(1916) Historic Styles in Furniture
(1916) Historic Styles in Furniture
(1916) Historic Styles in Furniture
UNIVERSITY
CALIfOKM*
SAN DIEGO
Historic Styles
in
Furniture
COLONIAL FURNITURE
THE WEST PARLOR MOUNT VERNON
HISTORIC STYLES
IN
FURNITURE
By
VIRGINIA ROBIE
1916
COPYRIGHT, 1905, By
HERBERT S. STONE
PUBLISHERS' NOTE
" "
THIS account of Historic Styles in Furniture was
originally issued ten years ago by the publishers of The
House Beautiful magazine, mainly for special sale in con-
nection with their publication. It received little exploi-
tation in the general market, and its merits did not,
therefore, become widely known. The present publishers
have believed that there is a distinct place for this vol-
Monastery Chair 26
Hall, LateMiddle Ages , 27
French Gothic Panel 28
Flemish Cupboard 29
Anteroom, Castle Meran 31
Sixteenth-century Chest of Drawers, Lucca 36
Sixteenth-century Cabinet, Lucca 37
Anteroom Chair of Walnut 38
Gothic Chair, with Renaissance Details 39
Bedchamber in the Vincigliata, Fiesole 40
State Dining-room in the Vincigliata, Fiesole 41
Renaissance Beamed Ceiling, Residence of Frederic C. Bartlett, Chicago 43
Renaissance Coffered Ceiling, Residence of the late William C. Whitney, New York City 45
Renaissance Carving 46
Door of the Vatican, Dssigned by Raphael 46
Carved Chairs, Lucca Museum 47
Desk and Chair Used by Savonarola, Florence 49
Screen of Intarsia 50
Florentine Marriage Coffer 51
A Fine Example of Renaissance Carving 51
State Chair, Late Renaissance, Baroque Treatment 52
Louis XII Fireplace, Chateau of Blois 56
Renaissance Chair, Chateau of Blois 57
Fireplace Built for Claude, Wife of Francois I., Chateau of Blois 59
Fireplace, Gallery of Henri II, Fontainebleau 61
Bedstead Belonging to Anne of Austria, Fontainebleau 62
Renaissance Paneling, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 63
Louis XIII Room, Fontainebleau 65
Cabinet, Late Renaissance 67
Cabinet of Dutch Marquetry 72
Flemish Cupboard 73
Hall in the Gruuhuse, Sixteenth Century 75
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
PAGE
Room in an Old Dutch Home, Edam 76
German Press, Typical Example of Renaissance Carving 77
Spanish Chair, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston , 82
Linen-fold Cupboard, Sixteenth Century 87
Presence Chamber, Hardwick Hall, Elizabethan Period 89
Dining-room, Jacobean Period 91
Seventeenth-century Cupboard 92
Chest of Drawers, Memorial Hall, Deerfield, Mass 93
Tapestry Woven by Mary Queen of Scots 94
Chair in Versailles, Regency of Anne of Austria 100
Louis XIV Clock 101
Boulle Console, Early Louis XIV 102
Bureau, Late Louis XIV 103
Example of Simple Louis XIV Furniture 105
Headboard, Louis XIV Bedstead 107
Gobelin Tapestry, Designed by Boucher and Tessier 112
Louis XV Sofa Petit Trianon 113
Louis XV Chair, Garde-Meuble 115
Louis XV Arm-chair, Garde-Meuble 117
Louis XV Clock 118
Louis XVI Bedstead, Fontainebleau 125
Louis XVI Cabinet, Fontainebleau 126
Louis XVI Clock 127
Writing-desk and Bureau-Toilette 128
Louis XVI Chair, Petit Trianon 129
Louis XVI Chair, Petit Trianon 130
Chippendale Mirror 134
Chippendale's Dutch Type, I 135
Chippendale Chair, II 135
Chippendale Arm-chair, III 136
Ladder-back Chair, IV 137
Chippendale Roundabout, V 138
Chippendale Chair, French Manner, VII 139
Shield-shaped Chair, Hepplewhite 140
Hepplewhite Table 141
Dining-room, Residence of Frederic C. Bartlett, Chicago 142
Hepplewhite Sideboard 143
Prince of Wales Chair, Hepplewhite 144
Hepplewhite Table 145
Adam Commode, Painted by Pergolesi 146
Bracket and Vase for Candles, Adam Style 147
Lock for a Cabinet Door 148
Adam Mantelpiece, Decorated by Angelica Kauffman 149
Sheraton Chairs 150
A Fine Example of Sheraton's Work 151
ILLUSTRATIONS
Broadly speaking the period termed the Middle Ages began with the fall of
Rome and ended with the capture of Constantinople, but it was the great interme-
diate stage, roughly spanned by the sixth and tenth centuries, which constituted
the dark age of history and art.
The British Museum contains illuminated manuscripts dating back to the ninth
century. From these priceless records and from wills of the period the home of
the Anglo-Saxon thane has been deciphered. Fragments from many sources have
been fitted together and a fairly clear picture has resulted.
The ham, or home, contained one large apartment called the heal which served
as a dining, living, and sleeping room. Adjoining it was the bower, or chamber,
reserved for the ladies of the household. The hall was sparsely furnished. A
board upon a trestle formed the dining-table. Benches and stools were the
laid
common seats and were used by all members of the family, except the lord and his
lady who occupied two rudely constructed chairs. The walls were hung with walh-
or wall cloths, which served as a protection from wind and rain. The rafters
rifts,
were covered with a ceil cloth, from which our word "ceiling" is derived. In the
center of the floor was the hearth, the smoke of the fire escaping through a louvre,
or opening in the roof. Illumination was provided by torches and by a primitive
3
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
lamp of horn, termed a cresset. The cresset lamp was a feature in English houses
formany centuries be found in rural districts.
and may still
The bower contained a straw bed and a cyst, or chest. A curtain protected the
bed and served to conceal the chest which was the most important article in the
house. The chest, or coffer, was a characteristic piece of mediaeval handicraft,
and the firstpiece of furniture to express the skill of the wood-carver and the metal-
worker. The development of the chest, in its various guises of coffer, hutch, and
bahut, forms an interesting phase of furniture-making. The cupboard, the dresser,
the credence, the cabinet, and the bureau were all evolved from this primitive
article. In early Anglo-Saxon times it was a strong box placed near the bed and
large enough to hold the family valuables. In an age when one baron waged war-
fare upon another it was important to have a receptacle always at hand where
valuables could be stored, and, if necessary, easily transported.
The homes of the common people of this period lacked the barest comforts. A
bench and a chest and a few skins of wild beasts were the household effects of the
masses. The bench was crudely constructed and without a back. The chest
was of more careful workmanship and served many purposes. It w as sometimes r
used as a seat, sometimes as a table, sometimes as a bed. It was the poor man's
chief article of furniture and as such it remained until after the Norman Conquest.
*
The conditions of Europe were not such as to foster the gentle side of living.
Two figures were pre-eminent: the monk and the soldier. One kept art alive;
the other nearly exterminated it. Italy, France, and Germany were torn with
wars, civil and ecclesiastical, and England, while more remote from the cause of
conflict, was also more remote from the centers of civilization. Southern countries
still preserved a few classic traditions. In the north they were long since extinct.
As England was last to respond to the Renaissance so she was last to develop a,
mediaeval art. At best it was a rude age even in the countries that came in touch
with Greek and oriental influences.
With the Norman Conquest came England's awakening to continental methods.
With the invasion came French ideas in dress and manners. A more refined mode
of living followed. Houses were fitted with the rude comforts which had been known
on the continent for nearly a century. Walls received their first decorations. The
skins of wild beasts, rafters to keep out the cold, gave place to
hung against the
pieces of rude tapestry. Fireplaces were fitted with Norman fire-dogs, and the
blazing torches were superseded by branches of iron holding tallow candles. In the
homes of the feudal lords dishes of metal increased the limited table service of wood
and horn.
In Ivanhoe a vivid picture is given of Cedric's castle, where French innovations
found little favor:
4
FURNITURE OF THE MIDDLE AGES
"
In a hall, the height of which was greatly disproportioned to its extreme length
and width, stood a long oaken table, formed of planks rough hewn from the forest,
and which had scarcely received any polish. On the sides of the apartment hung
implements of war and of the chase, and there were at each corner doors which gave
access to other parts of the extensive building. The other appointments of the
mansion partook of the rude simplicity of the Saxon period, which Cedric piqued
himself upon maintaining. The floor was composed of earth mixed with lime and
trodden into a hard substance. For about one quarter of the length of the apart-
ment the floor was raised by a step, and this space, which w as called the dais, was
r
occupied only by the principal members of the family and visitors of distinction.
^
"For thispurpose a table, richly covered with a scarlet cloth, was placed trans-
versely across the platform, from the middle of which ran the longer and lower board
where the domestics and inferior persons sat. Massive chairs were placed upon the
dais, and over these seats and the elevated table was fastened a canopy of cloth
which served in some degree to protect the dignitaries who occupied that distin-
guished station, from the weather, and especially from the rain, which in some
places found its way through the ill-constructed roof. The walls of this upper end
of the hall, as far as the dais extended, were covered with hangings or curtains with
some attempts at tapestry or embroidery. In the center of the dais were placed
two chairs more elevated than the rest, for the master and mistress of the family.
To each of these was added a footstool, curiously carved and inlaid with ivory,
which mark of distinction was peculiar to them."
The construction of houses changed little in the century following the Conquest.
Norman names were given to various portions of the dwelling, but the general char-
5
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
acter remained the same. The heal became the salla and the ham the manoir. The
for the center hearth.
greatest innovation was the substitution of a built-in fireplace
In many homes the fire continued to be built in the old way, but where the thick-
ness of the wall permitted the newer method was preferred. The bower, which
was formerly built on the ground floor, was elevated to the second story and termed
a soler, a term supposed to have been derived from the word sol. A new room
called a parloir, or talking-room, was the most important addition to the house.
The arrangement of the bedroom changed little, except that a wooden bed with
curtains replaced the bed of straw. Hungerford Pollen in the hand-book of the
furniture of South Kensington refers to the bedchambers of this period: "Bed-
rooms were furnished with ornamental bed-testers and benches at the bed foot.
Beds were made with quilts and pillows, and with spotted or striped linen sheets;
over all was laid a covering of green sag, badgers' furs, the skins of beavers, or
martens. A perch for tame falcons was fixed to the wall. A chair and a pro-
jecting pole, on which clothes could be hung, completed the Anglo-Norman bed-
room."
The bench was a convenience in receiving visitors. The soler was used by the
lady of the manor as a sitting-room until the parloir became a common feature of
house-building. Furniture was more varied after the Conquest and included
settles, arm-chairs, and folding seats. Thomas Wright, in treating of this period,
states that our word "chair" is Anglo-Norman, and that the Anglo-Saxon term was
sell or stol, the latter being retained in our modern word "stool." Fadestol was one
name for a chair of state, a word which has been translated in modern French to
fauteuil, and in English to arm-chair. The Norman table, as depicted in the Bayeux
tapestry, is similar to the Saxon trestle design. It was placed in the hall and taken
apart after the meal was finished. "Laying the board" was a matter of ceremony.
Lines were sharply drawn in regard to the seating of the household. The lord and
his lady occupied chairs, the retainers sat upon benches, and those lower in rank
remained standing. The placing of the salt was a matter of consideration. "Above
salt" or "below salt" indicated the social status of the guests.
Furniture of this age, with the exception of the table, was slightly carved.
Chests were the first pieces to receive decorative treatment and chairs came second.
In the oldest manuscripts there is a suggestion of ornament in most of the furniture.
Much of the decoration is impossible to classify, for it is too archaic to be defined,
but a small portion may be assigned to one of the three great styles of the
Middle Ages.
Applied ornament during this period may be divided into three classes, Byzan-
tine, Saracenic, and Gothic. The first two had little bearing on furniture-making
of the north; the third had a close connection with all handicraft of the times.
6
FURNITURE OF THE MIDDLE AGES
Byzantine ornament was based upon geometrical patterns combined with animal
and floral forms. Animals were used in a conventionalized manner and were
of religious significance. The fish, the serpent, the bird, occur frequently, combined
with the circle, the and the quatrefoil. The circle was emblematic of Omnip-
trefoil,
otence, the trefoil of the Trinity, and the quatrefoil of the four evangelists. Byzan-
tine art originated in the fourth century \vhen the Emperor Constantine removed
the seat of government from Rome to Byzantium. "The traditional Greek and
Roman arts," saysRichard Glazier, "were now assimilated with the arts of Persia
and but molded and influenced by the new religion, giving the strong personal
Syria,
vitality, deep symbolism, which was so remarkable throughout the Byzantine
period." Byzantium was changed to Constantinople, but the ancient name was
perpetuated in the art of the period. Saracenic ornament was of oriental origin,
and its influence was largely confined to countries that came in touch with eastern
influence. Unlike Byzantine ornament, animal forms were excluded. Intricate
interlaced lines and conventionalized leaves formed the basis of Saracenic decora-
tion. Contemporary with the Saracenic movement were two schemes of ornament,
having much in common with the oriental style. These were the Celtic and Scandi-
7
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
navian. The beautiful patterns of the Celts, based on circles, triangles, and endless
chains, and the bolder interlaced work of the Scandinavians,
form two unique
phases of mediaeval designing. The Celts used the serpent as a dominant motif
while the Scandinavians gave special prominence to the dragon.
These early schools of ornament had little bearing on the furniture-making of the
period, but their influence on future wood-carving
was so important that later
results cannot be understood without a brief reference to them. Byzantine
decoration was little fitted for domestic furniture and use was largely confined
its
to religious pieces. The famous chair of St. Peter at Rome, said to be the oldest
piece of wooden furniture in existence, is an example of Byzantine work. It is
inlaid in gold and ivory, in an intricate and beautiful manner, the details of which
are lost in the illustration. The importance of Byzantine ornament from the view-
point of furniture-making lies in the fact that the trefoil and the quatrefoil were
continued in Gothic ornament, and in the newer guise became a part of furniture
decoration for three centuries.
In order to understand the significance of Gothic art and its bearing upon all
handicraft of the period it will be necessary to consider the conditions that gave
people. During her reign the use of tapestries, hitherto confined to the palace and
to the halls of the barons, became general, and added greatly to the comfort and
beauty of interiors. Tapestries, or dorsels, as they were sometimes called from their
9
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
ecclesiastical origin,were both woven and embroidered. The former were usually
of small and intricate patterns, Byzantine and Gothic in character, and were imported
from the tapestry-weaving districts of the Loire. The latter, while crude in work-
manship, were more original in treatment. Thirteenth-century ladies in England
and France spent many hours over the tambour frame depicting hunting and battle
scenes, "jousts," and tournaments. These unique specimens of handiwork were
modeled on the famous Bayeux tapestry, woven by Queen Matilda and her ladies in
waiting.
During Eleanor's reign wood paneling was introduced into Windsor Castle, and
the halls of the manor houses were further enriched with Gothic carvings and mural
decorations. Furniture in England had already responded to Gothic tendencies,
and the massive chairs reserved for state occasions, and the simpler settles for daily
use, were ornamented in the style that had found favor on the continent. No
furniture of Henry's time has been preserved, but a celebrated piece of Gothic
carving of the following reign is now in existence. The coronation chair in West-
minster, made famous by a long line of monarchs, was first used when Edward
Plantagenet ascended the throne.
Prince Edward was on the continent fighting the French when he received the
tidings of his father's death. He remained to vanquish his foes, returning the fol-
lowing year, in the summer of 1274, to take possession of the English throne.
With the exception of Mary Tudor and William III, every English sovereign
from Edward I to Edward VII has been crowned in this historic relic. William
III and his queen were crowned together in a chair made expressly for them, and
Queen Mary received a chair from the pope especially blessed for her accession.
Made of oak and covered with heavy gilding "Edward's chair" was the work
of a Florentine artist, employed at Guildford Castle, who builded better than he
knew. Beneath the seat and supported by lions is a rough-hewn stone which has
the tradition of being the identical one which Jacob used as a pillow at Bethel. The
lions are modern and are inferior to the rest of the workmanship. Aside from this
venerated piece of furniture, so associated with English history, little remains of
early Gothic handicraft in England, except that which is ecclesiastical in character.
A few of the royal chests and coffers of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth
centuries are in existence, and are interesting specimens of wood-carving and metal
work. Hinges and locks are intricately chased with trefoils and quatrefoils, and
sometimes ornamented with heraldic devices. A
chest executed during the reign
of King John described as being "of oak, richly decorated with iron plates and
is
hinges"; another of similar date, "of oak, decorated with wrought-iron locks and
clamps and with basses of metal, on which are enameled escutcheons"; another "of
carved cypress, inlaid with ivory and mosaics, and having clasps of wrought silver."
10
FURNITURE OF THE MIDDLE AGES
The dower chests of Eleanor, of Pro-
vence, although recorded as being of un-
usual beauty, have not survived. A coffer
belonging to the queen of Edward I, who
was of Spanish birth, is now in the British
Museum. It is of dark wood, painted in
Moorish style, and the colors still retain
something of their early brilliancy. The
hinges are of iron, heavily ornamented,
and the locks display the arms of Castile.
With her chests the Spanish princess
brought Spanish ideas, and thus a third
element was added to the Norman-
Saxon court. Moorish carpets, decorated
leather from Aragon, brass hanging-lamps
and Sevillian pottery were among her
possessions. An inventory of the royal
household of this period contains "pitch-
ers of gold, plates and dishes of silver,
11
CHAPTER II
dining room furniture still retains its original significance. The use of the word
to designate a dressing-table or a bureau is modern and quite incorrect.
The distinction between a press and a cupboard was in the beginning clearly
defined. The cupboard was made without doors and was scarcely more than a shelf
on a trestle. In the fifteenth century the cupboard, the press, and the armoire
were more nearly alike. The significance of the word armoire is somewhat obscure,
and one upon which writers on furniture are not agreed. Frederick Roe, in his
book, Ancient Coffers and Cabinets, suggests that the original purpose of the
piece of furniture thus designated, was to hold armor.
