CASES ARE SPECIAL PROBLEM
Biele Company Since 1867 Has Served Both
Collectors and Museums
The
Charles F. Biele & Sons Co., calling itself simply "artisans in
metal, glass and wood" and usually referred casually as makers of
show cases and vitrines, is far from being as humdrum as it sounds.
A going concern since 1867, at 33-39 Bethune street for the last
twelve years, it has been in the Greenwich Village neighborhood for forty
years.
Museums
from Massachusetts to California use Biele show cases. Important private collectors, such as Benjamin
Altman,
Charles L. Freer, E. S. Harkness, Childs Frick,
Michael
Friedsam, John Gellatly, have called upon Biele for special cases; President Roosevelt
for his ship model collection; Theodore Roosevelt for his Japanese art
objects, and the present John D. Rockefeller.
Mr.
Biele is a registered architect, and personal supervision of individual
orders seems to have been the keynote of his success.
From the raw materials, every step of the work progresses under one
roof - with 40,000 square feet of space devoted to metal working,
woodworking, glass polishing, grinding and finishing equipment.
Biele
has made cases for the Metropolitan for more than thirty five years and
for the Morgan Library going back to the elder J. P. Morgan.
The dealers in paintings, sculpture and antiques bring their
special show-case problems to the old firm.
Special orders may call for anything, insetting a carved stone
sculptured fragment in a wood background and building a case around it,
for an art gallery; a pair of doors (just finished) for Chinese porcelain
cabinets for Mr. Rockefeller's Park avenue home; a recently made glass
cabinet for the Bell Telephone Laboratories to house a piece of railroad
track, so mounted that when one breathes upon it a pointer turns and marks
the deflection of the steel; a bronze and glass casket for the cathedral
at Santo Domingo.
The
last, delivered in 1937, was made to fit over the ancient lead casket
which Santo Domingo claims contains the bones of Christopher Columbus.
Visitors at the Cunard office, at 25 Broadway, gaze at a one-ton model of
the S.S. Majestic, housed in a bronze and glass show case made by Biele,
about twenty two feet long, and itself weighing about a ton, with a
chassis of structural steel and teakwood sliding platform.
Moldings
in all commercial metals, copper, bronze, brass, aluminum, chromium,
nickel-silver and stainless steel, used in everything from baby carriages
to hearses; special glass and metal shower-bath doors for ocean liners;
and elaborate mirror and shelf arraignments for dressing rooms are among
their manifold products.