Design Observer

Archive
Books + Store
Job Board
Comments
About
Contact



Observatory

Resources
Submissions
About
Contact


Departments

Audio
Books
Collections
Dialogues
Eric Baker's Today
Essays
Events
Gallery
Interviews
Miscellaneous
Opinions
Poetry
Primary Sources
Projects
Reviews
Slideshows
Video


Topics

Advertising
Architecture
Art
Books
Branding
Business
Cities / Places
Community
Culture
Design History
Design Practice
Ecology
Economy
Education
Fashion
Film / Video
Food/Agriculture
Global / Local
Graphic Design
Health / Safety
History
Ideas
Illustration
Info Design
Infrastructure
Internet / Blogs
Journalism
Landscape
Literature
Magazines
Media
Museums
Music
Nature
Obituary
Other
Peace
Photography
Poetry
Politics / Policy
Popular Culture
Product Design
Public Art
Religion
Reputations
Science
Social Enterprise
Sports
Sustainability
Technology
Theory/Criticism
Transportation
TV / Radio
Typography
Urbanism


Comments (11) Posted 08.17.09 | PERMALINK | PRINT

Adam Harrison Levy

Significant Objects: Star of David Plate



Significant Objects is a much-discussed experiment conducted by Joshua Glenn and Rob Walker. Their hypothesis: if a talented writer invents a story about a thrift-store object, that object will acquire not merely subjective but objective value — on eBay. How better to test this hypothesis than via a week-long collaboration with Design Observer? The first of five stories is by Adam Harrison Levy; it has also been posted to Significant Objects, and the object itself is for sale here on eBay.

Star of David Plate

Now that Budd Schulberg has died, the story of how I stole this plate from him can finally be told. I was researching a documentary film and I had taken a bus out to his house on Long Island in order to interview him. Schulberg wrote the screenplay for On The Waterfront ("I coulda been a contender"), named names for the House Un-American Activities Committee and, during World War Two, arrested Leni Riefenstahl, the famous film-maker. Not many people know that.

In my capacity working on documentary films, I’ve met a lot of famous people and stolen great stuff from them — Harry Belafonte's precise V5 roller ball pen, Liza Minnelli's ashtray, and a used Kleenex from Debbie Harry's red leather handbag. Some people collect autographs from famous people. I collect things.

These things represent the defining moments of my life. By stealing objects from people whose lives have been important, I celebrate my encounter with them (at least that is what I tell myself in order to explain what otherwise might be termed theft). A Kleenex is a Kleenex (even when smeared with lipstick) but when its Debbie Harry's Kleenex, it becomes truly important, and it gains even more importance when it joins Belafonte's pen and Minnelli's ashtray in my collection. Right?

So it was a crisp fall afternoon and I had taken the Hamptons Jitney out to see Schulberg, who lives near the ocean. He picked me up in his car. He was ninety-two at the time, and his head just about cleared the dashboard. We made it back to his house more or less in one piece.

We sat down in his living room, which was a jumble of really great stuff. On the mantelpiece was his Oscar for On The Waterfront (patina chipped and damaged and way too obvious to steal), a signed photograph of F. Scott Fitzgerald (framed and therefore too clunky), and a number of sea shells (too cute).

I asked Schulberg questions about his life. During World War Two, he had been a member of John Ford's film unit. His mission was to find and edit Nazi film footage to be used during the Nuremberg Trials. It was the first time that film was used as evidence in an International Court of Law. I was impressed. My own work demands that I view video clips on YouTube.

While he was talking, I spied the plate — which contained some loose change and three paperclips — on the credenza. Something about the simplicity and modernity of its shape reminded me of an Eero Saarinen Tulip Table. The artfully incoherent placement of the stars was like a Dada backdrop. The plate was clearly mass produced. It called out to me. When Schulberg doddered off to take a leak, I slipped the plate — change, paperclips, and all — into my bag.



Comments (11)   |   JUMP TO MOST RECENT COMMENT >>

hello world
asdfasd
08.18.09 at 01:35

So a subject invites you into their world and you return the favor by stealing from them? A class act, that.
Matthew Brett
08.18.09 at 08:54

Hi Matthew,

Perhaps you didn't have a chance to read the introduction (in italics preceding the actual story). This is a work of fiction.
adam Harrison Levy
08.18.09 at 09:59

Matthew, you might want to re-read the post, especially the introduction, which tells you that the story is invented!
Rob Henning
08.18.09 at 09:59

haha i love random collectables. i have a jewish plate similar to it
debt reduction
08.18.09 at 03:04

this series should be called "insignificant rubbish"
frederike suzuki
08.19.09 at 10:23

I think this project is completely flawed. The idea that it will have "objective" value is totally lost because some fan of the writer will order it for way more than it is worth.

This is a pointless experiment proving that people will pay money for things that have no real value - either sentimentally or pragmatically.

FAIL.
JN
08.19.09 at 01:42

I would think that referring to the project on the actual bid page would also provide too many variables. That fact that the story is fiction and you state that on the site seems to invalidate the project.

Other than that, the hypothesis is interesting!
Jonathan
08.19.09 at 03:28

A nostalgic kleptomaniac scores a rare Jewish dinner plate? Brilliant! I want one. Only I don't like to steal from the elderly. Bad karma.
ruthlessmind
08.20.09 at 12:01

This is really strange post.
I wonder how much the plate was sold for.
If I understand correctly this is an invented story about the plate?
David Weitzman
09.21.09 at 04:29

Fabulous article. Thank you so much!
Russell
01.12.10 at 09:46


Design Observer encourages comments to be short and to the point; as a general rule, they should not run longer than the original post. Comments should show a courteous regard for the presence of other voices in the discussion. We reserve the right to edit or delete comments that do not adhere to this standard.
Read Complete Comments Policy >>


Name             

Email address 




Please type the text shown in the graphic.


|
Share This Story

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adam Harrison Levy is a writer and documentary film-maker. He recently worked on the upcoming BBC2 series, The Genius of Design and produced Selling the Sixties, a BBC documentary about consumerism, advertising and culture of the early 1960s.
More Bio >>

ADS VIA THE DECK


DESIGN OBSERVER JOBS




RELATED POSTS


In the Palm of Your Hand: Dexterity Puzzles
A selection of rare dexterity puzzles from the personal collection of Jessica Helfand.

Two Rupees Worth
Now that the dust has settled on India's launch of their rupee symbol we are starting to see its application beyond the initial fanfare.

Viva The Villain: A Review of Despicable Me
In an age in which last week’s Bernie Madoff is next week’s BP oil spill, villains are no longer the stuff of fiction. So when a really juicy fictional villain comes along — let alone two — it’s time to go to the movies.

Bukhara: A Traveler’s Notes
Bukhara is one of the most ancient cities of the legendary Silk Road. Presented here is a slideshow of design and architecture from one traveler's visit.

The Next Great Graphic Designer
Tonight on Bravo's "Work of Art: The Next Great Artist" the winning Penguin book cover design will be unveiled, which begs a few questions. We hope our readers will weigh in with their opinions.