Great Road Style:
The Decorative Arts Legacy of Southwest Virginia and Northeast
Tennessee
|
| Betsy K. White |
| 224 pages, 9 x 10 |
| 197 color illustrations |
| 1 map |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2352-2 $59.95 |
 |
Linked historically, culturally, and geographically, the counties
that make up southwestern Virginia and northeastern Tennessee
are also connected by a shared decorative arts tradition. “Great
Road Style,” so called because of the region’s historical
importance as a stage route connecting the eastern seaboard with
the western frontier, is evidenced in distinctive forms of furniture,
ceramics, textiles, and metalwork. Yet until now, the area’s
rugged geography—and the isolation of its communities—has
prevented systematic documentation of its decorative artifacts.
With Great Road Style: The Decorative Arts Legacy of Southwest
Virginia and Northeast Tennessee, Betsy White takes readers
on an engaging tour of an underexplored region’s striking
material culture, and in doing so fosters a new appreciation of
its role in the development of American decorative arts.
The first substantive effort to conduct primary research in a
largely undocumented territory, the survey upon which this book
is based involved thousands of hours’ worth of fieldwork
conducted across two states in an attempt to offer the most detailed
accounting possible of handmade objects produced along the Great
Road before 1940. The eventual product of that exhaustive research
was an archive of photographs, slides, and data sheets on more
than two thousand objects representing diverse sectors of the
survey area. In organizing and providing a narrative for this
treasure trove of material, White and her research team have defined
and delineated for the first time what constitutes Great Road
Style.
Lavishly illustrated with compelling examples, and including
a full listing of the artisans who have been identified to date,
Great Road Style is a beautiful and historically informative
catalog showcasing the diverse arts and crafts of this region.
It will be a valuable resource for collectors, museum curators,
antique dealers, and indeed anyone interested in southern culture
or the decorative arts.
Publication was generously supported through a grant from
Furthermore: a program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund
Betsy White is Executive Director of the William
King Regional Arts Center in Abingdon, VA.