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Recognizing Age and Construction in Antique Furniture
Antique furniture restoration tips
Antique Furniture
Style Periods
Antique Talk's Guide to Western Furniture
Styles
Major Furniture Period or Style Definitions
cont'd -Page 2 Part 1
Chippendale: Masculinity supplants femininity in furniture.
Cabinetmakers like Thomas Chippendale take lead over monarchs in design.
Queen Anne form puts on a bowtie and goes rococo, mahogany rules.
Oriental influence comes to shore.
Neo Classic: Inspired by continuing excavations and discoveries at
Pompeii and Herculaneum (begun 1738) classic Greek and Roman decorative
motifs like dolphins, guilloches, lyres and urns emerge everywhere.
Straight lines and swags supplant rococo curves.
Hepplewhite: Neo Classicism influences English and American design.
Tapered rectilinear legs supplant the cabriole leg. George Hepplewhite's,
"Cabinet Makers and Upholsterer's Guide" is published in 1788.
Louis XVI: Beginning before 1774, 18th Century French Art climaxes under
King Louis XVI, Marie Antoinette and exuberant neoclassic style.
Sheraton: Thomas Sheraton's "Cabinet Maker's & Upholsterer's Drawing
Book" is published 1791. Turned Corinthian column legs supplant tapered
legs. Square shapes round out.
Directoire: Transitional phase from Rococo to Neo Classic. Soft painted
surfaces supplant ostentatious gilt. Rectilinear columnar design
replaces curves and cabriole legs.
American Federal Period: The new, emancipated country's beautiful
interpretation of graceful lines and form over excessive ornament.
Eagles emerge in great numbers.
Empire: Beautiful at first, then severe in treatment-especially in
America-of Classical forms. Surrounded by wreaths, Napoleonic ormolu
bronze mounts highlight mahogany.
Regency: Several styles emerge in Britain based on a blending of
traditional English lines with Gothic and Neo Classic influences.
Biedermeier: The great German reaction against English and French rococo
style. Generally rectilinear or slightly draping lines. Beautiful woods,
generally with little or no ornament. Comfort and common sense supplants
ostentation.
Victorian: The machine age takes hold. Ornament and busyness supplant
the weightiness of Empire in its last days. More is better.
Arts & Crafts: Rebellion against the Victorian Industrialism. Objects
that appear to be made by hand are in again. In America, Gustav Stickley
spearheads the Mission Oak furniture movement featuring mortise & tendon
joining and rectilinear lines.
Jugendstil: Germany's brilliant Arts & Crafts and Art Nouveau movement.
Strongly influenced the path toward modern art developments.
Art Nouveau: Probably born in a Parisian art shop (Samuel Bing c. 1895)
the new "Moderne" kind of art and design influenced by nature, Japanese
style and flowing feminine lines. A continued reaction against the
Victorian era of the "machine."
Art Moderne: Art Nouveau gives way to technology. NYC's Chrysler
building is a standing testament.
Art Deco: Who needs humanistic/naturalistic lines and earthy tones?
Chrome and plastic supplant wood. Bon Voyage, Art Nouveau. The rocket
age is born and furniture, art and design are going for the ride!
Part 1 |