During the fourteenth century the hall retained its feudal character. Life had
grown more luxurious, but the general plan of the house was unchanged. In the
"
manor house a " withdra wing-room was added to the lower story, taking the
15
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
origin. Chairs, with the exception of folding-stools, were of huge proportions, and
were made more massive by the addition of wooden canopies. Tables, on the
other hand, were exceedingly simple, and formed a striking contrast to the rest
of household furniture. They were made solely for utility, and outside of Italy
were overlooked by the decorator. In design they were long and narrow, but the
trestle supports of the previous century had given place to more careful workman-
ship. One form of table was made with the "bolt and slot construction," a modern
term expressing mediaeval methods. This table is chiefly interesting inasmuch as
it show s how closely arts and crafts workers have copied early designs.
r
While all handicraft of this period was marked by beauty of design and honest
workmanship each country excelled in certain lines. The Italians led in the han-
dling of low relief and in the application of color to ornament. Their work, partic-
ularly that of the Florentines, was characterized by great delicacy of feeling. The
Germans were especially skilled in the execution of elaborate floral and heraldic
motifs. The locks, hinges, and keys of cupboards and presses received as much
attention as the carving of the wood, and often formed an important part of the
decoration. The French, from the first, were a nation of furniture-makers, and
although their handicraft lacked the exquisite finish of the Italians it fully equaled
the work of the south in beauty of design.
The Swiss were adepts in wood-carving and the Tyrolese, in this century, de-
16
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
veloped a unique school of ornament. Their furniture was partly French, partly
German in character, and yet with certain qualities peculiar to itself. The Scan-
dinavians were masters of a rude style of carving, half religious, half mythological,
in subject. The work of the Danes was patterned after that of the Germans, as
was also that of the Austrians. The Russians, until the beginning of the Romanoff
dynasty, followed Byzantine canons, and the Poles and the Hungarians followed
the Russians. The Dutch and the Flemings lagged behind the other nations in
the art of furniture-making. It was not until the sixteenth century that they
equaled either the French or the Germans in this particular. But Flemish and
Dutch furniture remained beautiful and individual long after that of the French
had become exaggerated and absurd. The Spaniards never adopted the Gothic
style pure and simple in either their home architecture or their furniture. Spain,
at this time, was a power on the high seas, and Spanish woodwork combined the
designs of many countries. The Portuguese, when not at war with the Spaniards,
copied them slavishly. The English selected the best of all that Normandy and
Flanders sent to their shores and made it their own.
The fourteenth century inaugurated a new era in domestic architecture. The
religious enthusiasm of the people, inspired by the crusades, was over, and the
zeal
which was previously lavished on churches was now expended on dwellings. The
origin of many famous castles in England and France may be traced to this activity.
18
FURNITURE OF THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY
The rapid progress of home architecture was not confined to the dwellings of the
nobility. The improvement in the houses of the middle classes was no less remark-
able. Hand in hand with the outward betterment went an inward transforma-
tion. The comforts which were known hitherto only in the homes of the opulent
were now to be found in humbler circles. Class distinctions were more sharply
drawn but class privileges were extending. So prosperous did the trades-people
,
of Paris become that an edict was passed by Charles the Fair limiting the
household possessions of half the Parisians. No bourgeois could use wax candles
or sleep under a canopy of gold Genoa cloth. A similar law in England, framed
under Edward III, regulated the number of tapestries that a merchant might hang
in his house and the number of yards of Flanders embroidery his wife might wear
on her gown. In England the law was made in order to exclude French and Flemish
merchandise and to compel the people to patronize home industries. In France
it was passed to hold in check the growing ambitions of the trades-people and to
memorable than certain acts of Parliament; less so, perhaps, than that measure
in 1362, which established the English language as the speech of the nation.
passed
The use of French was discontinued at court and Norman customs went out of fashion.
19
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
wife before those of her husband a custom unknown before the fourteenth century.
Sizergh Hall in Queen Elizabeth's reign was famous for its beautiful woodwork and
furniture. The paneling of one room in this old castle is now in the Kensington
20
FURNITURE OF THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY
posed it,two occupied the first and second stories of the main building. The first
was raised some few feet above the ground floor of the court, and was occupied by
Violet of Milan and her husband, Louis of Orleans. Each of these two suites of
rooms consisted of a great hall, a chamber of state, a large chamber, a wardrobe-
room, and a chapel. The state chambers were eight toises, that is, about fifty and
a half feet long. The duke's chambers were six toises and a half square, and lighted
by long and narrow windows of wire work, with Gothic trellis work of iron. The
wainscots and the ceilings were made of Irish wood, the same as in the Louvre.
Among the ornamental furniture were a large vase of silver for holding sweetmeats
and a fine wooden casket covered with vermilion cordovan, nailed and bordered
with a narrow gold band and shutting with a key."
The ancient chronicle of M. Sauval would be incomplete without a reference
to the gorgeous Spanish leathers in Boheme. "In this palace," he continues, "there
was a room used by the duke, hung with cloth of gold bordered with vermilion
velvet, embroidered with roses. The duchess had a room hung with vermilion
leather decorated with cross-bows, w hich were her coat of arms.
r
That of the duke
of Burgundy was hung with cloth of gold, embroidered with windmills. There were,
besides, eight carpets of glossy texture, with gold flowers, one representing the
seven virtues and seven vices, another the history of Charlemagne, another that
of Saint Louis. There were also cushions of gold, twenty-four pieces of vermilion
leather of Aragon, and four carpets of Aragon leather."
Few descriptions of the homes of the people are on record. Litchfield,
in writing of a French house of this period, states that chests, more or less
carved and ornamented with iron work, settles of oak and chestnut, stools or
benches with carved supports, a bedstead and a prie-dieu chair, and a table with a
plain slab, supported on standards, would nearly complete the furniture of the chief
room in the house of a well-to-do merchant.
22
CHAPTER III
makers. Ornament was piled upon ornament until the original beauty was entirely
effaced. hand remained; the brain back of the hand had deteriorated.
Skill of
A waving form of ornament resembling a tongue of flame supplanted the geomet-
while cinquefoils took the place of the earlier trefoils and quatrefoils.
rical tracery,
This flaming motive had dominated church architecture, to its great detriment,
for more than a hundred years and
had given rise to the terms, Flam-
boyant, in France. Flowing, in Eng-
land, and Fischblase, in Germany.
Wood-carvers sought to surpass each
other in the elaboration of this theme,
and in fantastic combinations of
foliage, grotesque animals, and figures.
Chairs more than any other pieces
of furniture suffered at the hands of
the artisan. Built on severe lines
they were little adapted for the over-
loaded system of decoration. Chests
and cupboards, while lacking the sim-
plicity which had hitherto been their
chief charm, were by their construc-
tion less injured by complicated orna-
ment. Many of the finest specimens
of fifteenth-century woodwork were in
the form of presses and cupboards.
Bedsteads were too cumbersome in
ENGLISH MONASTERY CHAIR, FIFTEENTH CENTURY design, and, except in the homes of
the lower classes, too ornate to be
interesting. Tables had altered little in shape or purpose and were the sole articles
of furniture to conform to severe lines and
unadorned surfaces.
to
It was an age and scarcely less so in dress. The
of exaggeration in furniture
pointed cap, so long a feature of medieval fashion, rose to enormous heights, and
shoes were so elongated that walking with ease became a fine art. At the French
court, ladies in formal attire could not pass through an ordinary doorway without
lowering their heads, and the followers of Charles VII were obliged to walk three
feet apart in order to have sufficient space for the long and tortuous points of their
shoes.
The resemblance between the architecture and the furniture of historic periods,
is The similarity that costumes bear to both might
plainly discernible. also be
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
cited. Many parallels could be drawn between Louis XIV furniture and the
gorgeous dress of that day, between the more ornate furniture of the reign of Louis
XV and the greater extravagance in fashions, between the simpler Louis XVI
furniture and the return of the French
court under Marie Antoinette to a more
refined mode of dress, between the
classical furniture of Napoleon's time
and the severe gowns of the empire,
and between the stately furniture of
the colonial period and the equally
stately costumes. So long as the
pointed arch remained a vital force in
architecture, furniture and dress re-
flected in a greater or less degree Gothic
lighter pieces of furniture, and its exquisite grain yielded a more graceful form
of ornament. In the hands of the Italian and Spanish craftsmen it became an
ideal medium.
In Florence and Vargos were fashioned those chests and cupboards which placed
the work of the south so far above that of the north. The Florentines had long
demonstrated their and in this century the people of Vargos nearly equaled
ability,
them. Vargueno furniture was as celebrated as Cordovan leather.
Flamboyant architecture had made little progress in Spain and Spanish furni-
ture was free from the absurdities found in the furniture of the north. Moorish
traditions were deeply rooted and designs exhibited Saracenic rather than Gothic
influence. Gothic motifs were not entirely absent, but they were largely over-
shadowed by the richer ornament of the east. Spain was the only European
country that did not yield to the spell of the pointed arch. This worked for good
in the fifteenth century when all other nations except Italy were well-nigh
engulfed in Gothic detail.
With the exception of the English monastery chair the pieces of furniture
illustrated in this chapter are early fifteenth century. The cupboard is of oak and
is a typical example of Flemish handiwork. The carving shows the late Gothic
arch, and the tracery is more compact than in earlier pieces of furniture. By the
treatment of the arch the date of an article may be determined. Furniture fol-
lowed closely on architectural lines, and it is interesting to note that when windows
and doors showed changes in construction, cabinets and chairs exhibited similar
tendencies. The difference set forth in the construction of a room may be seen
in the Tyrolean interiors. The doors and windows in the bedchamber of the
castle Meran, illustrated in the preceding chapter, are in the earlier style. The
anteroom reproduced in this chapter shows the later treatment in the construc-
tion of the small door.
The Tyrolese more than any other people of Europe have clung to the customs
of their ancestors. Prominent in the affairs of Italy and Switzerland during the
Middle Ages they have had in modern times little part in the political warfare of
their neighbors. Favored by an isolated situation they have been undisturbed
by the march of civilization. In manners, in dress, in their home life they have
retained the traditions of an earlier age.
During mediaeval times the Tyrol was alternately occupied by the French and
the Germans, and architecture and furniture combine both French and German
tendencies. This is well illustrated in the fine old castles that cling to the mountain
tops and make this country one of the most picturesque in Europe. These
feudal strongholds passed from one conquering baron to another. The schloss of
one decade became the chateau of the next.
30
ANTEROOM, CASTLE MEBAN, GERMAN TYROL, SHOWING THE EARLY AND THE LATE
GOTHIC ARCH
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
Near the Meran stands the castle of that name, dating back to the
village of
twelfth century. The exterior has undergone many changes, but the interior has
been little altered. The paneling, the mural decorations, and the traceried windows
are early Gothic; the furniture and the tapestries belong to the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries. The furniture is particularly fine and consists of chests
mounted with iron, presses and cabinets ornamented with hinges and locks of
copper, long tables without decoration, and many beautiful chairs. The latter
are similar to the old Roman curules, and unlike English chairs of this period,
with their high backs and ponderous carving. A chair of this type is shown
in the anteroom of Meran illustrated on page 31. The furniture of this old castle
represents the best of the late Gothic school.
Toward the end of the fifteenth century a great change took place in handi-
craft. A new force born in Italy gradually spread throughout Europe. Gothic
artwas not uprooted in a day, and a period of confusion in design followed, in
which the old forms were combined with the new principles of the Renaissance.
CHAPTER IV
FURNITURE OF THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE. DURING THE TRANSITIONAL PERIOD
CLASSIC DETAILS WERE COMBINED WITH GOTHIC CONSTRUCTION.
LATER THE PURE RENAISSANCE WAS ESTABLISHED. WOOD-CARVERS
ADAPTED THE PRINCIPAL MOTIFS OF THE DAY WHICH CONSISTED
OF FOLIAGE BANDED WITH RIBBON, SWAGS OF FRUIT AND FLOW-
ERS, THE ACANTHUS LEAF, AND THE ARABESQUE. FURNITURE
BECAME MORE VARIED IN DESIGN AND WAS AUGMENTED BY MANY
PIECES UNKNOWN IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
CHAPTER IV
FURNITURE OF THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE
T" N the work of the Renaissance," writes John Addington Symonds, "all the
I great nations of Europe shared. But it must never be forgotten that the
-*-
true Renaissance began in Italy. In art, in scholarship, in science, hi the
mediation between antique culture and the modern intellect, the Italians took
the lead, handing to Germany and France and England the restored humani-
ties complete. Spain and England have since done more for the exploration and
colonization of the world. Germany achieved the labor of the Reformation almost
single-handed. France has collected, centralized, and diffused intelligence with
irresistible But if we return to the first origins of the Renaissance, we
energy.
find that, at a timewhen the rest of Europe was inert, Italy had already begun to
organize the various elements of the modern spirit, and to set the fashions whereby
the other great nations should live and learn
"
We cannot refer the whole phenomena of the Renaissance to any one cause
or circumstance, or limit them within the field of any one department of human
knowledge. If the students of art what they mean by the Renaissance,
we ask
they was
will reply that it the revolution effected in architecture, painting, and
sculpture by the recovery of antique monuments. Students of literature, philos-
ophy, and theology see in the Renaissance that discovery of manuscripts, that
passion for antiquity, that progress in philology and criticism, which led to a correct
knowledge of the classics, to a fresh taste in poetry, to new systems of thought,
to more accurate analysis, and finally to the Lutheran schism and the emancipation
of the conscience. Men of science will discourse
about the discovery of the solar
system by Copernicus and Galileo, the anatomy of Vesalius, and Harvey's theory
of the circulation of the blood. The political historian, again, has his own answer
to the question. The extinction of feudalism, the development of the great nation-
alities of Europe, the growth of monarchy, the limitation of the ecclesiastical
authority, and the erection of the papacy into an Italian kingdom, and, in the
last place, thegradual emergence of that sense of popular freedom which exploded
in the Revolution these are the aspects of the movement which engross his atten-
tion. Jurists will describe the dissolution of legal frictions based upon the false
arabesque or grotesque, as it
times a visit to the pope, sometimes a line about a piece of furniture. "Meanwhile
I contrived, by means of a pupil of Raffaello da Urbino, to get an order for one of
those great water-vessels called acquereccia, which are used for ornaments to place
on a sideboard. He wanted a pair made of equal size. One of them he intrusted
to Lucagnolo and the other to me."
Another writer of the same period says in a letter: " When I entered the house
of Maestro Giovanni, of whom I may have spoken, I was given bread and wine
from the sideboard and pressed to lodge for the night." In this letter is a second
reference of interest. "On my way out of the city, I fell in with three youths
whom I thought to be students. Two were weavers from Palermo, and the third a
40
STATE DINING-ROOM IN THE VINCIGLIATA, FIESOLE
hoped to learn but he talked little, and refused to tarry for wine."
more_erf his errand,
Unfortunately the letter gives no clue to the palace nor to the noble lady for
whom the coffer was intended.
In the listof new furniture was the chest of drawers. This was placed in the
bedchamber and was the forerunner of the bureau. During the sixteenth century
the bed took on a new form. The massive Gothic bed was no longer tolerated.
A lighter, more movable structure superseded it. Slender columns upheld a canopy
of brocade or tapestry, and curtains of similar material inclosed the sides. The
Renaissance bed was not a four-poster in the colonial acceptance of the word, for
the back was completely encased in wood. This headboard, if such it may be
called, was richly carved, and occasionally displayed the arms and insignia of the
family. The bed in the chamber of the Vincigliata, here illustrated, has exquis-
previous time. Panes of glass were no longer a luxury. With larger windows came
41
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
more light and better ventilation. A brighter, happier atmosphere was the result.
This changed condition was not confined to the upper story. The lower part of
the house was equally transformed. The shadowy corners, the dimly lighted stair-
cases, and the dark passageways were of the past. The perpetual twilight of the
medieval dwelling gave place to the sunshine of the Renaissance.
Among the host of articles which added to the comfort and convenience of the
Italian house were clocks, mirrors, and screens. Clocks were not the invention of
this century, but they were little used until this period. They were of small dimen-
sions, elaborated, incased in metal, and sometimes ornamented with pietra-dura
an inlay of ivory, horn, mother-of-pearl, and lapis lazuli. Screens were of stamped
and painted leather, and were usually imported from Spain. Mirrors were of two
varieties. The common ones were of polished steel; the more costly ones were of
glass. The frames in both instances were of metal and highly decorated. It was
in the small furnishings that the art of the house was at fault. Mirror frames,
clock cases, and candlesticks passed the border-line of good taste.
Chests gained rather than diminished in importance during this period.
They were no longer used as seats, for chairs were abundant. They were no longer
needed as receptacles for armor and implements of the chase, for hunting had fallen
into disuse, and the sixteenth century was one of peace. The housekeeper did not
require them for her household stores, for more convenient pieces of furniture were
designed especially for her needs. The family plate was no longer concealed in
them, for the silver was displayed on the sideboard by day and hidden in a safe
at night.
As dower or marriage coffers, the chests, or cassoni, of the Renaissance developed
into works of art. Many artists made their reputations in this field alone. The
finest gesso work, the purest gilding, the most intricate intarsia, and the best type
of carving entered into the construction of these coffers. The cartouche or
pierced shield was often a feature of the carved chest. Acanthus leaves and
delicately modeled arabesques were also favorite designs. One Andrea di Cosimo
was noted for his skill in adapting the cartouche. Vasari says of him: "It would
not be possible to describe the vast number of decorations in coffers and other works
of similar kind executed by Andrea di Cosimo, seeing that the whole city is full of
them. I must, therefore, decline the enumeration of them, but I cannot omit to
mention the circular escutcheons which were prepared by this artist, and to such
an extent that there could hardly be a wedding solemnized but that Andrea must
have his shops filled with such works, either for one or another of the citizens."
Many coffers were decorated with gesso, a composition of paint and gold-leaf.
