Victorian
furniture of the 19th Century can broadly be divided
into furniture of the first half of the century,
and furniture of the latter half.
There were several distinct styles in the early
part of the 19th Century (up until about 1870):
Classical (the dominant style), Gothic, Elizabethan
and Rococo revival.
All of these styles tend to revive the past. While
the styles of the great 18th Century also looked
to the past, they were distinctive in their own
right. The Victorian styles add very little of
their own creation, being basically a conglomeration
of many different styles from the past.
As the century progressed, the search of the past
and the revivals of the past seemed to grow more
and more frantic and, at the same time, more meaningless.
Furniture styles of the later part of the 19th
Century include a version of Louis XVI, Renaissance
and Jacobean; Near Eastern, and a new classical
revival.
Classical Furniture:
From 1810 to 1840 England produced a classical
revival style of furniture, and North America
followed a little later (1820 to 1860). By 1860
the leading cabinetmakers had turned from classical
to Rococo. In fact, the trend was evident as early
as 1835 in the products of the top cabinetmakers.
But the real interest in this over-developed style
was in the mass production of this furniture created
by the Industrial Revolution of the 19thCentury.
Gothic Furniture:
At the same time that the classical style was
being over-elaborated, the Gothic style was coming
in, not to replace the classical style, but to
run alongside it. This style was nothing new as
Chippendale had considered this style important,
and used this style often in a number of his chairs.
Elizabethan Furniture:
Elizabethan furniture represented still another
reversion to the past. In fact, the entire Victorian
period was an attempt, as far as furniture was
concerned, to recapture the past. The Gothic and
Elizabethan styles parallel in time the classic
style. All three were styles of the first half
of the Victorian era.
|