Dresser with Mirror

ca. 1880

Maker Unknown

Decorative Arts

These two dressers were produced in New York about a generation apart for style-conscious, upper-middle-class consumers. The Belter dresser, with its undulating contours and profusion of naturalistic decoration, is a masterpiece of the Rococo Revival style, while the later, ebonized dresser is in the more geometric Aesthetic Movement style. The Aesthetic Movement represented a conscious rejection of the perceived excesses of the overwrought revival style that preceded it. Its proponents urged design reforms based on Augustus Pugin’s principles (see the gaming table nearby), as well as new lessons learned from the art of Japan. Although both dressers were considered stylish when made, it is the simple rectilinear form and flattened, abstract decoration of the later piece that appear “modern” to us today.
Maker/Artist
Maker Unknown
Classification
Furniture
Formatted Medium
Ebonized cherry, other woods, mirrored glass, brass
Dimensions
Dresser and Mirror: 90 x 53 x 26 in. (228.6 x 134.6 x 66 cm) (a) chest: 30 3/8 x 55 1/2 x 25 15/16 in. (77.2 x 141 x 65.9 cm) Other ((b) Mirror): 61 1/4 x 53 1/4 x 12 3/4 in. (155.6 x 135.3 x 32.4 cm)
Departments
Decorative Arts
Accession Number
2009.52.2a-b
Credit Line
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Schorsch
Rights Statement
Creative Commons-BY

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