But the most beautiful ones were of intarsia. In the fifteenth century intarsia, or
the inlaying of colored woods etched by hot irons, was little known outside of the
42
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
Carthusian monasteries. In the sixteenth century its fame reached the courts of
Francois I and Henry VIII. The inlay was composed of natural and dyed woods
scorched with hot sand or iron and polished with penetrating oils. Geometrical
patterns, copied from mosaics, cinque-cento ornament, landscapes, and figures were
executed in this medium. Each artist had his own methods of preparing the colors,
and these secrets were carefully guarded. Among the famous workers in intarsia,
the intarsia-tori, as they were called, were Fra Raffaello, Fra Damiano, and Fra
Bartolommeo. These men were monks of the Carthusian and Dominican orders
,
but they made marriage-coffers as well as choir stalls and sacristy presses. A
notable piece of this sixteenth-century inlay is the screen in the Charter House at
Pavia, decorated by Fra Bartolommeo. Another celebrated example is the chasse
containing the relics of St. Dominic in the church of Bergamo. This work was
executed by Fra Damiano, but it is "called "Charles V's intarsia." When Charles
of Spain visited Bergamo he refused to believe that the chasse was made of
inlaid wood, declaring it was the work of the brush. Nor was he convinced until a
piece of the wood was removed. In memory of this occasion, and the tribute paid
to the monk's skill, the wood was never replaced. Many museums and private
collections contain beautiful specimens of this Renaissance inlay, notable specimens
Mr. John Temple Leader, who has spent a fortune in restoring it. Although the
castle is no longer used as a dwelling there is no suggestion of a museum in the
.W^"v ^ than many Italian palaces. The latter have suffered from
>~*?4 i
^lU.S vandalism, and scarcely less
* f rom unfortunate restora-
I l^ffSBU^'^Qfi''
tion. The Whitney interiors
RENAISSANCE CARVING are very consistent.
Celebrated ceilings are
in the ducal palaces of Mantua, Genoa and Venice,
but, as a whole, they are very elaborate. Venetian
decorators treated the ceiling as an independent
thing, giving it a prominence which was fatal to the
proportions of the room. They painted pictures in
allthe available spaces which detracted from the
importance of the side walls and spoiled the har-
mony of floor, walls, and ceiling, which was one of
the great principles of Renaissance decoration.
Paneling formed a part of the woodwork of the
sixteenth-century Italian house, but it did not
cover the wall so completely as in many English
houses. It had the character of a high wainscoting
divided into long, plain panels, headed with smaller
ones, carved in low relief. Above the woodwork
tapestry extended to the cornice. During this period
AN
tapestry becomes a part of the wall. Hitherto it had ^SUJLiby RlpE
KMm
been simply a hanging, fastened at the top and moving with every wind that
passed through the room. "Look for hidden foes behind the arras," was an old
proverb which now'lost its significance.
Tapestries were woven in great quantities in Genoa, Venice, and Palermo.
The Gobelin weaves were comparatively new, as the industry, founded by Jean
Gobelin was in its infancy, but Lille and Arras had been pouring the products of their
looms into Italy for generations. Arras had given to the Italian language a new
word, arrazzi and this term, in a general way, was applied to all textile hangings.
Brocades, velvets, and decorated leathers were sometimes used in palaces, and
again, the space above the panels was filled with mural paintings. But the every-
day room the room in the citizen's house depended on the soft-toned tapestry
of Palermo and Genoa for a background, and as no pictures were placed against
Pictures were the luxury of the rich. The citizen's house, therefore, possessed
a harmony which the home of the patrician lacked. Tapestry was little fitted to
display paintings. The richly framed pictures, when brought into contact with
the richly figured walls, produced an effect of over-decoration which was ruinous
47
to the unity of the room. The walls were sufficiently pictorial in themselves, and
escaped being too decorative by the subdued color schemes of the weavers.
Mediaeval colors were glaring; those of the Renaissance were rich and somber.
Venetian red, Gobelin blue, the golden browns and deep yellows of Palermo, and
the silvery greens of Genoa were among the colors chosen by the tapestry-makers.
It remained for a later and French taste to introduce the pale, cold colors, and the
glittering gold which annihilated harmony and spoiled the relation of walls and
furniture.
48
DESK AND CHAIR USED BY SAVONAROLA, MUSEUM OP ST. MARK, FLORENCE
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
scribes. In the Museum of St. Mark in Florence is exhibited the desk used by
Savonarola. It has not a a scrap of carving. The monks orna-
line of decoration,
mented their chairs and benches, but their desks were as severe as their lives.
Savonarola's desk is beautiful in its straight lines and plain surfaces, and aside
from its connection with the great Dominican, has value as a piece of Renaissance
woodwork. The curule shown with the desk is interesting. It is sold in replica
all over Florence as "Savonarola's chair," the Roman origin being overshadowed
art,more dependent on its patrons than fine art,deterioratedwith the waning influence
of those great families who had created standards of taste. The work of the stone-cut-
ter, the silversmith, and the furniture-maker became aweak imitation of former beauty.
52
CHAPTER V
FURNITURE OF THE FRENCH RENAISSANCE
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: A TRANSITIONAL PERIOD SIMILAR
TO THAT OF ITALY BUT OF LONGER DURATION, GOTHIC ART BEING
MORE FIRMLY ROOTED IN FRANCE THAN IN THE SOUTH. THE
ORNAMENT OF THE FRENCH RENAISSANCE WAS IN A LIGHTER VEIN
AND LESS DEPENDENT ON ANTIQUE MODELS. DELICATE ARA-
BESQUES AND PIERCED SHIELDS WERE USED BY FURNITURE-MAKERS
AND DECORATORS. LATER IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY WOOD-
CARVERS COMBINED AN INTERLACED RIBBON ORNAMENT WITH THE
LOZENGE AND THE CARTOUCHE, WHICH WAS FOLLOWED BY THE
INTRODUCTION OF THE SHELL AND THE ORNATE SCROLL. FROM
-
Gothic. The fourth was the waning Renaissance when a threadbare tradition
remained. The strongest period was the century 1515-1610, covered by the reigns
of five sovereigns, three of whom left an indelible impress on the arts of the day.
Francois I, Henri II, and Henri IV created epochs; Francois II, Charles IX, and
Henri III did little for the honor of France and less for art. The forty-two years
encompassed by the reigns of these three monarchs, last of the house of Valois,
were among the blackest in history. Little that was notable was produced in
France between the death of Henri II and the accession of Henri of Navarre.
40
During the thirty odd years that Francois I occupied the throne, more was done
for the artistic development of France than had been accomplished in the combined
reigns of Charles VII, Louis XI, Charles VIII, and Louis XII, who had ruled for
nearly a century.
Francois came to his inheritance when the nation was ripe for a great art
revival, and he had the wit to seize the opportunity, and the brains and wealth to
make the most of it. His ambition was to raise France to an equality with Italy
and to this end he invited great architects and painters to his court.
Italy was divided into countless kingdoms and dukedoms, but France was
practically a united country. Italy had her Florentine school, her Venetian school,
her schools of Siena, Milan, and Naples. The art of France was centralized in Paris.
Francois called to his aid the greatest lights of Italy and Flanders, and began the
series of magnificentchateaux which to-day bear witness to his munificence. Hun-
dreds of native designers were employed in building Chambord, Chenonceau, and
Fontainebleau, who worked under the guidance of such men as Serlio and Vignola,
55
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
Primaticcio, Leonardo da Vinci, Andrea del Sarto, and Benvenuto Cellini. Among
the illustrious Frenchmen who joined forces with the Italian architects and deco-
rators, and later formed the national school, were Bullant, Lescot, and Delorme.
Besides building royal residences Fra^ois remodeled the Louvre and added
several rooms to the chateau
of Blois which had been par-
XV shunned it altogether. Napoleon revived its splendor for a brief period and
Louis Philippe spent a royal fortune in restoring it. Thanks to Louis Philippe the
is a faithful representation of the Fontainebleau of the
Fontainebleau of to-day
56
FURNITURE OF THE FRENCH RENAISSANCE
sixteenth century. Much of the woodwork is the same and many of the frescoes
have been merely retouched. The fireplaces and mantels have been restored from
sketches and plans which had been carefully preserved.
The woodwork of the French Renaissance differed materially from Italian wood-
work of the same period. The ornament was in a lighter vein, the carving more
open, and less dependent on antique
models. Even when the work was
executed by Italian designers it was
imbued with the French spirit. This
is especially noticeable in the treatment
Less remarkable in an architectural way than the Francois I period the Henri
II surpassed it in the industrial arts. Furniture, textiles, porcelains, and book-
bindings were triumphs of artistic achievement. Jean Grolier, in his exquisite
bindings, carried the intersecting ribbon ornamentation to a high degree of
beauty, suggesting the interlaced work of old Celtic and Saracenic patterns. The
exquisite Oiron faience, better known as "Henri Deux ware," was decorated with
this scheme of ornament. In the intricate strap-and-band decoration furniture-
makers found an extensive field for ingenuity. The pierced shield, the lozenge, the
flat cartouche, were combined with interlaced lines in countless ways. Grotesque
heads in low relief were also used in connection with strap-work, particularly in
cabinets, presses, and armoires. In the Cluny Museum is a mourning cabinet
belonging to Diane de Poitiers, ornamented with bands of interlacing ribbons
painted in dull colors. Another cabinet with similar decorations came from Clair-
vaux Abbey. A chest with Henri's monogram has narrow lines of marquetry in
a pattern that might have been a direct copy of a book-cover. There are three
coffers in the Louvre, and two in Fontainebleau, which display this handling.
In the cabinet furniture-makers found the finest medium for their talents. So
long as ornament was controlled and made subordinate to the design, every piece of
carving from the hand of the French designer was a thing of beauty. Delicate
arabesques and the more severe strap-work appeared to great advantage in the
cabinet. The construction of this article gave scope for a treatment which was
impossible in the bed, the chair, or the table. What the chest was in the hands of
the mediaeval craftsman, the cabinet became in the hands of the furniture-maker
of the French Renaissance it was the highest exponent of the craftsman's skill.
;
Fontainebleau, Blois, the Louvre, and the Cluny contain many beautiful specimens
of this period, roughly spanned by the years 1550 and 1600.
In this country there are fine specimens in museums and private collections,
but they lose much in being separated from their original setting a remark that
may be made in reference to all Renaissance furniture. In the Lawrence room in
58
FIREPLACE BUILT FOR CLAUDE, WIFE OF FRANCOIS I, CHATEAU OF BLOIS
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, an admirable effect is gained by the use of Renais-
sance panels which line the walls. Against this background the carved cabinets,
the chairs, and the pieces of fine armor have a consistent setting. Much of
Benvenuto Cellini's work is here in replica. The shield and helmet made for
Francois I and the suit of armor belonging to Henri II, designed by Cellini and
executed by his pupil Pilon, are both exhibited. Pilon equaled Cellini in strength,
and Cousin and Jean Goujon surpassed him in delicacy. In the andirons of the many
fireplaces of Fontainebleau and Blois may be seen the skill and ingenuity of
French metal-workers.
When Henri IV came to the throne the sixteenth century was nearing its close.
Under Henri III the arts had declined. Henri of Navarre revived the glories of
Fontainebleau and gave a renewed impetus to the industries of France. But times
had changed and the creative force of the Renaissance was gone. Henri's queen,
Marie de' Medici, cared little for French taste and sought to introduce Italian work-
men at court. Furniture of her reign was either imported from Italy or patterned
closely on Italian models. Venetian brocades and Genoese velvets replaced French
and Flemish tapestries. Architecture, so far as the queen had a voice in the matter,
was decidedly Italian. After Henri's death Marie commissioned Jacques Debrosse
to build the Luxembourg. The exterior was planned after the Pitti palace, the
queen's early home, and remains an interesting architectural monument to this
remarkable woman.
In the chateau of Blois a chamber where Marie de' Medici passed the bitter
is
hours of her captivity. It has been described by Richard Sudbury in his delightful
of Catherine and her cousin Marie de' Medici. The whole suite, consisting of halls,
of private rooms and galleries, overlooking the town, is in a perfect state of
restoration. The French government has devoted much time and money to the
preservation of old designs and styles of decoration. Everywhere the blue and
yellow polished tiles, representing the or and azure of heraldry, are noticeable in
their ever-changing designs upon the floor. The thick beams of the ceiling,
decorated in the manner peculiar to the Renaissance, blend with that of the walls,
and make us believe that it is yesterday in which we are living rather than to-day.
A beautiful little chamber leads out to the private chapel of the king. It is
lined with tiny wooden panels, two hundred and forty in number, which are of
different design and highly ornamented in gold and brown. The ceiling is so similar
60
FIREPLACE IN THE GALLERY OF HENRI II, TONTAINEBLEAU
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
to the walls that it gives to the whole the appearance of a little jewel-box built
to inclose some royal gem. And indeed it did once long ago, for hard by is a
window where Marie de' Medici, escaped after twenty years of captivity in
this chamber."
Women wielded a powerful influence on the arts of France during the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries. Pious Anne of Brittany, renowned for her Book of
Hours, cannot be
reckoned as an im-
portant figure of her
day so far as the arts
are concerned, but a
Portugal, of
sister
Charles V, most fam-
ous monarch of his
time after Francois
himself, was notable
in a century of notable
women. Her interest
in thedevelopment
of French architec-
ture and decorative
art was very keen.
Catherine de' Medici's
talents were largely
expended on court
intrigues, but Diane
de Poitiers was an
important factor in
molding taste in the
62
FURNITURE OF THE FRENCH RENAISSANCE
Anne's bedchamber is one of the most sumptuous of the apartments in Fon-
The chandelierin Anne's bedchamber belongs to the late Louis XIII period
and oppressively gorgeous. Beneath each candle-holder is a huge pendant of
is
During the Henri IV period the shell, as a motif in wood-carving, came into
prominence. At first its use was confined to finials of chairs and cabinets where
it was extremely effective. During Louis XIII's reign the shell passed into
another stage of its existence. It formed a part of nearly every piece of furniture,
and was repeated in the decoration of doors and mantels. With the abuse of the
shell began the long reign of rococo ornament literally rock and shell rocaille
et coquille which was one of the most remarkable in the history of decoration.
Simon Vouet, who bore somewhat the same relation to Louis XIII that his pupil,
Lebrun, did to Louis XIV, was largely responsible for the florid ornamentation of
the late Renaissance in France. He used the heavily scrolled cartouche, the fancy
pilaster, the ponderous garland of fruits and flowers, the round cherub face and the
fantastic shell. Doors and mantels were oppressively ornate and furniture, in
order to conform to the same architectural scheme, was equally florid.
The best furniture of this period the middle of the seventeenth century was
of Flemish design. Furniture-makers were divided into two groups; those who
followed the lead of Simon Vouet whose inspiration was of Italian origin, and
those who clung to the simpler sturdy designs popular in the Low Countries.
Thus the furniture of the Louis XIII epoch represents two types. The first
was undoubtedly more in tune with the ornate decorative schemes of the day the ;
second was unquestionably the more beautiful, though always a little incongruous
with gilded walls. The direct Flemish influence of the late French Renaissance has
been attributed to Rubens who visited Paris at the request of Marie de' Medici in
the early part of the seventeenth century. This influence strengthened in the
succeeding reign and did not end until the Louis XIV style was well established.
The furniture of Louis XIII's time was much more varied than that of the
preceding reign. There were sets of chairs; six or twelve single chairs, four arm-
chairs,and two sofas all constructed on the same lines and upholstered in the same
^manner. Designs in stuffs had changed. Bouquets, knots of ribbon, and garlands
64
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
of flowers replaced the small and more classic patterns. Life was growing more
luxurious and it was transforming furniture. It was not only transforming, it was
creating. The divan with high curved back, padded with velvet or brocade, was
the product of Louis XIII's reign; so also was the console.
Prints and illuminations of the time of Louis XIII show a variety of chairs
chairs for the master of the house, the mistress, the children, and special shapes
for the servants. Litchfield says that the word "chaise," as a diminutive for
"chaire," found its way into the French vocabulary at this period.
With the inauguration of the scroll and shell a different form of arm-chair came
into existence. The seat was lower, the arms more curving, the upholstery more
comfortable. Severity of line was lost and with it the beauty of line also. To
balance the broader and deeper seat, larger supports were necessary, and these
gave to the chair a heaviness which the light and delicate ornament accentuated.
This description applies to the French chair of Italian origin. The Flemish
chair had a high seat, a comparatively low back, and turned legs connected by
strong, rectangular braces. The French chair was supported by an X-brace, ter-
minating in the center with a scroll. The chair designated as the "Regency of
Anne of Austria," illustrated in Chapter IX, is a refined type of this style. The
chair on page 57 combines the best characteristics of early seventeenth-century
Flemish and French designing. Here is admirable construction united with
admirable ornamentation. The outlines are Flemish but not extreme Flemish.
The seat is lower and the back is higher than in many Flemish chairs of the
period. The carving is French but is applied after the manner of the Flemish
craftsmen. The turned legs and carved brace are Flemish, too, but treated with
French delicacy. The presence of the cane back is worthy of note, for it is
seldom found in French chairs of this period. The cane back was a characteristic
feature of the Flemish chair of the late seventeenth century and in various
guises was known in England, Italy, and Spain. The chair in Blois is a particu-
larly attractive example, and illustrates the fact that in an age of excessive
decoration there was an occasional designer who could follow the dictates of
fashion and yet keep his work free from extravagance. In the Salon Louis XIII
are chairs which illustrate the point in hand. They are built on prescribed
lines but are severely plain. The circular X-brace is without carving and the
arms are straighter than in many chairs of the day. There is no hint of the shell
or the acanthus leaf in any part of the construction.
This lofty apartment was decorated and furnished for Henri IV whose initials,
combined with those of Marie de' Medici, are still visible in the painted cornice.
