arts & life collecting A pair of collectors fill their Franklin home with the glass, prints and more that they love. Suzanne Chessler I Contributing Writer Brett Mountain I Photographer "Style Moderne: French Art Deco Enameled Glass from the Ed & Karen Ogul Collection" runs through Sept. 13 at the Flint Institute of Arts, 1120 E. Kearsley St. $7 for ages 13 and older; free for children. (810) 234-1695; flintarts.org . W indows span only small spaces along the double- story great room in the Franklin home of Karen and Ed Ogul. Clear glass panes, high up in two adja- cent corners, admit enough daylight to accent the couple's extensive art collec- tion. Covering the walls are figurative French paintings, mostly from the sec- ond half of the 20th century. Filling lines of long tables are colorful, enam- eled Art Deco glassworks, functional pieces from the 1920s and 1930s. The collection streams started before the home was built so rooms were planned to give dominance to art, which appears in forms other than the ones in the great room. The Oguls combine pleasure with business as they run Paramour Fine Arts, selling prints to other collectors, private and public. Prints started them off on their personal collecting adven- tures, and travels to France enlarged their interests. Many professional connections have been made as the Oguls display inven- tories at art shows around the country. Introductions to administrators at the Flint Institute of Arts led to participa- tion in museum print fairs and a current exhibit of the couple's glass treasures. "Style Moderne: French Art Deco Enameled Glass from the Ed & Karen Ogul Collection" runs through Sept. 13. Ed spoke about the style before a gath- ering to launch the display. "Fifty-five pieces were picked from our collection to show the various uses of the glass during the time it was made;' Ed says about the examples fea- turing designs applied with paint added to powdered glass. "There are vases, plates and pendants representing a variety of appearance features and colors. Pieces were crafted by about 12 different makers, the most important of the period:' A plate by Nicolas Platon presents a mythological figure and is heavily enameled to develop a dramatic com- ponent. The glass that is not enameled shows a wide span of orange shading. A vase by Marcel Goupy shows a nude woman next to a large orange cat. Goupy, whose style ranges from figura- tive to geometric, was the director of a decorative-arts shop in Paris during the 1920s. ABOVE: French Art Deco glass vases and bonbonnieres (covered candy dishes) crafted by Marcel Goupy, circa 1925, are displayed against the back- drop of walls lined with prints. A beige and blue perfume bottle spotlights the talents of August-Claude Heiligenstein, who was one of the most successful enamellists of the time and the subject of a book devoted to his style. "John Henry, the director of the Flint museum, noticed the glass when he came to our home, and about a year ago, he sent the curator, Tracee Glab, over to look and take pictures;' Ed recalls. "She presented the pictures to members of the committee in charge of exhibitions, and they were very happy to have the works on loan. "This year, the museum is doing other shows related to French art so MULTI FACETED on page 43 June 25 • 2015 41