Considering his military background, it is no surprise Peter Harvell prefers collecting art made from artillery shells and bayonets to paintings of pastel pansies or Impressionist haystacks.
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“This was handed down to me from my grandfather,” wrote Jed Vier to the column about an item he was hoping to bring in for appraisal. “He was a French cavalryman in World War I. He spent three years ...
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Nowhere is this more true than in the kind of war objects called trench art, a term bequeathed by World War I but in fact a concept rather than a name applied solely to items belonging to a particular ...
Melinda Graefe does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
We want to hear about what you collect and why. Email Cindy Hval at dchval@juno.com or call Voices editor Kimberly Lusk at (509) 459-5457. Elizabeth Russell’s family has a long history of military ...
HOW IT STARTED Soldiers transformed battlefield objects into objets d’art; thanks to the Internet, they’re being traded JUDGMENT CALL It’s beautiful, bizarre, and can be worth a bomb Californian Jane ...
Nowhere is this more true than in the kind of war objects called trench art, a term bequeathed by World War I but in fact a concept rather than a name applied solely to items belonging to a particular ...