The walls are divided into small panels painted with flowers and landscapes, and
separated by carved borders. The large pictures form a permanent part of the
66
FURNITURE OF THE FRENCH RENAISSANCE
decoration, and are the work of Ambroise Du Bo is. These huge canvases were
painted for Henri IV and represent scenes from, the story of Theagenes and Char-
icles. Between the pictures are carved arabesques of fruit and flowers picked out
in gold. The room does not equal the gallery of Henri II in Fontainebleau, nor
can it
approach simplein
67
CHAPTER VI
FURXITURE-MAKINd IX GERMAXY AXD THE LOW
COUNTRIES
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: IX FLAXDERS AND HOLLAND AFTER
A BRIEF PERIOD OF ASSIMILATION THE RENAISSANCE DEVELOPED
OX ORIGINAL LINES. WOOD CARVERS ADAPTED THE ARABESQUE
AXD THE CARTOUCHE TO A SIMPLER, STURDIER FORM OF ORNA-
MENT THAX WAS KXOWX IN FRANCE AXD ITALY. HEADS AXD
GROTESQUE MASKS WERE INTRODUCED INTO CABINET WORK,
BUT ALWAYS WITH MARKED EFFECT. THE DUTCH EXCELLED
IN MARQUETRY, AXD THE FLEMIXGS IN THE USE OF CANE, BOTH
PHASES, OF WORK EXERTING A POWERFUL INFLUENCE ON THE
FURXITURE-MAKING OF OTHER COUNTRIES. DURING THE EARLY
SIXTEENTH CENTURY THE GERMANS COMBINED RENAISSANCE
DETAILS WITH GOTHIC CONSTRUCTION. LATER A MORE CON-
SISTENT TYPE WAS ESTABLISHED IN WHICH FINE METAL WORK
WAS CONSPICUOUS.
CHAPTER YI
FURNITURE-MAKING IN GERMANY AND THE LOW COUNTRIES
close connection politically between Flanders, Spain, and Germany
brought about a curious affinity between the various phases of the Renais-
THE sance known as Flemish, Spanish, and German. Charles, king of Spain was
emperor of Germany, and also count of Flanders and duke of Burgundy.
The intercourse between Spain and the Low Countries had for several centuries
been very intimate. When Marie of Burgundy married Archduke Maximilian,
Austria became a part of the royal circle which now included Spain, Germany,
Holland, and Flanders. By this marriage the Low Countries were annexed to the
Austrian crown, a rich possession at this period of the world's history.
The development of the Renaissance in Holland and Flanders, with its subse-
quent influence on the handicraft of other nations, one of the most interesting
is
chapters in the history of industrial art.Holland and Flanders accepted the move-
ment tardily and never succumbed to it as did the French and the Italians. Just
as Gothic ornament remained beautiful in the Low Countries long after it had
become extravagant in France, so the ornament of the Renaissance remained cohe-
rent long after it had become grotesque in France and England.
Holland and Flanders reversed the usual order of Renaissance development.
The early and middle periods were less creditable than the later phases. The
Italians and the French achieved their triumphs before the advent of the seventeenth
century, but the Dutch and the Flemings brought their work to perfection after
the year 1600. If the English were the great furniture-makers of the eigh-
teenth century, the inhabitants of the Low Countries were the great furniture-
makers of the seventeenth. The part that Holland and Flanders played in Eng-
land's triumphs cannot be overestimated. The late Jacobean and the Queen Anne
styles, both of which were a preparation for the great eighteenth-century styles,
were of Dutch origin.
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Flemish and Dutch work
was so closely allied that the two adjectives are often used interchangeably.
Previous to this date there was a greater difference in the arts of the two
countries. Flanders was more closely in touch with France, and Holland with
Germany. The hall of the Gruuthuuse, shown on page 75, is a typical Flemish
interior of a semi-public nature. The mantel is of stone and brick, with a simple
hood, ornamented in low relief. The severity of this room is in startling contrast
71
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
workmanship. Contem-
porary with the table is
interesting to com-
p a r e this sixteenth-
century specimen with
the fine fifteenth-cen-
these details the constructive qualities are one and the same. When it comes
to ornament there is a hundred years' difference in time, and a world of difference
in the treatment. Each is typical of its kind and each is a beautiful specimen of
wood-carving.
Flemish cabinet-making had a wide influence on the furniture-makers of other
countries, but Flemish chair-making exerted a greater one. The chair with turned
legs and braces traveled from one country to another, but no design equaled in
traveling capacity the cane chair of Flanders. It found its way to France, Spain,
England and later to America, each country adding a few characteristics. In
England it took root so firmly that for years it was classed as Jacobean, and still
masquerades as such in many old catalogues and inventories. The attributes of
the pure Flemish design were a back and seat of finely woven cane, feet termi-
nating in an outward scroll, three turned stretchers, and a carved under brace
following in general lines the carving of the back The beautiful chair in Blois,
described in the preceding chapter, is a French adaptation of the style.
Holland's chief contribution to furniture-making of the seventeenth century
was her exquisite marquetry. Holland's commercial intercourse with the orient
gave her a knowledge of rare tropical woods, and it is not surprising that she was
one of the first nations to use veneering as a form of decoration. Intarsia had
been carried to a high degree of perfection in Italy. France later in the century
gave to the world Andre Charles Boulle whose marvelous work in brass and
shell stands unrivaled. Spain led in the intricate inlaying of ivory and silver
a legacy from the Moors. But to Holland belongs the honor of bringing to per-
fection the veneer of colored woods known as "marquetry."
Hamilton Jackson in his book, Intarsia and Marquetry, says "The word 'in-
tarsia' isderived from the Latin 'interserere,' to insert, according to the best Italian
authorities, though Scherer says there was a similar word, 'tausia,' which was applied
to the inlaying of gold and silver in some other metal, an art practiced in Damascus,
and there called damascening; and that at first the two words meant the same
thing, but after a time one was applied to work in wood and the other to metal-
work. The word 'tausia' is said to be of Arabic origin, and there is no doubt that
the art is oriental. It perhaps reached Europe either by way of Sicily or through
the Spanish Moors. "Marquetry," on the other hand, is a word of much later origin,
and comes from the French "marqueter," to spot, to mark. It seems, therefore,
accurate to apply the former term to those inlays of wood in which a space is first
74
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
tiful specimens of this work in the form of cupboards and kasses. These are
still preserved by the descendants of the original owners and form, in their entirety,
an almost complete history of the art as applied to the decoration of furniture
from the middle of the seventeenth century until late in the eighteenth century.
In Germany there was a long transitional period during which the lingering
traditions of Gothic art died slowly. The early phases of the Renaissance show
the grafting of the new upon the old. This mixture of Gothic and Renaissance
was less successful in that country than in France where a happier union prevailed.
The best examples of German wood-carving of the early sixteenth century were
of ecclesiastical origin. Choir stalls and altar-pieces were richly decorated in the
manner of the day. In domestic architecture the combination of Gothic con-
struction and Renaissance ornament was less successful. A certain quaintness,
however, marked all German handicraft of this period and early Renaissance
specimens are eagerly sought to-day. Following the transitional period came the
Flemish-German period in which a marked similarity existed between the work
ROOM IN AN OLD DUTCH HOME, EDAM, HOLLAND, FURNITURE OP THE SEVENTEENTH AND
EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES
76
GERMAN PRESS, TYPICAL EXAMPLE OF RENAISSANCE CARVING
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
of Flanders and Germany. Spanish was fleeting and was mainly confined
influence
to a curious ornamentation of silverand ivory based on Saracenic patterns.
Toward the middle of the sixteenth century German handicraft became more
individual and the late Renaissance development was a distinct phase. Not
until the late seventeenth century, when German designers became engulfed in the
extreme rococo, did the work of this nation lose its beauty and vitality. Augs-
burg, Dresden, Munich, Cologne, and Nuremburg contain many sixteenth-century
specimens. Chairs, cupboards, and presses of this period are beautiful specimens
of wood-carving. The great presses of this century are the most characteristic
pieces of furniture. Made of oak and walnut with carved panels and heavy
doors they are as substantial to-day as when they came from the hands of their
maker. The press, illustrated on the preceding page, is made of walnut with an
unusually fine scheme of decoration. The plain surfaces are well distributed
and the ornament, although elaborate, is neither heavy nor fantastic. The lock is
concealed in the carving, while the key repeats the lines of the ornament. The
ball-feet are worthy of note as they indicate a new feature of furniture-making.
78
CHAPTER VII
FURNITURE OF THE SPANISH RENAISSANCE
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: A BLENDING OF RENAISSANCE
AND MOORISH ORNAMENT LARGELY TINCTURED WITH FLEMISH
INFLUENCE. FURNITURE-MAKERS COMBINED RARE WOODS WITH
SILVER AND IVORY, DEPENDING UPON INLAY INSTEAD OF CARV-
ING FOR DECORATIVE EFFECT.
CHAPTER VII
FURNITURE OF THE SPANISH RENAISSANCE
Gothic ornament was largely dominated by Saracenic influence, so it was
AS with the ornament of the Renaissance. Through all the work of Spanish
craftsmen runs a vein of Moorish feeling. It is shown in all the arts, espe-
cially in that of the wood-carver. Many pieces of furniture of this period are
distinctly Moorish; others combine a strong Italian or Flemish influence.
Furniture was imported in quantities and the fact that an old piece is found
in Spain does not always indicate that it is of Spanish origin. Charles V, anxious
to equal his royal brother-in-law in the splendor of his court, invited workmen
from the important cities of Europe to establish their crafts in Seville, Toledo,
Valladolid, and Vargua. Among the foreign workmen who took up their residence
on Spanish soil were wood-carvers, tapestry- weavers, marqueters, inlayers, and
goldsmiths. Moorish inlaying was already a perfected craft and visiting artisans
in this branch learned more than they gave. The metal-work of the peninsula
had been for centuries of a high order, especially in the way of damascening and
niello work.
Rare and beautiful woods entered into the composition of Spanish furniture
during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. From her possessions in the
east Spain imported ebony and ivory which were utilized in the making of
coffers and cabinets' Many of the latter were plain on the exterior, except for
beautifully wrought locks and hinges. The ornament was confined to the interior
and was of exquisite workmanship. The connection between the chest and the
cabinet seems to have been a close one in Spain. The massive cupboards and
presses of the north found little favor among native designers. The typical
Spanisji cabinet was an elevated chest supported by carved or turned columns.
Instead of doors there was a drop lid which could be lowered by a turn of a key.
Inside were many drawers and compartments ornamented in gold and vermilion,
or showing the characteristic combination of ivory and silver. Miniature arches,
colonnades, and doors were revealed by the turning key. "All somewhat bizarre,"
says an English critic, "and altogether rather barbarous, but a rich and effective
treatment." Silver was used to such an extent in the making of furniture that it
was forbidden by a royal edict in the latter part of the sixteenth century. "No
cabinets, desks, coffers, braziers, tables, or other articles decorated with stamped,
raised, carved, or plain silver should be manufactured."
81
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
It has the scrolled under-brace, the fine hoof feet, and other distinctive marks of
the pure Spanish type. It is one of the best examples of its kind in America.
A characteristic Spanish -Flemish design may be found in the chapter entitled Colo-
nial Furniture, page 172. This chair shows the mingling of the two styles, and is of
English origin.
82
CHAPTER VIII
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE SIXTEENTH AND
SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE! FIRST THE ENGLISH RENAISSANCE
OR TUDOR WHICH WAS A MINGLING OF FLEMISH AND ITALIAN
GRAFTED UPON GOTHIC. SECOND, LATE TUDOR OR ELIZABETHAN,
SHOWING GREATER UNITY; STRAP-WORK AND PANELING WERE
FEATURES OF THIS PERIOD. THIRD, JACOBEAN COVERING NEARLY
A CENTURY, AND INCLUDING MANY TYPES. FURNITURE WAS
PANELED AND CARVED UNTIL WALNUT WAS INTRODUCED WHEN
VENEER AND MARQUETRY BECAME POPULAR. AMONG JACOBEAN
CHARACTERISTICS WERE THE SPIRAL LEG, THE RISING PANEL,
"DOG TOOTH" AND SCROLL BORDERS, AND SPINDLE ORNAMENTS.
WITH THE ACCESSION OF WILLIAM OF ORANGE, IN 1688, DUTCH
INFLUENCE BECAME PARAMOUNT, AND ENGLISH FURNITURE
WAS SLOWLY REVOLUTIONIZED THE PERFECTED STYLE BEING
KNOWN AS QUEEN ANNE.
CHAPTER VIII
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH
CENTURIES
Henry VIII returned from his meeting with Francois I and Charles
WHEN V on the Field of the Cloth of Gold, he sought to introduce into England
some of the magnificence that characterized the French court. Impor-
tant changes in Windsor and Hampton date from this event. The great tide
of the Renaissance, however, had reached England before this momentous gather-
ing of sovereigns.
Torrigiano, a contemporary of Leonardo da Vinci, was commissioned to erect
the tomb of Henry VII. His treatment was naturally in the style of the Renais-
sance which was approaching its first flower in Italy. Holbein's sojourn in England
was an important link in the chain which was strengthened by distinguished visi-
tors from France, Italy, and Flanders.
The sixteenth century was a period of great architectural activity in England.
Hardwick Hall and Longleat are splendid specimens of the early Renaissance.
The castle of None Such erected by Henry VIII, were it now in existence, would
form a valuable addition to Renaissance architecture, for it embodied the work
of many celebrities. John of Padua was court architect and to him was intrusted
the larger share of the work. It was the king's wish to have the palace equal Fon-
tainebleau, and he spared no expense in carrying out this desire.
The style known as "English Renaissance" or "Tudor" was a mingling of Italian,
French, and Flemish, the latter largely predominating. It was not until the
accession of Elizabeth that the style became distinctive. During her long reign
greater encouragement was given to native workmen, and the style known as
"Elizabethan" was much more English than that of the early Tudors.
Two marked phases in interior work existed under the Tudor sovereigns. The
first was developed in Henry VIII's time; the second reached its culmination
under Elizabeth. The first was the "linen-fold" motive in wood paneling and
furniture; the second was "strap- work," mentioned in connection with the Henri
II period which was contemporaneous with the Elizabethan. From France via
Flanders the linen pattern is supposed to have emanated, although its origin is
somewhat obscure. It was introduced into England during the reign of Henry
VII and appears to have won instant approval. Like strap-work it appealed
strongly to English taste. The treatment of the pattern suggested folds of linen
arranged in long, perpendicular lines.
85
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
A room in Hampton Court is paneled in this manner and dates from the reign
of Henry VIII. Haddon Hall, Parkham, and Oxbridge Castle contain rooms with
similar woodwork. This scheme of decoration, which lasted for nearly a century
in England, had no connection with the Renaissance. It has been called the latest
survival of the Gothic and the last of mediaeval ornament. It was known in the
monasteries of France long before it reached England, and it is possible that it
may have been in use as early as 1450 in Flanders and Germany. In England its
development was wholly secular and, with few exceptions, was confined to wall
treatment. The folds were executed in low relief and, during the best period,
were without ornament. A beautiful cupboard, carved in this manner, owned by
Guy F. Laking, Esq., is shown in this chapter. This specimen belongs to the early
sixteenth century and is of French origin.
When Elizabeth came to the throne the linen pattern had lost its simplicity.
It gradually declined in favor and another style took its place. The beauty of
Elizabethan strap-work has been mentioned. The development of this scheme of
decoration, like its predecessor, was of slow growth, and was not perfected until
late in Elizabeth's reign. It survived this sovereign many years, finding favor
under the Stuarts. Haddon and Hardwick Halls contain many examples of strap-
work. Over the fireplace in the Presence chamber of Hardwick is a simple inter-
pretation of the motif, combined with the round and oval lozenge. In the state
dining-room is a stone chimney-piece with a more elaborate treatment. A plain
entablature, with an inscription, is surrounded by intricate strap-work in which
figures are introduced. The date of the completion of the hall, 1597, is cut
in the stone. Hardwick as a whole is a magnificent example of Elizabethan
decoration.
The great Presence chamber shows another scheme of wall treatment which was
in high favor towards the close of the sixteenth century. This was the plastered
frieze used in connection with wood paneling or tapestry. The great tapestry-
weaving districts of Flanders and the Loire were sending forth their beautiful
productions to enrich the manor houses across the channel. The finest Flemish
tapestries are of this century,and Hardwick has many beautiful specimens, the
most elaborate hanging in the Audience or Presence room, which is illustrated in
this chapter. Here the queen was received when she honored Bess of Hardwick,
the Countess of Shrewsbury, with her visits. As a picturesque figure of her day
Bess of Hardwick almost rivals Queen Bess. Her wit, her beauty, her money, and
her many marriages have been the theme of numerous stories. As a romantic
heroine for an historical novel the Countess of Shrewsbury leaves little to be
desired, and no background could be more kaleidoscopic than beautiful old Hard-
wick. The Presence chamber, where so many important events have been en-
LINEN-FOLD CUPBOARD, SIXTEENTH CENTURY
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
belongs to the late sixteenth century. The table is the type that followed the
board-and-trestle. The stretchers, or "struts," as they were then called in England,
are a few inches from the ground. This long and narrow style remained the
accepted form until late the Stuart period.
in The round table with many
turned supports, known in America as the "thousand-legged table," and in England
as the "gate-leg table," was the successor of the heavy Elizabethan pattern. In
the early Jacobean period (from the accession of James I until the beginning of the
Commonwealth) many variations of the long table were in use. The legs were
often skilfully turned, showing balls and rectangles, the struts were grooved, and
carved with the "dog-tooth" pattern; occasionally brackets were placed beneath
the top, ornamented in similar manner.
Chairs, as the seventeenth century progressed, became more varied and were
constructed with a greater regard for comfort. During the Tudor period there were
few chairs in general use. Benches and stools were the common seats of the day.
The Flemish chair, with high seat and low back, was placed in halls and audience
rooms. It was seldom seen in the homes. The turned chair, with crude supports
and heavy spindles, was a more common style and is interesting to Americans,
inasmuch as it was the earliest type imported in the colonies. Governor Carver
and Elder Brewster brought turned chairs with them in the Mayflower which are
now exhibited in Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth.
The most important chair of Elizabeth's day and of the succeeding reign was
the wainscot chair which, as its name indicates, was of oak. This was a mas-
sive piece of workmanship, far above the turned chair in point of execution and /
often carved with strap-work, scrolls and bits of Renaissance ornament. A plain
example of the wainscot chair is seen in Liberty Hall, Philadelphia, and a more
elaborate specimen Essex Institute, Salem. The latter is a fine piece
in the
of Elizabethan furniture and would be rated as such in England.
The wainscot table was a little later in date than the wainscot chair. It was
a combination chair and table, the back of the seat forming the top of the table.
