If
one spent a great deal of time studying furniture
design, Victorian furniture would probably not
come off that badly. The problem is that when
it is compared to the best of the 18th Century
(Sheraton, Chippendale, Hepplewhite, etc.) the
standards of which are very high, it does not
compare favorably.
Yet, some of the smaller pieces of the Victorian
era are not poorly designed or poorly made. Some
are light and have a certain grace, and the woods
are certainly beautiful. When these features are
combined with a price which is very low in comparison
with earlier pieces, Victorian furniture has a
definite place.
In the Victorian era there was some realization
that the furniture was not as artistic as it might
be, and serious attempts were made to improve
it. By 1850 furniture-making had become just another
industry. The makers were no longer artists but
industrialists, yet not on a scale of importance
as railroad builders or steel-makers.
In fact, the furniture industry was many rungs
below many economic enterprises of the middle
19th Century. No longer was it like painting,
but rather a fairly low-level machine-shop operation.
William Morris, in partnership with other craftsmen
and painters, organized in the middle of the century
to try and improve the "bad taste" and
lack of culture at the time. He deplored the machine
age and what he considered to be its tolerance
of a low artistic level.
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Morris's
company designed furniture which was massive
but straightforward, well proportioned, and
well constructed. It was also made by hand,
and not by machine. The lines were straight
and the carving was simple and sharply cut
in straight lines.
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Charles
Eastlake was also greatly influenced by Morris
and his group. Eastlake's book, Hints on Household
Taste, originally published in 1868. went through
many printings. This furniture was based on Morris's
designs, but in a simplified version. Eastlake
used heavy oak with very simple decorations, and
very prominent hinges which gave the pieces a
feeling of antiquity.
His simpler pieces are characterized by a feeling
of horizontal and vertical straight lines, without
curves and ornamentation. The colour is almost
always dark, employing oak as the wood of choice.
There is now quite a demand for Eastlake and the
pieces can still be purchased quite reasonably.
The smaller pieces are not massive and can be
used in smaller homes.
Another
attempt to produce a furniture which would counter
the trend to machine-made furniture of low-level
design and poor craftsmanship was Japanese Victorian
furniture. In some ways, it was comparable to
the 18th Century Chinese furniture style of Chippendale,
in that it depended on Oriental surface motifs.
There was an attempt to use the fine line and
asymmetry of Japanese art and architecture.
The furniture enjoyed a brief popularity, particularly
in England but is not on today's market in the
quantity that some of the other styles are. In
summary some of the revival schools of furniture
such as Morris and Eastlake, who attempted to
improve furniture design and construction, have
lasted and are now accepted, and will probably
enjoy a lasting recognition, along with the mainstream
Victorian furniture of quality.
The price history of Victorian furniture is difficult
to trace, because the furniture is so varied in
quality and design. Not many years ago most Victorian
furniture could be bought cheaply, as there was
a certain stigma attached to it.
However, that has changed and the very good Victorian
pieces now bring high prices. As long as the 18th
Century furniture continues to soar to ever increasingly
high price levels, the Victorian furniture will
probably grow in interest and price, and it would
not be surprising to see a real vogue develop
for Victorian pieces as we enter the first part
of the 21st Century.
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