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Extending frames
It
is well known among artists and dealers that a frame gives a
work of art authority - never show a prospective client a picture
without a frame!
In the 18th and 19th centuries
when canvases were generally painted to standard sizes there
would usually have been a frame of the right size to hand to
show a picture at short notice. In the 20th century the collapse
of the old system of standard sizes encouraged the idea of the
extending or adjustable frame.
A pair of Musy Extending Frames
(fig. 1) were lent to the exhibition, The Art of the Picture
Frame, at the National Portrait Gallery in 1996. Made of
wood, papier-mâché and pressed card by R. Musy of
Lyons in France, these frames were advertised in The Artist
in March 1934 (fig. 2) by Lechertier Barbe Ltd as enabling 'an
artist to show his pictures completely framed to a prospective
client. They are instantly adjustable to accommodate pictures
of various proportions'. This adjustment was made by sliding
the hollow corners over the side sections. The frames came in
three sizes: 9 1/2 x 13 3/4 ins extending to 13 1/4 x 20 ins;
13 1/2 x 18 1/2 ins extending to 19 1/4 x 26 1/4 ins, and 20
x 25 3/4 ins extending to 29 x 36 1/2 ins. Prizes ranged from
£1.10s 6d to £4.8s according to the size and pattern
chosen.
The Musy Extending Frame was
not the only flexible frame on the market. Two other examples
are mentioned here, one dating to 1857, the other to exactly
a century later. In June 1857, Harriot Gouldsmith approached
the artist, John Linnell, asking for his endorsement for a frame
which was advertised as 'The Artist's New Constructed Frame,
for containing more than one work of art,... opening with ease
at the back, and which, with elastic strings, will contain several
Works of Arts, to be changed without trouble' (Kathryn Moore
Heleniak, 'Money and marketing problems: The plight of Harriot
Gouldsmith (1786-1863), a professional female landscape painter',
British Art Journal, vol. 6, no. 3, 2005, p.32.)
Quite a different system, noted
in The Art Bulletin of the Fine Art Trade Guild in Spring
1957 as 'An Adjustable Frame at last', was marketed by an American
company, the Multi-Frame Company of Springfield, New Jersey,
and was described as a 'fantastic boon to artists and anyone
who has to exhibit pictures of varying size'. The Multi-Frame
Company's system was quite different to Musy's: 'The frame is
handsomely finished, carved in a simple manner and has a 3_ inch
section. It consists of small one-inch pieces which join together
on the principle of a child's constructional toy. It can thus
be adjusted in one-inch steps to any size which is a full inch
measurement between 14 x 18 ins and 38 x 42 ins'. The price of
this 'wonder frame' was $39.50.
Do any examples of the Multi-Frame
Company frame survive? Were there other makes on the market?
How far were such frames used in practice by artists and dealers?
Jacob Simon
26 August 2006
jsimon@npg.org.uk
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