It did not supersede the long table previously mentioned, but was used in connec-
"
tion with it until the more convenient gate-leg table" became the accepted pat-
tern. Esther Singleton, in writing of oak furniture of the sixteenth and seven-
teenth centuries, says of the word wainscot: "The name, according to Skeat,
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
being derived from the low Danish "wagenschot", the best kind of oak wood, well
grained and without knots That wainscot was applied to the wood
rather than the paneling we learn from Harrison's Historical Description of the
Land of Britaine (1587), where he says, 'that the oak grown in Bardfield Park,
Essex, is the finest for joiner's craft, for ofttimes have I scene of their works made
of that oak so fine and fair as most of the wainscot that is brought hither out of
"
Danske.'
The word "joined" is a frequent one in old annals. In 1574 an inventory of
the furniture in Thomas Cumberworth's house included: "A presse of waynscott
wt diverse shelffes, 3 thrown cheyers, 3 joyned forms, 2 joyned tables, 1 pair of
bedstocks, 1 grete waynscott cheyer, 1 waynscott bed, 1 court-cupboarde, 6
joyned stools." Joined furniture was made without nails, being fastened with
mortise and tenon, a method almost as old as furniture-making itself. Presses and
cupboards continued to be of colossal dimensions, and by their construction offered
scope for intricate strap-work, paneling and figure work. "Court" and "livery"
cupboards are frequently mentioned in sixteenth century inventories. Many are
the interpretationsby modern writers of the words "court" and "livery." The
former sometimes translated "short," the latter "service."
is Whatever their
original meaning may have been it is certain that during the late seventeenth
century, both in England and America, the words "court" and "livery" were used
interchangeably, and always in connection with a high cupboard inclosed with
doors. Many early allusions to this piece of furniture include silverware. In
Romeo and Juliet, a servant in Capulet's house says: "Away with joint stools,
remove the court cupboard, look to the plate." In Chapman's May Day, pub-
"And so for the feast, you have your court cupboards
lished in 1611, occur the lines,
planted with flagons, cups, beakers, bowls, goblets, basins, and ewers"; and again:
"Here shall stand my court cupboard, with its furniture of plate." Another refer-
ence reads, "With a lean visage like a carved face on a court cupboard."
The piece of furniture thus designated in Thomas Cumberworth's inventory was
doubtless unlike the press, and from the fact that the word "wainscot" is not
used, was probably not of oak. The "thrown" chairs mentioned were of the turned
variety. This inventory is interesting as it shows the furniture in a home of
an Englishman of the middle class. "Bedstocks" were built into the wall and were
the common beds of the period, setting aside the pallets of straw which were still
used by the lower classes. The "great bed" mentioned was probably of carved
oak and the most important piece of furniture in the house. The bedsteads of
Elizabeth's day were huge affairs, many of them of great value. Some of the finer
ones are preserved in the old manor houses and show a strange mingling of Renais-
sance and Gothic. In the homes of the nobility there was always a state bed,
90
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
One of the distinctive features of Jacobean furniture was the spiral leg which
isseen in chairs, cupboards, and chests of drawers. The finest type of spiral was
not of the turned variety, but carved by hand. The most interesting pieces of
this periodwere elevated cupboards standing on high spiral supports.
During the Commonwealth progress was retarded. The conditions of the country
were not such as to foster the work of the decorator and furniture-maker. With
the Restoration came prosperity and a renewed interest in the arts of peace.
Charles II had spent a large part of his life in France and was thoroughly imbued
with luxurious ideas which he had profitably studied at the court of Louis XIV.
Furniture of this reign is somewhat grotesque, combining a medley of designs,
French, English, and Flemish. One marked change for good was the tendency
toward more graceful forms. The introduction of walnut made a startling
lighter,
difference in furniture-designing. The wood did not lend itself to carving and
new effects were obtained by veneer and inlay. Cupboards and chests of the late
seventeenth century show a variety of decoration. One unique scheme of orna-
ment had a great vogue in England and was widely copied in this country. A
plain surface was ornamented with turned pieces of a different wood, cut in the
shape of ovals, drops, spindles, and nail heads. Sometimes the pieces were painted,
in order to give variety to the scheme. According to Dr. Irving W. Lyon, the
pioneer writer on colonial furniture in America, drop ornaments were first used by
Peter Koek, a Fleming, who decorated his furniture with carrot-shaped pieces of
painted wood. "Nail heads" the same writer traces to a Norman origin, stating
that the true nail head was diamond-shaped. Some of this applied-ornament is
highly decorative, and marks a distinct epoch in furniture-making. Paneling
during the Stuart period remained in favor and was diversified by diamond-
94
FURNITURE OF SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES
shaped moldings. The "rising" panel belongs to this period and the depressed or
sunken panel to Elizabeth's reign.
A example of applied-ornament is shown in the chest of draw-
characteristic
ers in Memorial Hall, Deerfield, Massachusetts. According to tradition this piece
of furniture was brought from Scotland in the late seventeenth century.
The adjective "Jacobean" has been variously interpreted by furniture writers; some
limiting the word to the reigns of James I and James II, others using it in a broader
sense and including the furniture of the entire Stuart line. The term is used in the
wider meaning in this chapter
The accession of William of Orange, in 1688, was a turning-point in English
furniture-making. The best that Holland possessed passed into England, and
from that date a beautiful simplicity was manifest in English handicraft. The
Flemish chair of cane had already influenced chair-making, and was a distinctive
feature of the late Jacobean period. Prominent among Dutch innovations was
the cabriole leg, a furniture accessory which was destined to revolutionize the chair,
the table, and the chest of drawers. Marquetry was freely used over large plain
.surfaces, and withpopularity paneling declined in favor.
its
Changes in furniture-making are gradual. It was not until the reign of Queen
Anne that the Dutch and English designs were assimilated. The perfected style
is known by the name of this sovereign and belongs to the early part of the
eighteenth century.
95
CHAPTER IX
LOUIS XIV FURNITURE
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: A FORMAL ROCOCO IN WHICH PRO-
PORTION" AND BALANCE WERE SALIENT FEATURES. IMPORTANT
DETAILS WERE THE SHELL, THE CLASSIC ACANTHUS, THE RAM's
HEAD, THE MASK, AND THE SATYR. IN THE EARLY PERIOD FUR-
NITURE WAS MASSIVE AND THE DESIGNS OF THE LOUIS XIII STYLE
WERE PERPETUATED. CARVING WAS LARGELY SUPERSEDED BY
MARQUETRY AND BY CHISELED MOUNTS OF ORMOLU AND BRONZE.
CHAPTER IX
LOUIS XIV FURNITURE
three styles known respectively as Louis XIV, Louis XV, and Louis
exchequer. The regency was brief, for Louis, according to the laws of France,
99
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
reached his majority at the age of thirteen, but during that period he had learned
a lesson in extravagance that was destined to bear fruit at Versailles
It was not until the death of Mazarin that the young king displayed the qualities
of leadership which made him
the central figure in Europe.
No previous monarch of France
had so dominated other nations.
His marriage with Marie The-
resa, daughter of Philip IV,
gave him a hold on Spain
and Austria; his invasion of
Franche-Comte, a footing in
Flanders; his conquest of sev-
eral Dutch provinces, a grasp
on Holland; his purchase of
Dunkirk from Charles II, a
loophole in England. All these
interests had an influence on
the arts of the day. Spanish,
Dutch, Italian, and Scotch
craftsmen were invited to
gardener Andre Le Notre. The greatest artists of the day were employed in dec-
orating the interior and the greatest designers in planning the furnishings. The
finest products of the silk and tapestry looms of France were utilized for the hang-
ings. The rarest woods of the world were selected for the furniture. Craftsmen
of thekingdom vied with each other in perfecting their art so that the palace of
Le Grand Monarque should stand unrivaled.
Madame de Sevigne who penned so
many graphic pictures of court life,
wrote, in 1676, to her daughter: "Let
me inform you, my child, of a change
of scene which will appear to you as
agreeable as does to every one. I
it
"That agreeable confusion without confusion of all that is most select lasts
from three to six. At that hour their majesties enter their carriages. Some go
in gondolas on the canal, w here there is music.
r
At ten o'clock all return, when
a comedy is performed; midnight strikes and then all is over."
The apartment to which Madame de SeVigne" referred was undoubtedly the
Salon de la Guerre, mentioned by Mrs. Kingsley in her fine description of the palace.
"Nowhere," she says, "has interior decoration been carried to a further point
101
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
of perfection than in Versailles where we are offered the most splendid examples
possible of the Louis XIVstyle. It may be all wrong in the eyes of architectural
purists, but for sheer magnificence of effect, for actual richness of detail in marble
and painting, in gilded stucco, carved wood, superb gilt-bronze, it cannot be sur-
passed. Take, for example, the
Salon de Mars. The modillions
of the grand golden cornice are
empty casques. And in the
covings of the ceiling are golden
trophies and cupids in gilt
stucco riding eagles and taming
wolves. Golden wreaths frame
the paintings of the ceiling by
Audran, depicting Mars in his
chariot. Or, again, the Salon
d'Apollon, with its ceiling
by Lafosse and its winged
muses of extreme beauty, on
which the great sculptor Coy-
sevox did not refuse to work.
But all this glory of decorative
103
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
treating a room in Louis XIV or Louis XV style neglect the simple aspect of the
style, which, with the exception of state apartments and ball-rooms, is the only
side suitable for reproduction in an American home. The gorgeous rooms in Ver-
sailles are chosen as models, rather than the plainer apartments in Fontainebleau
or the Trianons.
Many pieces of furniture belonging to palace and to private house were
destroyed at the time of the Revolution, but enough remain to show the
trend of the Louis XIV period. The Renaissance raised furniture-making to the
dignity of an art, but it was not until the reign of Louis XIV that furniture-
Boulle was a man of many but his fame rests chiefly on a unique
talents,
marquetry of tortoise shelland brass with which he ornamented his furniture.
He was not the inventor of the process, but he carried it to such a point of excel-
lence that the name of the originator has been overlooked. Doubtless some chest
or casket of oriental workmanship suggested to French cabinet-makers this form
of decoration. Royal inventories of the late fourteenth century mention Damascus
caskets of shell overlaid with silver. Joan, first wife of Louis XII, numbered
among her dower chests one of ivory and horn inlaid with copper. Boulle's handi-
work was quite unlike oriental marquetry in point of execution, but it bore a slight
resemblance to it in general effect. His method was to cover the piece of furni-
ture to be decorated with a veneer of shell, over which brass cuttings were fas-
tened. Small brass nails secured the metal to the shell background and these were
deftly engraved to form part of the design. Shells, scrolls, acanthus foliage, and
other characteristic bits of ornament were represented in the brass. Metal mounts
and moldings were a feature of the work. Masks, satyrs, and cupids were some of
the designs used as garnitures. The ram's head was a favorite with Boulle, and
may be found on many of his pieces. These mounts were usually of ormolu, a
composition of gold, mercury and copper which was applied to the brass to give
it the appearance of gold. Sometimes the process of veneer was reversed and
upon a brass foundation shell was appliqued. When the shell was overlaid with
brass, it was called "first part," or "boulle," and when the brass formed the back-
ground, with shell ornamentation, it was termed "second part" or "counter."
When both were combined in the same piece of furniture it was "boulle and
104
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
counter." Other terms were "new boulle" and "old boulle." The former referred
to the practice of placing color beneath the shell. Brilliant effects were obtained
by lining the shell with scarlet or gold-leaf. This combination was the work of
Andre's imitators, and found little favor with the master himself. Boulle's own
handicraft was marked by a refinement which his followers were unable to copy.
Many of Boulle's designs were furnished by Lebrun and executed under his super-
vision.
The console in the Louvre, illustrated on page 102, is an example of his early
work. combines "boulle" and "counter," and is a representative piece. It also
It
shows the massive type of furniture in vogue during the early Louis XIV period.
The console depends entirely on the marquetry and metal mounts for interest; the
outline is heavy to the verge of cumbersome. The supports are of the pedestal
order and are a survival of the preceding reign. The pedestal support is important
as indicating the date of the piece.
Later furniture shows a curving leg, still massive, but more graceful. The
supports of the early eighteenth century are more slender, and approximate the
Louis XV
style. The two extremes may be studied in the console mentioned
and in the bureau on page 103.
The chair reproduced belongs to the early Louis XIV period. It was made
during the regency of Anne of Austria, and has the heavy supports of the Louis
XIII period. The acanthus leaf is the chief motive in the decoration, as it is in
most of the chairs of that day. The leaf is well modeled and is in low relief, a
marked contrast to its later development when endless foliations replaced the
severer handling. Beauvais tapestry forms the upholstery and fringe in corre-
sponding colors adds a finish to the seat and back.
Later chairs show a bolder treatment of the acanthus and a more ornate
frame. The pedestal supports are still in evidence, but the lines have changed
somewhat. The arms have a deeper curve and have lost something in beauty. It
is a point worthy of notice that the arms of the Renaissance chairs were quite
straight, and that the curve was of gradual growth. Chair legs in France re-
mained straight until late in the seventeenth century when the general tendency
-
towards flowing lines altered the supports of chairs, tables, and cabinets. During
the last fifteen years of Louis XIV's reign (1700-1715) every article of furniture,
except the bed, conformed to rococo outlines. Rococo ornament had long held
sway, but shapes as a whole had been severe.
The bed had undergone several changes. The lower posts were discarded and
the canopy was suspended from the cornice. The bed in the king's chamber at
Versailles shows to what an extent the decoration of this article of furniture could
be carried. The headboard of this royal structure is carved in the best manner
106
HEADBOARD, LOUIS XIV BEDSTEAD, VERSAILLES
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
of the period. The mask with radiations, surrounded by the laurel wreath, the
acanthus scrolls, and the The mask represented the
shell are all characteristic.
sun and the radiations the beams. This was a compliment to his majesty whose
power was without limit. The hangings of the bed are of Gobelin tapestry and
Lyons velvet.
Ebony, oak, walnut, and chestnut were the woods most in favor with furniture-
makers. Rare woods, like sandal and tulip, were used as panels to give color and
variety. When to this combination onyx, porphyry, and lapis lazuli were added,
the whole ornamented with ormolu frames and mounts, only a prophet in furni-
ture could have predicted that a succeeding style would carry decoration a point
further.
The Louis XIV style was suited to the monarch who delighted in being called
le grand and who desired to be painted in the character of Jove hurling thunder-
bolts at trembling Europe. It was fitted for palaces but, save in its plainest
aspect, was little suited for the homes of those born outside the purple.
That elaborate furniture was not confined to the court may be gathered from
letters and inventories of the celebrated cabinet-makers of the day. Boulle made
many pieces for the wealthy citizens of Paris, particularly in the later years of
his life when the king's fancy had turned to the work of younger men. Boulle
lived to be ninety years of age, surviving his royal patron more than a decade.
The list of cabinets, consoles and armoires designed by him is a long one. Much
of his work, like that of his contemporaries, was destroyed at the time of the
Revolution.
108
CHAPTER X
LOUIS XV FURNITURE
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: THE EXTREME ROCOCO IN WHICH
THE PRINCIPAL DETAILS WERE THE BROKEN SHELL, THE CURLED
ENDIVE, AND THE SPIRAL SCROLL. BALANCE AND SYMMETRY
WERE LESS IMPORTANT IN THE EYES OF FURNITURE-MAKERS
THAN RICHNESS OF ORNAMENT AND FAULTLESS EXECUTION.
ANGLES GAVE PLACE TO CURVES, AND THE TALENTS OF THE
GOLDSMITH AND THE PAINTER WERE UTILIZED IN DESIGNING
FURNITURE WHICH, IN POINT OF WORKMANSHIP, HAS NEVER
BEEN SURPASSED.
CHAPTER X
LOUIS XV FURNITURE
were no clearly defined lines between the Louis XIV and the Louis
XV styles of furniture. The sweeping curves and ornate decorations which
INHERE
characterized the designs of the early "Quinze" period were the natural out-
growth of the late "Quatorze" epoch. From the time that Pierre Mignard
succeeded Lebrun, as art director, a gradual change had taken place in all handi-
craft. Instead of one controlling force there were a dozen influences. Designers,
freefrom the restraint of obeying one master mind, worked on independent lines.
In rare cases this was productive of good. The arts as a whole suffered seriously.
With the death of the Grand Monarque the last of the seventeenth-century tradi-
tions passed away.
Louis XV, like his great predecessor, was only five years of age when he was
proclaimed king. During his minority the office of regent devolved upon the duke
of Orleans. This term of eight years, 1715-1723, was an important period in the
history of decorative art, The old court with its stately ceremonies, its pomp
and magnificence was gone, and in its place was a new court bent on the lightest
and gayest amusements. The formal arrangement of rooms, the classic treat-
ment of walls and furniture, found little favor with the regent and his followers.
To conform to the tastes of the day decorators introduced the extreme rococo.
The broken shell 'the twisted acanthus, the curled endive, and the flowing scroll
formed a part of interior woodwork. The cornice, the wainscot, the mantel,
the moldings of windows and doors, the frames of panels and pictures, em-
bodied one and the same idea. To harmonize with this setting furniture was,
of necessity, constructed on similar lines. Plain surfaces were abhorred. Every-
thing glittered with elaborate mounts of bronze and ormolu; everything was orna-
mented to such a degree that its real purpose became a secondary consideration.
Several pieces of furniture were sometimes combined in one in order to give wood
and metal-workers greater scope for ingenuity. Some of the regency designs are
strange combinations of writing-desks, bureaus, and timepieces. The workman-
ship of this fantastic furniture is of a high order; the greatest artists of the day
bestowed their skill upon it. While it does not surpass in beauty of execution
the work of the masterly band who designed furniture for Louis XIV, it equals
it in many
ways. A
few of the great cabinet-makers, who were associated with
Lebrun, lived to execute orders for the regent, and also for Louis XV.
Ill
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
Charles Cressent, a pupil of Boulle, and one of his most noted followers was
closely identified with the style of the regency. Dubois and the elder Caffieri were
among the number who adapted their methods to the tastes of the time. Boulle
was less flexible. With the
spirit of the day he was
never in touch. His work
belongs so entirely to the
"Quatorze" period, it is such
a complete expression of the
formalism of the seventeenth
century, that it is impossible
to associate him with the
succeeding epoch. He pro-
duced much that was fine
in the latter years of his life,
but it bears little resem-
blance to the handicraft of
his contemporaries.
