings on the walls, the 
              statue of Rachel, bric a brac, the stove, the back room (allowed 
              in there once or twice)... To the end it remained a `hole in the 
              wall' purposely and many were the well known authors, writers, theatrical 
              people etc. who frequented it for its quiet charm... While preserving 
              the amateur standing of the shop its dealer was actually tops in 
              the first edition field. " Joseph Cornell of  The Sign 
              of the Sparrow, a collectors' shop at 42 Lexington Avenue, 
              New York, quoted in K.McShine, Joseph Cornell , exhib.catal., MOMA 
              NY 1990. 
            
  Rules ; Of the American collector Paul Mellon, "He rightly 
              looks at works of art in terms of the pleasure they give him and 
              his point of view accommodates whimsical proscriptions; neither 
              he nor Mrs.Mellon care for windmills and would not allow more than 
              three cows in pictures.Who can blame them ?" Denys Sutton,
              in Wilmerding op.cit 
              The world's biggest collection of Avon Beauty Products. Display,
              where and how ;"Sir Andrew Fountaine "decided to give 
              up his London house and move his collections to his country seat 
              of Narford in Norfolk. As well as pictures he owned " a large 
              number of coins and medals, and he also assembled many splendid 
              pieces of Italian majolica which, in the words of a scornful contemporary, 
              were' set out upon shelves like a shop'...." Haskell, in Jackson-Stops,
              op.cit p.51. 
            
"Ogden collected everything. Books filled his room to overflowing 
              - one visitor counted eighty-two family Bibles - and were arranged 
              if at all according to bizarre principles, such as the initial letters 
              of the titles spelling out a word or phrase, the significance of 
              which was often open to question. He also had quantities of musical 
              boxes, shoes (forty-two pairs by one count) clocks and mechanical 
              toys like the bird that sang only if asked to in basic English." from
              Catherine Caulfield, The Emperor of The United States 
              of America and other magnificent British Eccentrics , Corgi 
              London 1981 
            
              Spasmodic collectors ;
             "Six months later they had become archaeologists, and their 
              house looked like a museum. An old wooden beam stood in the vestibule. 
              Geological specimens cluttered up the staircase, and an enormous 
              chain stretched along the whole length of the corridor..... Just 
              inside one bumped into a stone trough (a Gallo-Roman sarcophagus), 
              then a display of ironmongery caught the eye. Against the opposite 
              wall a warming pan rose above two firedogs and a hearthplate representing 
              a monk fondling a shepherdess. On shelves all around stood torches, 
              locks, bolts screws. Shards of red tiles hid the floor. On a table 
              in the middle were exhibited the rarest curiosities: the frame of 
              a bonnet from Caux, two clay urns, some medals, a phial of opaline 
              glass. Over the back of a tapestry chair lay a triangle of lace. 
              A bit of chain mail adorned the partition to the right and below 
              it a halberd, a unique piece, was held horizontally on spikes." Flaubert, Bouvard et Pecuchet ,op.cit., p.103.
             
  The Eighteenth Century Cabinet of Curiosities; Some of the contents 
              of Alexander Pope's Grotto," Several pieces of Crystal with 
              a brown Incrustation and a Mixture of Mundic from the Hartz mines 
              in Germany; a fine piece of Gold Ore from the Peruvian mines; Silver 
              ore from the Mines of Mexico; several pieces of silver ore from 
              Old Spain; some large pieces of gold clift from Mr.Cambridge in 
              Gloucestershire; Lead Ore, Copper Ore, white Spar, petrified wood, 
              Brazil pebbles, Egyptian pebbles and Bloodstones...." from
              Francis Spufford,op.cit p.123, section Riches (Collections, Commodities
              and Vanities); see G.Grigson, The Romantics , pp. 
              21-2, Don Saltero's Coffee House of Rarities. 
            
  A Silly Collection " A Collection of seven miniature volumes 
              containing drawings of six beetles, nutcrackers, clay and briar 
              pipes, horse brasses, scissors and candle snuffers, American wall 
              and shelf clocks and ancient musical instruments. The first drawn 
              by Marie Angel and the remainder by Pamela Fowler. Bound and chained 
              to a miniature wooden lectern which is encased in a cylinder, leather 
              covered and gold tooled. Executed at Froxfield by Roger Powell and 
              Peter G.Waters in 1959." from Ash and Lake, Bizarre 
              Books, Macmillan London 1985, quoting the British Museum 
              catalogue entry. 
            
