laundromat
Well-known member
Way back in 1992,I was aproached by a woman named Ellen Lupton who was a curator at New York's Cooper Hewitt Museum of Design.She was getting together objects for a neat show there and wanted to get as many major and small appliances as she could to put it all together. Ellen had read about my fascination as well as the "museum" I had in B'more in the New York Times and People Magazine. When she arived,we had all weekend to go searching. I took her around and showed her all I had then took her to John LeFever's where there were even more appliances and Tom Stiyer also made a few contributions to show off. Well,there was a book written by Ellen about the show and what it was all about.It's illustrated and talks about juxtaposing different images to sell the products and how women had their own image to fullfill regarding the many tasks that appliances were made for to help them overcome the drudgery of being the housekeeper. I found it on line and bought it. I myself had gone to see the show and was given my own copy of the same book but lost it in a major fire that distroyed the house and everything I had in it.My cat,kenmore, had jumped onto the GE Versatronic double oven range I had in pink and pressed the front left burner control button setting the range on fire and destroying the entire house.I had gone to the bank to make a deposit and came home to see the house in ruins as the firemen were giving 4 of my cats oxygen.So,I was glad to see the book available and got it today.Anyone here interested in the history of appliance advertisement as well as the design and artists who developed them should get a copy of it.Grat illustrations and photos of some real nice products.Aloha!