GOBELIN TAPESTRY DESIGNED BY BOUCHER AND TESSIER, broken and the COUnt-
Shell,
1757. EXECUTED BY NEiLsoN less twists and twirls which
were such a feature of French
decoration during the eighteenth century. His defiance of the rules of balance
and proportion delighted the duke of Orleans, who gave him many commissions.
Meissonier disregarded allprinciples of symmetry and sought to obtain novel
effects by introducing startling contrasts. One side of a cabinet or console would
often be treated in a manner quite different from the other. He was consistent
112
LOUIS XV SOFA, PETIT TRIANON
gant from the grotesque. Symmetry, which was such an important factor in the
eyes of the furniture-makers of the Louis XIV period, was lacking in the work of
many of the later craftsmen.
Louis XIV carried his love of balance to such a point that Madame de Main-
tenon once wrote, "The king will have us all buried in symmetry." Such fine
distinctions did not trouble Louis XV, nor the men and women of his court,
whose favor or disapproval made or marred the success of an artist.
The group of men decorators, designers, furniture-makers, workers in metal
and marquetry who spent their lives in the endeavor to please a capricious court
formed a large and notable body. Within the compass of a single chapter it is
not possible to give more than a brief mention of the great artist-artisans of this
period. Many volumes would be needed to treat in an adequate way French handi-
craft of the eighteenth century. The subject of furniture alone, if presented in
all its phases, would demand a chapter on the great tapestry industries of France,
another on Sevres porcelain, a third on metals, and a fourth on lacquer. Wood
alone formed but an insignificant part in the making of a large portion of the Louis
XV furniture. Marquetry had its place, but the pieces in which marquetry alone
isused for ornamentation are very rare. The talents of the tapestry-weaver, of the
potter, and of the goldsmith, were utilized to produce those marvelous cabinets
and commodes which to-day, when offered for sale, bring prices which can scarcely
be expressed in less than four figures.
Among the men who made this sumptuous furniture may be mentioned Rie-
sener, Cressent, Leleu, Oeben, Rontgen, Duplessis, Pasquier, Carlin, Hervieu,
Gouthiere, and the Caffieri. Jacques and Philippe Caffieri belonged to a famous
family of metal-workers. Jacques was a son of Filippo Caffieri, who came to France
from Italy about the middle of the seventeenth century. He had served Pope
Alexander VII with distinction but, tempted by the reports of the generosity of
Louis XIV, joined the band of workers at the Gobelins. For more than a century
the name of Caffieri was closely associated with French furniture. The metal
mounts and moldings which came from the workshop of Jacques and his son
Philippe were not surpassed by those of any other designer. The exquisite finish of
their metal-work was notable in an age when beauty of execution was the rule
rather than the exception. The commode with bombe or curving front was the usual
medium chosen by them to display their intricate garnitures of bronze and ormolu.
Pierre Gouthiere followed the methods of the Caffieri. He and Riesener were
younger men and were identified with both the Louis XV and the Louis XVI
styles. Gouthiere executed many beautiful pieces of furniture for the duchess
du Barry. At the time of her execution she owed seven hundred and fifty-six
thousand livres for furniture designed and ornamented by him. The government
114
LOUIS XV FURNITURE
refused to pay this sum, and after end-
less lawsuits the ill-fated Gouthiere died
in poverty. His work lacked the
strength of that of Philippe Caffieri and
Charles Cressent, but it was marked by
elegance and great delicacy. dullA
gold finish, which he is said to have
garlands are the metal ornaments of this remarkable piece of furniture. Lavish
as the description sounds there is a suggestion in the treatment of the whole design
of the simplicity of the Louis XVI period. Could the vases and the figures be
removed the bureau would show little trace of the style rocaille. Had the date
been 1750 instead of 1769 it would doubtless have been treated in the true rococo
spirit. The bureau du Roi is typical of the work of the time in the skill shown in
the decoration of the back.
No hidden corners were shirked by French craftsmen. The care bestowed
upon the framework of furniture may be noted in the illustrations of the chairs
from the Garde-Meuble. They have lost something in beauty by being robbed
of their upholstery. As furniture studies they have gained in value. They show
just what French furniture-makers borrowed from the Flemish and what they in
turn gave to the English. They have the curving legs which superseded the ped-
estal support of the Louis XIV period, and the rococo carving which supplanted
the classic acanthus leaf. It is a mild rococo, however, and in the case of the
great was the demand for oriental lac that panels of Chinese woodwork were in-
serted in French furniture. This was a combination, however, that could not
long be tolerated. A Dutch cabinet-maker named Huygens is credited with being
the first to discover a preparation which had the qualities of lacquer. The Martin
family of Paris, after years of experimenting, perfected a composition which was
called Vernis-Martin, or Martin's varnish. This invention placed them in an inde-
pendent position. They were carriage-painters but with the success of their lacquer
they became cabinet-makers. In the painting of car-
riages they had a field for considerable skill, for vehicles
of all kinds were elaborately ornamented in the time
of Louis XV. Coaches and sedan chairs received as
careful a scheme of decoration as the interior of houses.
-construction; both are ornamented with marquetry and metal mounts. The
Louis XV has more sweeping curves; the mounts, instead of closely outlining the
woodwork, form an independent feature of the decoration; the acanthus leaf, as a
motif, is abandoned and the curled endive takes its place. These articles are
typical of the two styles. They are chosen from the middle periods. Late
Louis XIV furniture resembled early Louis XV, and late Louis XV approached
the Louis XVI. The rococo school, by its very extravagance, brought about a
reaction that was destined to transform furniture-making.
119
CHAPTER XI
LOUIS XVI FURNITURE
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: SIMPLICITY OF CONSTRUCTION
AND SEVERITY OF ORNAMENT. ROCOCO DETAILS DISAPPEARED
AND CLASSIC EMBLEMS REPLACED THEM. IMPORTANT FEATURES
WERE THE FLUTED COLUMN, THE BAY LEAF, THE OAK AND ACORN,
THE BELL FLOWER OR "CORN HUSK," THE GREEK BAND, AND THE
PLAIN ACANTHUS. STRAIGHT LINES SUPERSEDED CURVES AND
ORNAMENT WAS A MEANS NOT AN END.
CHAPTER XI
LOUIS XVI FURNITURE
Marie Antoinette has long been accorded the honor of the pseudo-classic
interesting development, for in its perfected form it differed as widely from the
Louis XV style as did the early Renaissance from the Gothic. Whether the style
owed its existence to the influence of Marie Antoinette, or to the discoveries of
also effectively used and on rare occasions the acanthus, in a severe form, was
revived. But to the oak leaf was given chief preference and it is interesting to
study its development in small as well as large pieces of furniture. In the decoration
of clocks, mirrors, and sconces it was an important and beautiful accessory.
123
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
The cabinet from Fontainebleau is an excellent example of the Louis XVI style.
The fluted columns have no ornamentation except crossed bands of ribbon. The
oak leaf appears in both a natural and conventionalized manner. The metal work
is simple and exceedingly good. The gold is of two shades, red-gold in the mold-
ings and green-gold in the mounts. The claw-feet which are in the shape of eagle's
talons are very spirited. An unusual effect is gained by the insertion of dark
panels which add greatly to the beauty of the design. (See page 126.)
The Louis XV
furniture-maker would not have been content to leave the broad
center panel undecorated. Marquetry and elaborate mounts would have been
necessary adjuncts in his eyes. The charm of flat unadorned spaces was unknown
to him. Fontainebleau contains many pieces of furniture designed expressly for
Marie Antoinette, and this cabinet is of the number.
Pierre Rousseau planned the apartments of the queen at Fontainebleau and
designed the decorations. The boudoir is particularly fine and has been little
altered since it was first executed. Everything pertaining to Marie Antoinette is of
interest. From the historical point of view there are no apartments in Fontaine-
bleau, Compiegne, Versailles, or the Petit Trianon so worthy of study as those occu-
pied by the ill-fated queen. From the standpoint of interior decoration all the
rooms furnished in the Louis XVI style have value. Of the three schools named in
honor of the sovereigns Louis XIV, Louis XV, and Louis XVI, none is so worthy of
reproduction as the style 'Louis Seize". It combines grace with simplicity, and, when
correctly interpreted, is as suitable in an American home of the twentieth century
as it was in a French palace of the eighteenth century.
In the case of the three great French styles the palatial pieces form an important
contribution to furniture lore, for with the exception of greater richness of material
and more elaborate detail, the furniture of the court closely resembled that of the
citizen's house. Thus the collections of Versailles, Fontainebleau, and the Garde-
Meuble have more than a royal significance. The Louis XIV style suggests gran-
deur, the Louis XV elegance, and the Louis XVI grace. Comfort is not lacking in
many of the Louis XIV designs but comfort is not their most prominent feature.
In the Louis XV pieces there is more luxury and less magnificence. The Louis XVI
designs are constructed on severe lines but are perfectly proportioned, and combine
both beauty and comfort. The furniture of this period seems made for use, not
merely a medium for the display of intricate marquetry and elaborate metal work.
Ornament for ornament's sake is absent although perfection of detail is never
lacking.
Many of the men who achieved fame under Louis XV rendered Louis XVI
distinguished service. Riesener, Carlin, Duplessis, Leleu, Gouthiere left an im-
press on both periods. Rousseau, Guibert, Saunier, Rontgen, Benemann, Thomire,
124
LOUIS XVI BEDSTEAD, FONTAINEBLEAU
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
and Oeben, the younger ,were more closely identified with the Louis XVI style. Much
of Riesener's later work was executed for Marie Antoinette and is marked by the
same exquisite finish that made his furniture famous during the reign of Louis XV.
In the catalogue of the Hamilton collection which was sold at auction in 1882,
are listed many of these royal designs.
"No. 301. Upright Secretaire, signed
'Riesener 1790.' Branded with the cipher
of Marie Antoinette on the back, 4,620.
No. 302. A commode en suite signed
'Riesener 1790,' 4,305. No. 303. An
'
Lady Dilke describes one of his transactions with Catherine of Russia. Rontgen
had arrived in St. Petersburg with a notable collection of furniture :"The empress-
126
LOUIS XVI FURNITURE
was ready to admire and wonder, but could not be persuaded to buy, her funds just
then being exhausted by the war with the Turks. In the night preceding the visit
which she had promised to pay to Rontgen's exhibition, arrived the news of a naval
victory won by the Russians at Tchesme, and when she was received on the follow-
ing day at the place appointed, matters
were so arranged that her eyes should fall
at once on an imposing secretaire, which
was surmounted by a clock bearing a
Genius, whose graver indicated the date
which
of the successful naval engagement,
work precisely as the painters signed their canvases, and who shall say that they
were lesser artists?
Mahogany had been growing in popularity since the middle of the century, and
walnut which had so long been the chief medium of French furniture-makers, had
gradually lost favor. Walnut was not discarded, but it was more often gilded and
enameled than used in its natural state. For chairs and couches, and for all pieces
where upholstery was utilized, walnut was the usual foundation. The enameling
to which the wood was treated was in soft colors and exceedingly durable. Many
of the Louis XVI chairs, sofas, and bedsteads show this delicate finish which to-
day exhibits little trace of wear. The gilded furniture belongs to another class,
although the designs are often similar. Many of the glided chairs are combined with
cane. Sometimes the natural cane is set in a gilded frame, and again the cane is
gilded and the wood enameled. Another style combines cane with natural walnut
which most attractive of all. Modern furniture-makers have lately revived this
is
fashion. With a consistent setting these cane pieces are exceedingly effective.
Marie Antoinette, in furnishing the Petit Trianon made a most effective use of
cane. It suited the simplicity which she delighted to affect when she retired to the
Trianon. The queen, brought up in the Austrian court which was less formal than
that of France, spent her happiest hours in the picturesque building which Louis XV
erected for the duchess du Barry. Here
she could escape the etiquette of the
court and live as independently as she
pleased, even playing dairy-maid when
the whim seized her. The English gar-
den, the poultry-house, the mill, the
grotto,and the djfiry are still in exist-
ence, and are scarcely less interesting
than the Little Trianon itself.
laced letters M. A. The antechamber has a Greek portal, and within is paneled
in a severe but elegant style with a cornice of palmettes and painted rectangular
panels over the doors. The dining-room opens immediately from it. The orna-
ments on the panels, trophies of quivers and crowns, were placed there by the order
of the queen. The main salon is furnished in crimson and gold. The boudoir is
charming, with its simple but beautifully wrought moldings, its panels relieved by
delicately modeled arabesques, and its simple mantel garniture of two Sevres
vases and branches for candles in gilt bronze."
The rooms described may be taken as typical of the Louis XVI period. They
did not surpass the furnishings of many private houses. Paneled woodwork orna-
mented with arabesques and trophies formed the usual decoration of side walls.
The furniture of the main salon consisted of six straight-back chairs, two arm-
chairs, a bergere, or chair with upholstered sides, two sofas, and several tables.
In studying Louis XVI chairs two general types are observed: one is composed
entirely of angles; the other makes a partial use of the oval. The arm-chair on
page 129 is a fine illustration of the first class. The chair reproduced on this page
belongs to the second. The fluted support is shown in both types and this feature,
it may be added, is the most marked characteristic of Louis XVI furniture.
130
CHAPTER XII
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: FIRST, QUEEN ANNE WHICH WAS
A DEVELOPMENT OF THE DUTCH TYPES OF THE LATE SEVEN-
TEENTH CENTURY. SECOND, CHIPPENDALE THE LEADING FEA-
TURES BEING THE BALL-AND-CLAW FOOT, THE PIERCED SPLAT,
AND THE CABRIOLE LEG. THIRD, ADAM, INAUGURATING A RE-
VIVAL OF CLASSIC ORNAMENT. FOURTH, HEPPLEWHITE, IMPOR-
TANT DETAILS OF WHICH WERE THE STRAIGHT TAPERING LEG, THE
SHIELD-SHAPED CHAIR BACK, AND THE SPADE-FOOT. FIFTH,
SHERATON, SALIENT CHARACTERISTICS BEING THE FLUTED LEG,
THE RECTANGULAR CHAIR BACK, AND CLASSIC CARVING AND
INLAY.
CHAPTER XII
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
THE WORK OF THOMAS CHIPPENDALE
English furniture-makers the name of Thomas Chippendale stands
first. Other designers have surpassed him in certain lines, but to none has
AMONG the same amount of fame been accorded. Chippendale was the first Eng-
lishman to give title to a style. Celebrated designers had preceded him, but
their identity submerged in that of their sovereign. We hear little of a George
is
I, a George II, or a George III period. Queen Anne's name is associated with the
furniture types of the early eighteenth century. Victorian is the term given to
the furniture development of the first half of the nineteenth century. Between
these two reigns styles in furniture are known by the names of the men who
created them.
Chippendale was more a translator than a creator. He adapted Dutch,
French, and Chinese designs infusing his own personality into everything he
touched. His early work was largely tinctured by that of Grinling Gibbons, a
contemporary and co^wofker of Sir Christopher Wren. Gibbons's influence on
work was almost as potent as was that of Wren on the architecture of the
interior
day. Chippendale owed much to this man whose fame has been overshadowed
by some of his followers.
All furniture-makers of the first half of the eighteenth century were indebted to
the Dutch. Chippendale used the cabriole or bandy-leg freely, also the ball-and-
claw foot, and the fiddle-back. Other designers did the same, but Chippendale
combined them with greater success. It is hardly to be wondered at that these
characteristics are termed "Chippendale," for it was he who gave them lasting fame.
How the world would rate Chippendale and his contemporaries if oak and walnut
had been their only medium is impossible to say. What English furniture of the
eighteenth century would have been if mahogany had been unknown is difficult to
conjecture. The firmness of the wood, coupled with the fine quality of the grain,
enabled furniture-makers to secure results which were unattainable in oak. It is
not toomuch to say that the great English cabinet-makers of the eighteenth century
could not have achieved their triumphs without the aid of this beautiful medium.
By use designers obtained both strength and delicacy, characteristics which
its
135
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
tables, and library-tables library bookcases, organ-cases for private rooms, or churches, desks
;
and book-cases dressing and writing-tables with book-cases, cabinets, and cloaths-presses ;
;
china-cases, china-shelves, and book-shelves; candle-stands, terms for busts, stands for china
jars and pedestals; cisterns for water, lanthorns, and chandeliers; fire-screens, brackets, and
clock cases; pier-glasses and table-frames; girandoles, chimney-pieces, and picture-frames;
stove-grates, boarders, frets, Chinese-railing, and brass-work, for furniture,
from which it may be seen that the designer of St. Martin's Lane could design,
stove-grates and lanterns as well as organ-cases.
Sideboards are not mentioned in the Director and it is doubtful if Chippen-
dale made these pieces. Many articles long attributed to Chippendale are now
credited to Hepplewhite and
Shearer. It is conceded by
students of furniture that
136
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
somewhere, and that was on the surface. If Thomas Chippendale could have fore-
seen that these designs would one day be held up to ridicule, while on the other
hand some of his simple patterns would sell for fabulous sums, he would have
doubted the sanity of posterity.
Among his "simple" pieces may be reckoned the ladder-back chair which is repro-
duced in the fourth illustration. This embodies the fine proportions which have justly
given him the title of prince of chair-makers. The "roundabout" illustrates another
phase of his work, while his French manner is depicted in illustration VI.
137
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
While to Chippendale belongs the glory of raising his work above his contem-
poraries of the middle portion of the century, the work of other men must not be
forgotten. Grinling Gibbons has been mentioned; James Gibbs, Isaac Ware, and
William Kent followed him. Coming a little later were Abraham Swan, Batty
and Thomas Langley, Edwards and Darley, Thomas Johnson, Ince, and Robert
Manwaring. These men were notable in special lines. Batty and Thomas Langley
were famous for their pier- tables and consoles; Edwards and Darley were expo-
nents of the Chinese taste; Thomas Johnson was the high priest of the extreme
rococo; Manwaring and Richardson were contemporaneous with the Adam broth-
ers, and were identified with the work of their day.
One name should be given special prominence and that is Richard Gillow wjiose
work was of unusual merit, and to whom may possibly belong the honor of origi-
nating the shield-shape chair. Richard Gillow was son of Robert Gillow who
achieved fame earlier in the century. If Gillow had written a book he might have
been a rival of both Chippendale and Hepplewhite. His work on paper was con-
fined to his working drawings which show ability of a high order. Many of his
finest pieces were executed for the Adam brothers whose commissions were greatly
138
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
gular back and the fluted leg. That these men could be "myriad minded" in their
designing we know from their books, but we judge them by their typical furniture
and rate them accordingly.