  The Royal Library; " At the King's death [George III] the library 
              contained about 65,000 books and 450 manuscripts. It comprised
  everything  that an eighteenth century scholar could desire. Some idea of its
   scope can be gathered from the editions of the Bible it contains. 
              There are at least two hundred, including a Polyglot Bible and
  a  Gutenberg printing; versions in Arabaic, Chaldaic, Greek, Hebrew, 
              Latin and Syriac; and the English versions from Coverdale and Tyndale.
   There are translations in every European language, including Finnish, 
              Hungarian, Russian and Welsh as well as the commoner languages.
   There is even a version in the language of the North American Indians." John
              Brooke, King GeorgeIII, Constable London 1985,
              pp 304-5. 
            
  The Twentieth Century Archive Movement ; "Every County or Shire 
              Hall contained a Muniment Room for housing the records of the Court 
              of County Sessions, the central administrative records of the county 
              , in the care of the Clerk of the Peace. At a time when the breakup 
              of the large country estate was often placing such collections under 
              the threat of dispersal or loss, it seemed a natural progression 
              to extend that care to other archives of historical significance 
              to the area.. Bedfordshire County Council set a precedent in the 
              years before the First World War which was quickly followed after 
              the War by others - Hertfordshire, Middlesex, Surrey, and so on 
              with ever increasing momentum. So it was that from this most modest 
              enough inspiration, by the enthusiasm of local pioneer archivists 
              that the county record offoce movement grew." ex.cat The Common
              Chronicle. 
"It was feared that if no measures were taken, the surviving 
              documentation of Freud's life would be dispersed all over the world 
              and most of it would be lost to future research. The need for a 
              Sigmund Freud archives was thus recognised. Subsequently the Library 
              of Congress agreed to accept as a donation, all documents collected 
              by the Archives, and to make them accessible to scholars after prearranged 
              dates, to be determined by the Archives." from Janet Malcolm,
              op.cit. 
            
  The End of the Collection ; "My wish is that my drawings, my 
              Prints, my Curiosities, my Books - in a word, these things of art 
              which have been the joy of my life - shall not be consigned to the 
              cold tomb of a museum and subjected to the stupid glance of the 
              careless passerby; but I require that they shall all be dispersed 
              under the hammer of the Auctioneer, so that the pleasure which the 
              acquiring of each one of them has given me shall be given again, 
              in each case, to some inheritor of my own tastes." From the
              will of Edmond de Goncourt, quoted on the sale catalogue of the
              Library of John Quinn, see Reid op.cit. 
            
"During the past week the British public has been admitted 
              to a spectacle of painful interest and gravely historical import. 
              One of the most splendid abodes of our almost regal aristocracy 
              has thrown open its portals to an endless succession of visitors, 
              who from morning to night have flowed in an uninterrupted stream 
              from room to room and floor to floor - not to enjoy the hospitality 
              of the Lord or to congratulate him on his countless treasures of 
              art, but to see an ancient family ruined , their palace marked for 
              destruction, and its contents scattered to the four winds of Heaven." The
              Times in 1848 in the sale of Stowe and its contents, quoted in
              Jackson-Stops, op.cit.pp.57/8 
            
" The ring of living beauty drawn about our shores was a very 
              thin and fragile one. It had existed all those centuries solely
in consequence of the indifference, the blissful ignorance of man. These rock
basins, fringed by corallines, filled with still water almost as pellucid as
the upper air itself , thronged with beautiful sensitive forms of life - they
exist no longer; they are all profaned and emptied, and vulgarised. An army of
`collectors' has passed over them and ravaged every corner of them. The fairy
paradise has been violated, the exquisite product of centuries of natural selection
has been crushed under the rough paw of well meaning idle-minded curiosity. That
my father, himself so reverent , so conservative, had by the popularity of his
books acquired the direct responsibility for a calamity that he had never anticipated
became clear enough to himself before many years had passed, and cost him great
chagrin.' Edmund Gosse, Father and Son ,published 1907, writing 
              about his childhood in 1857. 
            
"All the Renaissance was there [John Dee's Library]. Before 
              he left for France he made a catalogue of his library which is dated 
              September 6th 1583. Shortly after he left an angry crowd broke into 
              his house at Mortlake, smashed his scientific instruments and damaged 
              the library." [Dee] estimated the value at £2,000 and 
              said that that it took him about forty years to collect them "from 
              divers places beyond the seas and some by my great search and labour 
              here in England." from Frances Yates, The Theatre of 
              the World, RKP London 1987 
            
  A final collection. Of the Arts Bunker at Manod Quarry, "[The 
              Home Secretary] described two concrete bunkers inside caverns,
  steel  doors barring access, and the presence of a maintenance team on 
              the site....[Lord Jenkins asked in the Lords] Which works of art
   are to be selected for location in the Arts Bunker in the event 
              of nuclear war.. and I ask whether provision is being made for
  any  living artists or Arts Council officials....{The Earl of Avon, Government
   spokesman in the Lords answered that] it would not be in the public 
              interest to disclose details of security arrangements..." debate
              12.11.81, from Duncan Campbell, War Plan UK  Paladin
              London 1983