EXHIBIT MUSINGS FROM BOB RHUE Public Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 37, September 10, 2006, Article 5

    EXHIBIT MUSINGS FROM BOB RHUE

    Bob Rhue writes: "I appreciate Alan Weinberg's kind words about
    my three exhibits at the Denver ANA show: Hawaiian Plantation
    tokens (pg 376 of current Redbook); Horsecar tokens (1871 - approx
    1910); & Colored Seal Notes of Colonial Georgia (1776-1778) all at
    the Denver ANA show.

    For me it's 'pride of ownership' & a desire to share my collections
    & information about them, that motivate me to exhibit. Leaving them
    in a bank box just isn't quite as rewarding for me.

    I love to introduce/interest people in my esoteric areas of collecting.
    And like Alan says - newly interested people are likely candidates for
    buying MY collection down the road.

    A perfect example of that is my own experience 20 years ago: Rad
    Stearn's exhibited his collection of Colored Seal Georgia Colonial
    Currency at an ANA show in the early or mid '80's & I was totally
    taken in by their history & by the sheer beauty of the multicolored
    vignettes, contrasting to the normal black & white printing on
    virtually all other colonial currency. A year or two later I happened
    onto Bob Vlack at a NY show, who was offering his collection of these;
    & I couldn't resist the opportunity to start with a bang a collection
    of the 50 different pieces comprising this 'set' as I call it. After
    adding to & upgrading over the years I now have a collection I'm most
    proud of & which I have exhibited a number of times. Not to mention
    the 'fringe benefits' of inevitably developing a high level of
    expertise in this area over the years, as well as developing the
    comaraderie that comes with discussing & sharing with others an
    area of deep interest.

    At every show we attend we now devote most or all of one of our show
    cases to fun things - just for 'show & tell'. Surprising how much
    interest that generates in people who then decide they'd like to
    collect some of those items themselves."

    [On a related note, exhibitor George Fitzgerald writes: "That was my
    Lesher dollar exhibit in Denver. Nelson was from Holdredge, Nebraska,
    not Omaha." -Editor]

Source URL Date published
  • 2006-09-10
Volume
  • 9

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