THE WORK OF GEORGE HEPPLEWHITE
Less is known of Hepplewhite than of either of his great contemporaries. His
death occurred in 1786; the date of his birth is a matter of conjecture. For many
years a mystery has surrounded the names "G. Hepplewhite" and "A. Hepple-
white" which has of late been solved. Research has revealed the fact that the
business of George Hepplewhite, after his death, passed into the hands of his widow
Alice, who continued the work of the firm over the signature of "A. Hepplewhite
and Company." Thus the long controversy as to the relationship of the two is
satisfactorily settled. The theory that "G." and " A. " Hepplewhite were brothers
is set at rest.
That this designer personally made, or even supervised, half of the furniture
bearing his name, is out of the question. Craftsmen trained in his methods per-
petuated the work. Hepplewhite's book, The Cabinet-maker and Upholsters Guide,
appeared the year following his demise and was completed by other hands. It is
believed that Thomas Shearer, who was associated with him, made many of the draw-
ings contained in the work. Shearer's identity seems to have been lost in that of
"
Hepplewhite. An English critic, in writing of him, says Whether Shearer in-
:
139
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
prevent us placing him first in this particular department. Even as these stand
they are better than Hepplewhite's, and there can be little doubt of their influence
on Sheraton."
Shearer is believed to have originated the serpentine sideboard and Hepplewhite
to have brought it to perfection. A
fine specimen illustrated on page 143
has all the characteristics of this
designer. The serpentine curve, the
will always be considered. It must be estimated by the impetus they gave the arts
as a whole an impetus towards simplicity.
141
DINING-ROOM, RESIDENCE OF FREDERIC C. BARTLETT, CHICAGO, HEPPLEWHITE FURNITURE
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
The brothers did not create the style which bears their name. They adapted to
English conditions a style old as ornament itself, and which in France had already
gained a footing, later to blossom as the Louis XVI school. Robert Adam, on
his return from
Italy, whither he had gone with the French architect Clerisseau,
found England ripe for a second reformation. The work of the great French design-
ers of Louis XV's reign was being copied in England, but without the delicacy of
HEPPLEWHITE SIDEBOARD
touch which made the eccentricities of such men as Meissonier almost excusable.
One glance at the early drawings of Chippendale, Johnson, and Ince show with
what a heavy hand the English designer wielded rococo ornament. When Sir Wil-
liam Chambers introduced the Chinese style of decoration, and a few so-called
"oriental" details were grafted upon the rococo hodgepodge, the time was at hand
for an artistic upheaval. At this point Robert Adam, fresh from the study of
antique ornament in Italy and Spalatio, arrived in England. The year was 1754 a
memorable one in English annals. From this moment the reformation began,
insignificant at but gathering force as its influence widened.
first,
In 1764 Adam
published a folio of drawings, engraved by Bartolozzi, showing the
ruins of the Emperor Diocletian's palace at Spalatio. In an introduction to the
143
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
work he stated that his "object in selecting this ruin for special examination was its
144
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
him. Pergolesi executed many of the decorations designedby the brothers, and in
this work he was assisted by and by that gifted woman,
Cipriani, another Italian,
Angelica Kauffman. Furniture was designed in harmony with the walls and painted
in goldand enamels.
Adam brothers was in England it was scarcely less
Strong as the influence of the
in this country. America owes these men an everlasting debt of gratitude, for to
them is largely due our finest architecture. Many of the houses erected in New
England and the South from 1780 to 1810 were built on lines laid down by Robert
and James Adam. The beautiful rooms of these old mansions are as truly Adam
as the interiors of Kenwood, Sion House, and Portland Place. To the American
mind the colonial woodwork is the finer, being simpler, and marked by greater
restraint.
Robert Adamshared honors with James and to-day their names are seldom
separated. Robert was undoubtedly the master of the two, possessing the creative
faculty to a rare degree. Aside from his work the story of his life reads briefly.
In The Gentleman's Magazine for March, 1792, is a short but significant biography.
England lost two of her greatest men within one month, and both are honored
in this quaint pamphlet. Under the heading, "Obituary of Considerable Persons,"
146
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
Kirkaldy, in the county of Fife, the same place that gave birth
to Dr.Adam Smith, author of the Wealth of Nations. He
was the second son of William Adam, Esq., of Marybury,
an architect of merit. He received
his education at the University of Edin-
burgh. The friend- ships he formed
were with men who have since emi-
nently distinguished themselves by their literary products, among
them being Mr. David Hume, Dr. Robertson, Dr. Adam Smith, Dr.
Adam Fergusson, and Mr. John Home. At a more advanced time
of life he had the good fortune to enjoy the friendship and society
of Archibald, duke of Argyle, the late Mr. Charles Townsend, the
earl of Mansfield, and several others of the most illustrious men
of the age.
"Mr. Adam, after his return from Italy, was appointed archi-
tect to his Majesty in the year 1762, which office, being incom-
patible with a seat in Parliament, he resigned in 1768, on his being elected to
represent the county of Kinross. It is somewhat remarkable that the arts should
be deprived at the same time of two of their greatest ornaments, Sir Joshua Rey-
nolds and Mr. Adam, and it is difficult to say which of them excelled more in his
147
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
has been diffused into almost every branch of manufacture. His talents extended be-
yond the The loss of Mr. Adam at this time must be peculiarly
line of his profession.
felt, as the new University of Edinburgh and other great public works, both in that city
and in Glasgow, were erecting from his designs and under his direction. To the last
period of his life Mr. Adam displayed an unusual vigor of genius and refinement of
taste ; for in the space of one year preceding his death he designed eight great public
works and twenty-five private buildings, so various in their style and so beautiful in
their composition that they have been allowed by the best judges sufficient of them-
selves to establish his fame unrivaled as an artist."
It is impossible to show the charm of the Adam
style with a few illustrations.
No adequate conception of the talents of the brothers can be gained from isolated
examples of their work. The mantels and doors designed by them lose half their
beauty when removed from the original setting. Thus the reproduction of the door
to the Etruscan room in the Grosvenor Square house, and that of the chimney-piece
in the same mansion, give little hint of the Adam genius. Viewed with their sur-
roundings they become successful details of a very harmonious whole. The Adam
decorations, more than that of any other style, with the possible exception of the
Louis XV, lose by being separated from the construction. The watchword of the
brothers was "harmony," and this quality in their work can be appreciated only
when a room or series of rooms is studied. There are reprints of the interiors of
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
Sion House, Kenwood, Queen's House, and the mansions in Portland Place and
Grosvenor Square, and these are as useful from the student's standpoint as the now
priceless first editions. These books are worth volumes of descriptions.
Many learned writers have discoursed extensively on the work of James and
Robert Adam, but few have so intelligently expressed the point of the matter as
did Robert himself in the preface of his first book :
"If we have any claim to approbation we found it on this alone: that we have
been able to seize, with some degree of success, the beautiful spirit of antiquity, and
to transfuse it with novelty and variety through all our numerous works."
Thomas Sheraton, last of the great English furniture-makers, was born in 1751,
three years before Thomas Chippendale published The Gentleman and Cabinet-Ma-
1
ker s Director. "Last and least" cannot be said of Sheraton. "Last and
greatest" expresses the opinion of many latter-day critics. A
recent writer on the
inexhaustible subject of eighteenth-century furniture, says of him: "Much as one
may appreciate the workmanship of Chippendale and Hepplewhite, in the presence
of a true piece of Sheraton's work one cannot help feeling that their productions are
coarse, almost blatant that they were workmen, while Sheraton was a poet, and a
poet blessed with color." This is strong praise, but it comes from the pen of an
Englishman who has studied his subject deeply. No American could truthfully call
Chippendale "blatant," unless he used the word in turning over the pages of the
Director. Chippendale's fame rests on his furniture, not his drawings, and so it
is with Sheraton. The great cabi-
net-makers who ^ wrote Directors,
Guides, and Drawing-Books, put
their extravagant ideas on paper
and their simple ones into furniture.
With their elaborate sketches they
SHEEATON CHAIRS
150
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
struct decora-
tion.
Coming af-
t e r Chippen-
dale and Hep-
plewhite, this
designer learn-
e d much
from their,
methods. Dis-
carding the
plain, taper-
ing support,
he selected the A FIXE EXAMPLE OF SHERATON'S WORK
fluted form of
the Louis XVI style which the Adams had introduced into England. He made
use of the fluted column in his sideboards, tables, and desks, treating it with rare
restraint. In his chairs he used the square support, believing that a rectangular
back demanded a rectangular base. On the same theory his use of the round and
fluted leg equally consistent, for it is always combined with a curve. The table,
is
sofa, and chest of drawers reproduced in this chapter show the combination of the
fluted support and the curved surface. The table is an extremely graceful design
and makes an interesting comparison with the Hepplewhite table illustrated on
page 141. These designs are of the "drop leaf" type, the leaf of the table fol-
lowing the outlines of thesupports. The square, tapering leg of the Hepple-
white table is in perfectharmony with the top, which, though curved, is completed
by square corners. Sheraton's design meets the same test, the rounded corners
outlining the curved supports.
The chest of drawers, or bureau in our modern acceptance of the word, is an
excellent example of Sheraton's principle of construction. Here again we see the
curved front in conjunction with the rounded support. The fluted column begins
at the top of the second drawer and ends at the base of the lower drawer. Above
the fluting is the "corn and husk" motif executed in a conventionalized manner;
below is a turned leg of admirable proportions. The drawers have narrow moldings
and brass handles of a simple pattern. Narrow beading outlines each plate which
is further decorated by a small rosette.
The sofaa typical example of Sheraton's work, having the fluted support and
Is
delicate carvings in low relief. The back of the sofa shows the festoon pattern used
.so freely by the Adam brothers in their interiors.
151
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
Sheraton's designs. His desks, bookcases, and writing-tables belong also to this class,
but are less familiar in America than in England. In the second list may be grouped
the graceful drop-leaf tables, orna-
mented with narrow lines of inlay,
the pretty tea-trays, knife-cases, and
writing-boxes, the latter often show-
ing an insert of sycamore and tulip-
wood. The third division includes
the furniture designed by Sheraton
and decorated by Angelica Kauff-
man, Pergolesi, and Cipriani. Many
of these pieces were executed for the
Adam brothers and were of exquis-
ite workmanship. Satin wood form-
ed the basis of the larger portion of
this work, and when decorated sug-
which was
sycamore
dyed a pale shade of
brown, white wood, stain-
ed apple-green, satin-
wood in its
lovely^
nat-
SHERATON SIDE-BOARD AND CHIPPENDALE MIRROR
ural tone, and kingwood,
were used by this man with marvelous skill. Other cabinet-
of deeper coloring,
makers combined these woods but, never on English soil, with such consummate
art.
Sheraton was a many-sided genius and met the fate of the man who does many
things well. He lived and died poor. Adam Black to whom the world is indebted
for most of its knowledge of Sheraton's private life has written graphically of the
cabinet-maker hi his "Memoirs." Black was born in 1783 and died in 1872. At
one time he was Lord Provost of Edinburg. In his early career he was employed
by Sheraton, at a time when the great furniture-maker was devoting himself to
many pursuits. Black writes: "He lived in a poor street in London, his house
half shop, half dwelling, and looked himself like a Methodist preacher. He had
been a cabinet-maker, and was now author, publisher, and teacher of drawing, and,
I believe, occasionally, preacher." Again, he says: "This many-sided individual
153
ENGLISH FURNITURE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
15*
CHAPTEE XIII
FURNITURE OF THE FRENCH EMPIRE
CHARACTERISTICS OP THE STYLE: THE TORCH, THE WREATH, THE
SPHINX, THE ATHENIAN BEES, AND THE GREEK HONEYSUCKLE.
CARVING AND MARQUETRY WERE DISCARDED AND PLAIN SURFACES
WERE COVERED WITH CHISELED MOUNTS OF BRASS AND ORMOLU.
SIMPLE EMPIRE TYPES WERE FULL OF BEAUTY BUT THE FINAL DE-
VELOPMENT WAS CLUMSY AND GROTESQUE.
CHAPTER XIII
FURNITURE OF THE FRENCH EMPIRE
Empire style marked the last of the great historic epochs in furniture
THE and decoration. It was cold and formal, reflecting the personality of the
men so closely identified with its development. The Revolution brought
chaos to the industries of France which had so flourished under the old
Empire. Riesener, escaping the fate of Gouthiere and other famous furniture-
makers, designed many pieces in the new style, but his name lives in his earlier
work. The Directory and the Consulate were periods of construction. In the arts
the process of rebuilding is slow. David's name is associated with this transition
from old forms to the new, and with him must be mentioned Charles Percier and
Pierre Fontaine. Percier was architect to Napoleon during the Consulate and
ranks with Fontaine as a celebrated craftsman of the period. Napoleon was not a
patron of the arts, yet no monarch of the old regime had so dominated a style. The
letter "N" is stamped over the entire decorative scheme of the Empire. Conquest
and victory are spelled in every line.
Designers of Louis XVI's day lauded the classics, but seldom to the extent of
the Empire artists and never to the glory of one man. The laurel leaves of the
preceding style were rearranged and twisted into a victor's wreath. The fluted
column upheld a torch. Roman and Grecian emblems were used lavishly. "Paris
was to become a new Athens, Napoleon a Caesar, and France a second Roman Em-
pire." The craze for the antique transformed the dress of the day. Statesmen wore
togas and court ladies donned the gowns of Grecian goddesses.
Architects, decorators, and furniture-makers were imbued with the spirit of the
hour. The classic lived again and, if somewhat inconsistent, the enthusiasm of the
day overlooked all shortcomings.
The chief characteristics of the Empire style were the wreath and torch, the
Roman eagle, the Athenian bees, the Greek fret, and the honeysuckle. After the
campaign hi Egypt the sphinx was added to the medley and became a conspic-
uous feature in both furniture and decoration. Distinctive qualities of the furniture
of the period are few and easily mastered. Constructively the plain column and the
claw-foot are the most salient features decoratively the wreath and torch are most
;
157
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
prominent. Marquetry was discarded and plain surfaces were covered with orna-
mental mounts of chiseled brass and ormolu. Chairs showed a square frame with
a plain round leg, ornamented with mounts of characteristic patterns. The chairs in
Compiegne, illustrated here, are typical of the style. Although imperial pieces-
they do not differ from the chairs of a private house. They are enameled white
and ornamented with the Greek honeysuckle. The divan on page 160 has the an-
tique outlines so affected by furniture-makers. David painted Madame Recamier
on such a couch, the "Grecian attitude" being carefully preserved.
The carving of the Compiegne couch is in the "running laurel pattern." It was-
hard for craftsmen to get away from the bay leaf. When the surface to be treated
was too small for a wreath, the laurel was introduced in the manner shown.
Tables may be divided into two general classes those with a center column,
terminating in a broad base with claw feet, and those of a heavier build, sup-
ported by sphinxes. The first type is well known in this country through countless-
"
colonial" adaptations.
Beds during the period of the Empire were stately couches and form striking
contrast to the luxurious beds of the French kings. Napoleon's bedchamber in
Fontainebleau shows the ever-present
emblems of conquest which, even in a
sleeping apartment, were never absent.
The torch, the eagle, and the wreath
are all represented.
The work of Percier was marked by
great delicacy, but a large portion of
the later work of the Empire was clumsy
and absurd. Commodes and cabinets-
lost their real significance and became
mere vehicles for the display of gran-
diose metal-work.
Unlike the Louis XV artisans the
Empire furniture-makers lost sight of
"
fitness. They were too much in earnest
to be content, as were the artists of the
old regime, with borrowing the antique
lines only to playfully transpose them
thing but playful in spirit. Their antiquity was to be actual antiquity, drawn purely
from the fountain-head and admitting of no admixture. As the pieces of furniture
necessary to modern comfort had greatly increased since the days of the ancients, the
designers, fearful of the risk of departing from precedents, found themselves in a quan-
dary. Not daring to create they concealed the new constructive lines by an overlay of
incongruous accessories. The arm-chair was made to resemble the ancient curule seat
159
a
,1
S
-
FURNITURE OF THE FRENCH EMPIRE
as far as possible, but when arms were to be added, the best that they could do with
them was to turn them into swans' necks, and support them by cupids. The legs
of the most harmless tables became bristling griffins. Flaming torches bore the
cradle of the sleeping babe, a chair rested upon horns of plenty, the bed became a
barge, its peaceful curtains upheld by sheaves of lances. In a word the designers
were embarrassed by the self-imposed necessity for torturing the most obvious and
simplest forms into symbolic paraphernalia of antiquity. Take the clock for an
example. The most salient and characteristic feature, became a
dial, ordinarily its
mere accessory. It was blushed for as a modern thing and hidden with great
ingenuity. It started out of the wheel of an antique chariot in which a warrior
rode. It was set into the rock upon which Telemachus reclined. It became the
161
CHAPTER XIY
COLONIAL FURNITURE
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE STYLE: AFTER PIONEER DAYS THE COLO-
NISTS MODELED THEIR HOMES ON THOSE OF THEIR NATIVE LAND.
EARLY FURNITURE WAS THE HEAVY OAK OF THE OLD COUNTRY OR
PINE AND DEAL PIECES MADE IN THE COLONIES. TOWARD THE
END OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY THE TRANSITION FROM
MASSIVE TO MORE GRACEFUL FORMS TOOK PLACE. THE INTRODUC-
TION OF MAHOGANY IN ENGLAND SOON INFLUENCED FURNITURE-
MAKIXG ON THIS SIDE OF THE WATER, AND FOR FIFTY YEARS
CHIPPENDALE, HEPPLEWHITE, AND SHERATON WERE THE GUIDING
STARS OF AMERICAN DESIGNERS. EARLY IN THE NINETEENTH
CENTURY ENGLISH PATTERNS DECLINED IN FAVOR AND FRENCH
INFLUENCE BECAME PARAMOUNT. THE EMPIRE STYLE MARKED
THE END OF COLONIAL FURNITURE-MAKING.
