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Larry Weinberg
Larry Weinberg is a graduate of Amherst College and an alumnus of the Hagley Program in the History of Technology, University of Delaware. He has studied and worked at numerous museums, including Historic Deerfield, Strawbery Banke, and the Brooklyn Museum. In 1994, he co-founded the Lin-Weinberg Gallery, which became one of New York City's premiere showcases of vintage modernist furnishings. Lin-Weinberg participated annually in Sanford Smith’s Modernism show, and it hosted a number of design exhibitions, notably the blockbuster 1997 show entitled “Edward Wormley: The Other Face of Modernism.” More recently, he worked with the Museum of the City of New York to mount an exhibit of his collection of early post-war American furnishings.
In April, Larry opened a showroom in the New York Design Center, from which he also writes. View his current inventory of vintage design at weinbergmodern.com.
Cindy's SalonLink This | Email This | Comments (7) DIFFA's Dining by Design 2011Butterflies are free; tickets to the sold-out opening cocktail party for DIFFA's annual Dining By Design are not. Nor should they be, given that the proceeds benefit one of the nation's largest AIDS charities, providing funds for direct care for people living with AIDS/HIV, and preventive education. DIFFA stands for Design Industries Foundation Fighting AIDS, and it brings together members of the... MoreLink This | Email This | Comments (6) Pick Six: The Armory Show 2011The New York Times presented an overall favorable review of last week's Armory Show, pointing out that in lieu of the top dealers who have abandoned the show for more intimate and trendy venues, the cavernous pier 94 was filled with fresh curatorial blood, particularly from Latin America. This imparted a new energy lacking in recent years. From what I saw, I suppose this is the case, and I had a b... MoreLink This | Email This | Comments (4) It Takes a VillageThe 32nd annual Greenwich Village Antiquarian Book Fair, a benefit for P.S. 3, was held this past weekend. For the second straight year, I was a vendor. But for the heat, which was turned full on, and could have been mitigated by opening a window, the fair was fun to do, and reasonably successful. I sold a variety of vintage architecture and design books, and a few of my first edition mystery nov... MoreLink This | Email This | Comments (8) 1stdibs: Brick and MortarThe big news in the New York design world this week is the opening of the 1stdibs pavilion at the New York Design Center. As a 1stdibs dealer and a showroom owner at the NYDC-with my own vignette on the new floor--I've been in a unique position to witness the process from conception through negotiation to fruition. Last night's opening event drew somewhere upwards of 2,000 people, possibly the... MoreLink This | Email This | Comments (5) Czech ModernMany mid-century surveys of decorative and industrial arts have an agenda of celebrating and promoting the work of a nation, region, or city. So it is refreshing to come across one that finds industrial production wanting, and posits room for improvement. And you have to like a picture book that begins with a chapter entitled "Craftsmanship and Cybernetics." "Modern Design in the Ho... More |
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