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VRA 2003 Annual Conference, April 7-13, Houston
http://vraweb.org/2003conference

PRE-REGISTRATION DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 21, 2003

Tour 3
House and Gardens I: Bayou Bend

Registration Fee: $30
Limit: 40 participants

Bayou Bend is one of the country's leading museums of American
decorative and fine arts. Founded by the renowned collector and
philanthropist Miss Ima Hogg (1882-1975), the collection is displayed
in her former residence, Bayou Bend. Twenty-eight room
settings-elegant parlors, a fashionable dining room, a grand
reception hall, and stylish bedrooms-chronicle the evolution of style
in America from 1620 to 1870. The collection of Americana numbers
more than 5,000 objects, including furniture, paintings, works on
paper, silver, ceramics, glass, and textiles. The exceptional
furniture of John Townsend and John Henry Belter, outstanding
paintings by John Singleton Copley and Charles Willson Peale, and
beautiful pieces of silver by Paul Revere and John Coney all
illustrate the inspiring artistry of early America. Fourteen acres of
formal and woodland gardens encircle Bayou Bend. Named for the bayou
that winds around the property,the elegant pink stucco home was built
in 1927-28 by the renowned Houston architect John F. Staub.Bayou Bend
is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and certified
as a Texas Historical Landmark.

Tour 4
House and Gardens II: Rienzi

Registration Fee: $30
Limit: 40 participants

Rienzi, the Southwest's most important collection of European
decorative arts, opened in April 1999.Houston philanthropists and
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston patrons Harris Masterson III and his
wife,Carroll Sterling Masterson, gave their home, called Rienzi, to
the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston along with their exquisite
collection of decorative arts. An accomplished collector, Mr.
Masterson was especially drawn to British painting and decorative
arts, which he began to acquire while in England during World War II.
The ballroom, the grandest room of the house, is an elegant setting
for mid-18th-century English furniture, small gold objects by
American jeweler David Webb, and a dazzling collection of Worcester
porcelain. The centerpiece of the picture hall is an early
19th-century white marble sculpture of the Roman goddess Venus,
attributed to Giovanni Pisani and Brothers. Other highlights include
Saint Joseph and the Christ Child (1638-40) by Guido Reni and a
sumptuous portrait of Lady Blount (1760s) by George Romney. John F.
Staub, the architect of Bayou Bend, designed Rienzi in 1952. A
one-story villa, Rienzi features a symmetrical facade, balustrade,
and a parapet and overlooks a dramatic pool and more than four acres
of gardens designed by the noted Texas landscape architect Ralph
Ellis Gunn.