CHAPTER XIV
COLONIAL FURNITURE.
term "colonial furniture," used in its literal sense, includes the household
from the time of the settlement at Jamestown until
THE effects of the colonists
the war of the Revolution. This restricted definition excludes the work of
the great English cabinet-makers of the late eighteenth century, and all pieces
which owe their origin to the style known as the Empire. Thus the furniture
of Sheraton and Hepplewhite, and the later designs of Chippendale, are debarred
from the category, together with all those massive mahogany shapes having carved
columns and claw-feet which have long been the stronghold of colonial collections.
Correctly speaking, these pieces should be classed as late Georgian and American
Empire. To limit the adjective "colonial" to the furniture imported or made by
the colonists prior to 1776 would disqualify more than half of the old mahogany in
this country. The word has been used so long in a wider sense and has been applied
so continually to everything in furniture, from the earliest possessions of the Pil-
grims to the designs in vogue as late as 1820, that it is doubtful if the literal meaning
is ever accepted. From one point of view the broader use of the term is the right
one. It was not until 1830 that American furniture-makers ceased to be governed
by the standards of the Old World. English taste in house-furnishing prevailed
long after English supremacy was at an end. The colonial period in furniture out-
lived the colonial period in history fifty years. When black walnut replaced
mahogany and styles became "indigenous," the last vestige of outside influence
was over. Then came the decline.
In the accepted definition two centuries of furniture-making are covered,
1620-1820. The hundred years may be called the age of oak, and the second
first
the age of mahogany. During the earlier period the history of all handicraft
in this country was closely allied to that of England and Holland. In the later
epoch Dutch influence lessened, and England shared with France the honor of
molding taste in America.
The early seventeenth century in England was a time of transition. The Tudor
adaptation of the Renaissance was slowly giving way to the Jacobean. Furniture
was heavy in every sense of the word and exhibited a combination of styles which
bordered on the grotesque. A little leaven of simplicity was sadly needed and
this, later in the century, was provided by the Dutch. When William of
Orange became king of England, in 1688, the triumph of Dutch designs was com-
165
OLD CRADLE, BROUGHT OVER IN THE MAYFLOWER,
1620. PILGRIM HALL, PLYMOUTH, MASS.
plete. Holland occupied a unique position commercially. She was in touch with
the great nations of the world, and wielded a power second only to that of Italy.
Her ports were open to Spain, Portugal, China, and Japan. Via Flanders came
French and Italian merchandise. With the accession of William the best that
Holland possessed passed into England. Furniture-making was permanently bene-
fited by the introduction of Dutch, Flemish, and Spanish models. In an Anglicized
form many of these types reached the colonies. In New England styles in furniture
were of tardy growth. In the south, where a closer touch was kept with England,
fashions in costumes and in house furnishings changed more rapidly.
Colonial furniture, from the first, showed a variety of types, for the early settlers
reproduced as nearly as was possible, in a strange country, the homes of their native
166
COLONIAL FURNITURE
land. The furniture of the Pilgrims was unlike that of the English colonists in the
south, and each differed from that of the Dutch settlers. Equally distinct were the
household belongings of the Huguenots in Canada, and they in turn were unlike
those of the French explorers in Louisiana. The Quaker and Swedish settlers in
Pennsylvania added still another element. While the English of the south were
fairly representative of one class, and lived after the manner of their kind in the old
country, there were slight differences between the colonial homes of Virginia and
those of Georgia and Carolina. After the roughness of pioneer life passed away the
dividing lines between the English and the Dutch, and between the north and the
south, became more marked, and remained so until the beginning of the eighteenth
century. At that time Manhattan had been for some years under English rule,
and the Massachusetts settlers, with increasing prosperity, were enabled to main-
tain a more comfortable style of living.
The early homes of the Pilgrims and the Puritans were sparsely furnished. The
struggle for existence in those first bleak winters made everything but the bare
167
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
in this country.
Among the first trades mentioned in New England records were those of the
housewright, the joiner, the carver, and the turner. The list of men who earned
their living by furniture-making was a long one. In the Bay colony were John Dix,
joiner; William Pettigrew, turner; Increase Allen, carver; Thomas Tarbox, clock-
maker; Solomon Andrews, turner; Ebenezer Holworthy, varnisher; Martin Rogers,
upholsterer. In 1642 there were twenty joiners in Boston and over thirty turners.
In the Plymouth colony Kenelm Wynslow was a prominent furniture-maker and
was a registered craftsman in 1634.
Six years after the landing of the Pilgrims a law was passed in which it was
declared that "no handicrafts men soever as taylors, shoemakers, carpenters, joiners,
smiths, sawyers, or whatsoever, which doe or may reside or belong to the plantation
Plimoth, shall use their science or trades at home, or abroad, for any strangers or
foreigners, till such time as the colony be served."
168
COLONIAL FURNITURE
The boundless forests of New England supplied workmen with oak, walnut, ash,
hickory, cedar, maple, deal, birch, cherry, and pine. Imported furniture was usually
of oak, but native pieces were often of the softer woods. Painted furniture formed
a large part of the turner's stock in trade. To the heavy coats of paint is due the
preservation of many an old-time chest and settle which would otherwise have long
since been destroyed.
Contemporary with the turned chair in England was the wainscot chair made
of oak, and heavily carved. This chair was too cumbersome for easy transpor-
tation, and is not enumerated in the earliest inventories. In Salem, 1638, "2 wains-
coate chairs" were among the household effects of Giles Perkins, magistrate; in
Boston, 1640, William Pettigrew, turner, advertised "3 wainscoate chairs, with
cushions"; and in 1643, Deliverance Mayhew, of Plymouth, bequeathed to her
"
daughter Patience 1 wainscoate chair, 6 turned chairs, and 2 joyned stools."
Less massive than the wainscot chair was the "leather chair" which was of
Italian origin. It was introduced into England by the Dutch who obtained it from
the Flemings. The Italian model had the spiral supports of the late Renaissance
period. The colonial type was substantially built, with turned legs and heavy under-
braces. Following closely upon the leather chair came the "turkey chair" so
called from the oriental
fabric with which it was
171
HISTORIC STYLES' IN FURNITURE
ment. From
the Italian palace- of
the sixteenth century to the New
England home of the seventeenth
was a far-away cry and yet, barring
crude workmanship, the colonial
bench was a faithful copy of the
Renaissance design. The Dutch set-
tlers were unfamiliar with this settee,
as they also were with the New Eng-
land settle. Aside from a few pieces
which were typical of the homes of
the Pilgrims and Puritans, the Dutch
colonists possessed a far greater va-
riety of furniture.
Life in New Netherlands differed
FLEMISH CHAIR, SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS, LATE SEV-
ENTEENTH CENTURY essentially from life in New England.
172
COLONIAL FURNITURE
to found a trading-post in
the interest of the West ,
India Company ;
the English,
that their children might
escape the divine right of
kings. The Dutch were a
nation of organizers and the
Manhattan settlers were
equipped with all the neces-
sities of pioneer life. From
the first the privations en-
dured by the New England-
erswere unknown to them.
Their genius for commerce,
coupled with their, knowledge QUEEN ANNE CHAIR, EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTLKV
of seamanship, 'robbed the
long voyage across the Atlantic of half its terrors. Therefore, a close touch was kept
with the mother country. Returning vessels brought back Holland bricks and tiles
and in a few years New Amsterdam was old Amsterdam in miniature. While Dutch
sovereignty extended over a period of less than sixty years, Dutch manners and cus-
toms left an impress that a century of English rule could not remove. When New
Amsterdam became New York, and Rensselaerswyck became Albany, it was a change
of letter, and little else. The English crown was added to the arms of the colony, but
the Dutch beaver was not displaced, and the loyal Hollanders still sang Boven Orange.
Madam Knight, a Massachusetts traveler visiting Manhattan in 1704, writes in
her journal: "The Buildings, Brick generally, are very stately, and high, though not
altogether like ours in Boston. The Bricks in some of the Houses are of divers
coullers, and laid in checkers, being glazed, and very agreeable. The inside of them
is neat to admiration. The fireplaces have no Jambs, as ours have. But the backs
173
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
cupboards. Most of these pieces were imported. The trade of the turner and
joiner did not flourish in Manhattan as it did in Massachusetts. The close touch
kept with Holland made domestic furniture unnecessary. Many of the chests and
cupboards were richly carved, some were painted in the bright colors which the
Dutch loved so well, others were ornamented with marquetry. The various cup-
174
COLONIAL FURNITURE
occasionally in those of New England, were carved and paneled in the Jacobean
style. The prices for some were
of these pieces relatively very high. In 1640 the
values were: "One livery cubbard and shelf, 25; A great cupbart, 38 3s."
Another piece of furniture which, in the Puritan house, was of rigid simplicity, was
"
the thousand-legged table." or "gate table."This was a peculiarly constructed
article many
having which
leaves, were supported by heavily braced legs. In the
south this table became quite an ornamental affair. Smaller tables were the
"folding," and "drawing" ones, which were similar in design, but less richly carved.
Toward the end of the seventeenth century in England the heavily carved and
paneled pieces were replaced by lighter designs. Chairs were built on more graceful
lines, tables became less cumbersome, cupboards lost their massive proportions.
Furniture was constructed with a greater regard for comfort and utility. The new
designs were easy of transportation, and soon influenced woodworkers on this side
of the water. The names of the colonial craftsmen had changed. The joiner and
the turner and the housewright had become the cabinet-maker, the chair-maker,
and the carpenter.
In 1690 the "Handcrafts Guild," of Boston, numbered more than sixty men
180
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
English furniture-mak-
ers obtained the designs
FOUR POSTER, LATE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY from Holland, where they
had long been held in
favor. The original Spanish chair was upholstered in leather; the legs terminated
in hoof-shaped feet, and the underbracing was carved. The Flemish chair
had scrolled feet, and the seat and back were of finely woven cane. In being
transplanted from one country to another these chairs lost many of their
distinctive features. Dutch designers robbed them of some of their grace and Eng-
lish woodworkers added several Jacobean touches. Few Spanish and Flemish chairs
of pure type reached America. In England the characteristics of both were blended,
and this composite chair was imported in great quantities by both the northern and
southern colonists. With Spanish feet, Dutch arms, English back, and Flemish
underbracing, its nationality was somewhat puzzling. The Salem chair, illus-
trated on page 172, is an excellent example of the Flemish type as it is found in this
182
COLONIAL FURNITURE
country. The frame of this old piece has the quality of teak, age having toned the
wood to rich, deep brown. Originally the seat of this chair was cane also, the
upholstery being added at a later date.
With the discarding of the great cupboards, the elevated chest of drawers,
familiarly known as high-boys, came into use. The names "high-boy" and "low-
boy" are not found in old furniture annals and are of comparatively late date.
"High chests" and "low chests" are frequently mentioned, and it was by these
terms that they were known in colonial days. The first high-boys contained from
183
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
four to six long drawers and four or more divided drawers, all of which opened with
brass drop handles. Six turned feet connected by a stretcher formed the supports.
The tops were straight, and were finished with a heavy molding. Oak and walnut
were the principal woods used in their construction. An idea of their value may be
gained from prices gathered from old advertisements. The highest figure is 15,
and the lowest 2 10s. There was little change in the construction of the high-boy
until about 1720, when the introduction of the cabriole, or bandy-leg, revolutionized
this piece of furniture, as it did the chair and the table. Instead of six turned
supports, the high chest of drawers rested on four slender ones. The stretcher, in
a modified form, remained, but in another decade it was discarded, and the high-boy
of 1730 stood on independent feet. The high-boy, page 175, shows the type in use
at a slightly later date, when the scroll top was introduced. The drawers display the
fan carving destined to be a feature of so many colonial pieces.
Mr. Luke Vincent Lockwood has made a careful study of the high chest of
drawers, and in his book, Colonial Furniture in America presents a detailed his-
tory of its development. Mr. Lockwood has rendered a service to collectors and
to all lovers of old furniture, by his scholarly analysis of colonial styles. In speak-
ing of the high-boy, he says: "The chest of drawers proper has usually four
drawers, graduating in size from seven to four inches in width; the section above
the fourth drawer is divided commonly into five drawers; a deep one, ornamented
with the rising sun, with the space each side of this equally divided into small
drawers. The table part has a drawer running all the way across the top, and
under this three deep drawers, the center one also having the rising sun. The large
majority of low-boys offered for sale are the lower or table part of the high-boys,
184
COLONIAL FURNITURE
and can be distinguished from the table proper by their height and the more sub-
stantial make of the leg. The genuine low-boy seldom mentions measures over 34
inches in height; the high-boy tables average about 38 inches. The little low-boys,
'
to the trained eye, are easily distinguished from the pieces made by supplying a top
to the high-boy table. It may also be added, that when they are thus separated,
the chest of drawers is often finished with feet, and offered for sale as a colonial
bureau."
A variation of the usual high-boy of 1730 was the type with a blocked front.
This style israrely found to-day, but the blocked desks which are of later date,
convey an idea of the general arrangement of the drawers. With the appearance
broken cornice, the high-boy entered the third period of its
of the scroll top, or
development. The scroll top was the dividing line between old and new forms. It
transformed the high-boy into a thing of beauty; it added lightness and grace to
the cupboard, and it wrought a wonderful change in the desk. Contemporary with
the scroll top were the delicately carved finials and the finely executed brass handles.
The tall clock, no less than the high-boy, was improved by the scroll. When
cabinet-makers discarded the straight cornice, clock-makers followed in their foot-
steps. Clock-making in the colonies
forms a chapter by itself. The earliest
time-pieces were portable, and were of
English make. Hanging clocks, de-
scribed in old documents as "lantern"
and "chamber," were little known in
186
HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
nineteenth Chauncey Jerome, at a later date, made the rectangular
century.
shelf-clock, which
a faithful timekeeper to-day in many Connecticut houses.
is
The year 1720 which ended the first hundred years of furniture-making in the
colonies, was an important date in England. About that time mahogany came
into use in London. The introduction of this wood has long been credited to Dr.
Gibbon, an English physician, the story of which has been related in Chapter XII.
That mahogany furniture was in limited use in the colonies before 1720 is now
placed beyond a doubt. In the will of John Jones of Philadelphia, 1708, a mahogany
screen is mentioned, and in a New York advertisement, of similar date, a mahogany
chest of drawers is offered for sale. The truth of the Gibbon story is open to ques-
p u
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HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE
first Chippendale chairs which were known in America were made with the bandy-
leg and ball-and-claw foot. The backs were a variation of the Dutch splat, pierced
and The next type imported showed a more elaborate back, and
slightly curving.
straight, tapering legs. About 1770 a slight departure from the regulation Chip-
pendale chair resulted in the "ladder-back" design. The supports of this chair
were straight, and the back was divided with horizontal bars. Mt. Vernon contains
several of these patterns. In the West Parlor, shown in the frontispiece, a lad-
der-back chair placed on either side of the fine Louis XVI fauteuil.
is
many of these pieces, show how strongly he was guided by the standards of
the Adam brothers. Most of Sheraton's work in this country is of a high order.
To many minds the old furniture which bears his name is the finest of all colonial
styles.
Four famous colonial chairs are illustrated here. First, the Flemish type;
second, the pure fiddle-back; third, the Windsor; and fourth the chintz-covered
"wing." There were several modifications of these types, but they were merely
In detail.
After the War of 1812 English patterns declined in favor and furniture-makers
turned to France for inspiration. The American development of the Empire style
is a lasting credit to the designers of this country, and forms a fitting close to the
second century of colonial furniture-making. The table and sofa, pages 183 and
184, are typicalexamples of the American Empire and show what spirit could be
imparted to massive designs.
While the Empire style in America followed in a general way the trend of the
movement in France, it was free from the incongruities which marred many of the
foreign pieces. Carved columns, claw-feet, pine-apple finials, and ornamental
brasses were the hall-marks of the American Empire. Realistic heads of lions and
griffins, and the many Egyptian details to which French furniture-makers resorted,
were happily absent from the work of the day on this side of the water.
By 1830 the Empire style in this country had run its course. Designs lost their
vitality and became heavy and ponderous. When black walnut superseded
mahogany the characteristics which had made furniture-making an art for more
190
COLONIAL FURNITURE
than a hundred years ceased to exist. Varied as were colonial types there were
certain features common to all. Whatever extravagances marked English and
continental styles, designs in this country leaned toward simplicity. It is this
quality that renders colonial furniture as satisfactory to-day as when it came from
the hands of its maker.
191
Acanthus, 33, 37, 42, 97, 104, 106, 111, 123, Bedstocks, 90.
144. Bell-Flower, 121.
Adam, Brothers, 138, 140, 144, 150. Bess of Hard wick, 86.
Adam, James, 141, 145, 146. Chateau of, 56, 57,
Blois, 60, 66.
Adam Style, 131, 144, 148, 151. Boheme, Hotel, 20, 21.
Alaux, Jean, 57. Bookcases, 50, 163. 138, 140.
Anne of Austria, 62, 63, 99. Boulle Furniture, 104, 106, 108.
Anne, Queen, 83, 95, 61, 106. Bower, 4.
Anthemion, 37. Bureau, 15, 111, 136, 138, 151
Arabesques, 33, 37, 38, 42, 53, 144. Bureau-Toilet. 127. 128.
Armoire, 11, 15, 108, 123, 125.
Arras, 47 CABINETS
Augsburg, 78, 103. Dutch, 72.
French, 58, 63
Bahut, 4, 15. Italian, 39,
Ball-and-Claw, 133, 139. Spanish, 181.
Ball-Foot, 78. CABINET MAKERS
Bandy-Leg, 133, 184. Boulle, 104, 106, 108.
Baroque, 48, 50. Caffere, Jacques, 114.
Bartolozzi, 143. Caffere, Philippe, 112, 114.
Bartolommeo, Fra, 44, 50. Carlin, 124, 128.
K
Beauvais, 63, 128. Chippendale, 136, 134, 13, 136, 137, 138,
,
195
PNDEX
Napoleon, 157, 158. Hepplewhite, 140.
New England, 168, 169, 171, 182, 186. Jacobean, 88.
Renaissance, 39, 50.
Oak, 10, 78, 82, 169.
Settle, 170.
Ormolu, 104, 108, 111, 128, 158.
Sheraton, 151.
196
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