Antique Auction Forum Podcast Por Martin Willis arte de portada

Antique Auction Forum

Antique Auction Forum

De: Martin Willis
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Bringing you audio podcast interviews focusing on the full range of collecting antiques, art, decorative art as well as auctions and the history of it all. We conduct interviews with Auctioneers, Artists, Antique Dealers, Art Dealers, Appraisers, Experts & Specialists, Historians, Curators, Avid Collectors, Show Promoters and more. We hope to provide information touching on all segments of the industry.Copyright © antiqueauctionforum.com 2024 Arte
Episodios
  • 204. Brown Furniture Isn’t Dead: A Boston Masterpiece Sets a New Benchmark
    Jan 3 2026

    A Boston mahogany linen press has just shattered expectations, soaring to a price level rarely seen in today’s market for American brown furniture. In this episode, Martin breaks down the remarkable sale at John McInnis Auctioneers in Amesbury, where competitive bidding pushed this exceptional piece into record territory. Joining the conversation is Martin’s good friend—and the underbidder on the piece—who offers a rare behind-the-scenes perspective on what made this linen press so important, why serious collectors recognized its significance, and how quality, provenance, and condition can still ignite intense demand. Together, they explore what this sale signals for the future of Boston furniture and whether reports of “brown furniture’s death” have been greatly exaggerated. YOUTUBE VIDEO

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    13 m
  • 203. Linda Zimmermann on Civil War Soldier Albion Brooks
    Dec 5 2025

    Martin sits down with author and historian Linda Zimmermann to explore her powerful new book, A Civil War Soldier and Me—the true story of Sgt. Albion Brooks of the 8th Connecticut Volunteers.

    Over the course of 30 years, Linda traced Albion’s life through original letters, diaries, and family papers spanning three generations. In this conversation, she and Martin discuss how a single Civil War soldier became a personal obsession, starting with a dusty trunk of documents and leading to thousands of miles of battlefield travel.

    You’ll hear about:

    • Albion’s journey from Maine and Bridgeport, CT to the front lines

    • His experiences at Antietam, Fredericksburg, Suffolk, Burnside’s North Carolina Expedition, Drury’s Bluff, Bermuda Hundred, and Cold Harbor

    • What his letters reveal about courage, humor, faith, and the emotional weight of war

    • Linda’s immersive battlefield visits that retrace where he marched, fought, and died

    • Albion’s final hours at Cold Harbor, as recorded by the chaplain who stood at his bedside

    • Martin also shares a brief anecdote about his own Civil War–era family history, adding another personal layer to the discussion

    If you’re drawn to personal soldier stories, Civil War history, or the emotional power of original letters and diaries, this episode of The Everything Else Show offers a rare, intimate look at one young man whose words still speak across 160 years.

    SHOW NOTES

    Podcaster Martin Willis’ great, great, great grandfather: William James Hipp (b. ~1842, SC; d. 1902, GA) served in Company F, 44th South Carolina, and He lost his arm at the Battle of Frazier’s Farm (Glendale, Virginia) in 1862. Furniture made with one arm below.

    http://antiqueauctionforum.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/albion.mp4
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    1 h y 18 m
  • 202. Why Antiques Matter with Johanna McBrien
    Apr 24 2025

    In this episode, we’re joined by Johanna McBrien who has worked in the field for more than 40 years in the antiques, publishing, and museum fields. From Historic New England to teaching at RISD and Boston Architectural College, Johanna has spent her career digging into the rich stories behind furniture, interiors, and decorative arts. Johanna discusses her love for 18th century Salem, MA furniture (see our related video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eVB-tb1GOfk ), also she talks about what’s hot (and what’s not) in the antiques market, why you should collect what you love instead of chasing value, and how the loss of historical education is putting our connection to antiques at risk. For Johanna, it’s simple: when antiques lose their stories, they lose their soul. Tune in for a thoughtful, engaging chat about why history matters—and why understanding the past is essential to preserving the beauty and relevance of antiques today. Johanna is the currently t executive director of the Dedham Museum and Archive.

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    52 m
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