NEWARK, NJ.- Sumptuous gilded ornamentation still teems throughout the brick home of the Ballantine family of beer makers in Newark, built in 1885. But objects and artworks newly incorporated into the period rooms show how underappreciated strivers maneuvered in Newark society during the Ballantines heyday.
The Ballantine House, long used as an annex to the adjacent Newark Museum of Art on Washington Street, is reopening to the public Nov. 17, after a two-year, $12 million restoration and rethink. The goal of the overhaul was to wake it up and shake it up, said Linda C. Harrison, the museums director since 2019. The building, she added, was not forgotten but just not able to get the attention that it deserved.
Amy Simon Hopwood, the museums associate curator of decorative arts, who helped spearhead the new installations, said that visitors are encouraged to wonder, Whos doing the work to keep the room glittering?
In the entrance hall, alongside a towering wooden mantelpiece carved with the familys B initial, paintings have been added that depict working-class Newark life. In an 1870s street scene, firefighters race to quench a blaze, in a carriage full of firefighting equipment steered by a Black driver named Lorenzo Dowd Trent. There are tableaus of Italian Americans celebrating a religious festival in the 1920s, and factory workers from the 1930s pouring molten metal. In an upstairs bedroom, a honey-colored Victorian bedstead has been updated with a red-and-white patchwork quilt, made in the 1930s for Dorothy O. Smith, New Jerseys first Black female podiatrist.
Headless mannequins, which British Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare created for the museum in 2009, are feasting at the dining room table, piled with punchbowls and candelabra. Ballantine family heirlooms, newly scattered around the house, show signs of servants grueling labor: dazzlingly polished silver vessels from Tiffany & Co., a crisply ironed pillowcase, a recipe book singed by a cooking pot and stained with grease.
An entire gallery has been devoted to artist and historian Noelle Lorraine Williams installation, Stay: The Black Women of 19th-Century Newark, part of an ongoing series called Black Power! 19th Century.
Williams, a longtime Newark resident, has combed archives and online sources, including eBay, to research the Ballantine neighborhoods unsung residents and visitors. She has assembled portraits and documentation of acclaimed soprano Marie Selika Williams; teacher Ellen King, whose family home was an Underground Railroad station; businessperson and music teacher Sara OFake Evans; and church leader Hannah Mandeville, who had been born enslaved. There are images of 20th-century activist Louise Epperson; Eloise Spellman, a seamstress and mother of 11 killed by police or National Guard forces in 1967; and Sakia Gunn, a lesbian teenager murdered in 2003 in a hate crime a few blocks from the museum. (This fall a nearby street was named in Gunns honor.)
Williams said that the long history of Blacks in Newark has been often invisible. The community was historically far larger, prosperous and accomplished than is commonly believed, helping to build this city, she added. Black women residents of the 19th century have gone particularly unnoticed, and few depictions of them had been known to exist. In Stay, she said, All of the images are hot off the press. This history is new to most folks.
John Ballantine, a second-generation beer maker, and his wife Jeannette commissioned the building from architect George Edward Harney, who worked for various plutocrats including the Roebling family of bridgebuilders. Many of the construction workers were immigrants from Italy and Germany. In the familys 27 rooms, silks and velvets were draped along the windows, walls and furniture upholstery, and paneling and fireplaces were carved from a rainbow of wood types including mahogany and cherry. Tastemakers from New York City were brought in to add more eye-catchers; in the librarys window by Louis Comfort Tiffanys team, a windblown blond maiden basks in rays from an opalescent sun.
After John Ballantines death in 1895, Jeannette remained in the house with the couples only surviving daughter, Alice Young, who raised her family there. (Four of the Ballantines eight children had died young of disease, and in 1905, one of their three surviving sons, Robert Ballantine, died by suicide at the house, after being blackmailed by a lover.)
In 1919, an insurance company acquired the building and adapted it gently into offices. The museum took over the property in 1937 and has been undertaking phase after phase of restoration and décor improvements. In the past two years, crews rebuilt crumbling exterior masonry, rotting window frames and leaky roof sections. They cleaned and repaired the interior; some of the damage was caused by curious visitors, picking at the dining room wallpaper.
The halls now echo with newly recorded sounds of the Ballantine era: billiard balls thudding, teacups clinking, newspapers rustling, horses hoofs clopping on pavement, pianists practicing ragtime and classical music. Display cases have been filled with vintage glass vessels for Ballantine beer and bejeweled cigarette lighters manufactured in Newark.
Plans are afoot to open more parts of the house to the public. The treasures to be unveiled Friday amount to the launching pad of many future stories, said Hopwood, the associate curator. A recurring question among her colleagues is, What can we look at with new eyes in our collection?
The Ballantine House
Opens Nov. 17, 49 Washington St., Newark, NJ, 973-596-6550; newarkmuseumart.org/exhibition
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.