Posts Tagged ‘artistic decoration’

Antique Occasional Tables

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Occasional tables.
In the late 17th and 18th centuries the great palaces and chateaux of Europe were furnished in the Parisian fashion, whereby suites of chairs, tables, and torcheres (candlesta lids) were placed against the walls; this left the centre of the room open for formal receptions and audiences. Although seat furniture could be drawn into the centre for more informal gatherings, inevitably pier tables were less movable and this gave rise to a need for smaller tables that could be brought in for “occasional” use.
EARLY OCCASIONAL TABLES
The earliest occasional tables, recorded in the second half of the 17th century in Paris, Augsburg, and Vienna are of rectangular form, usually with frieze drawers, and were often lavish commissions that are masterpieces of the cabinet-maker’s art. Frequently constructed in exotic or expensive materials, such as amber, silver, or ivory, they arc extremely rare.
However, at the court of Louis XV, with its increasingly informal social gatherings, the demand for free-standing tables increased. Richly mounted in ormolu and veneered with floral marquetry, architectural capricci (fantasies), or illusionistic parquetry, or painted with vernis Martin, the French table ambulante was emulated throughout Europe. The rapid dissemination of Parisian taste was in part a result of the huge number of foreign cabinet-makers who had either visited or served their apprenticeship under a cabinet-maker in Paris. Under their direction, mid-18th-century occasional tables became not only more elaborate but also more utilitarian. Drawers
were fitted with pen-trays and inkwells to create writing tables, while a love of mechanics led not only to the introduction of spring-loaded drawers, on tables en
cbiffonieres, but also to more complicated forms: tables a transformation, or metamorphic tables, which could convert into reading tables, library steps, or a bonbeur du jour; rarer still was the table rafraicbissoir, with hinged, fitted compartments devised to conceal the plates, glasses, and provisions for a light supper.
Developed from the late 17th-century table de cabaret, a new type of occasional table appeared in the later 18th century as cocoa was imported from
the 1750s and the consumption of hot drinks increased. This type of table was required to withstand the heat of coffee and chocolate pots. Although white marble certainly sufficed, in the 1750s the inarchand-mercier (dealer in luxury goods) Simon-Philippe Poirier (172085) conceived a most luxurious refinement. He acquired a decorated porcelain tray, without handles, from Sevres and commissioned an elaborate table base to support it; thus the concept of porcelain-mounted furniture was born. This type was greatly admired at the French and Russian courts and was almost exclusively supplied through Poirier and his successor Dominique Daguerre (d.1796), who established a shop in London; such furniture became fashionable throughout Europe, even after the Revolution.
PLAINER OCCASIONAL TABLES
Although initially conceived as luxury items, the practical nature of occasional tables inevitably resulted in simpler, more affordable examples for a wider public. In particular, folding or collapsible tables, upon which food or drinks could be served and which could be easily stored away, were particularly desirable for informal entertaining. Of this type, perhaps the most widespread design is the so-called coaching table, first engraved by John Claudius Loudon (1783-1843) in the early 19th century. Closely related in form to the mid-Georgian butler’s tray on a stand, and usually of mahogany or oak, these coaching tables were popular throughout Britain and North America from the early 19th century.
It was multi-purpose tables, particularly nests of quartetto tables, that enjoyed enduring popularity in the 19th century. First recorded in England in The Cabinet Dictionary ( 1803) by Thomas Sheraton (1751-1806), 1-1806), they were often made in the early 19th century in exotic woods such as rosewood, amboyna, ebony, and satinwood.The design of quartette tables remained remarkably consistent during the first half of the 19th century, the legs becoming gradually heavier in form from the second quarter. Inevitably, Colonial cabinet-makers copied the English design, and although Chinese export examples in padouk, or ivory examples from Vizagapatnam in India, tend to follow English precedents, heavier, more florid examples in ebony from Goa also survive.
Although quartetto tables were often plain, with only crossbanded decoration to each rectangular tier, more elaborate ones were inlaid with a chequerboard to the smallest tier, and occasionally featured a removable, sliding ratchetted, lyre-shaped music stand, which was stored beneath the lowest tier. Although the form altered little, by the 1820s English cabinet-makers began to shy away from exotic hardwoods, reverting instead to indigenous woods such as pollard oak, burr-yew, and burr-elm, but these too were gradually superseded in the 1830s by the Parisian fashion for papier-mache inlaid with mother-of-pearl.
SPECIMEN MARBLE TABLES
Since the mid-17th century, travellers to Italy on the Grand Tour had acquired panels or table tops of pietre dude (hardstones) as souvenirs from Florence. The Florentine workshops became the pre-eminent centre for inlay in marbles specializing in panels and table tops with pastoral landscapes, birds, coats of arms, or sprays of flowers. However, for Grand Tourists with shallower purses, table tops decorated with the same motifs could be made of scagliola (powdered marble made into to a paste, applied to a gesso ground, and polished), and were a fraction of the cost. This technique enabled an almost painterly freedom in the designs and flourished particularly in the 18th century.
In the early 19th century, under the influence of Napoleon I, who had brought a considerable collection of marbles to Paris as spoils of war, there was a renewed taste for gueridon (candle-stand) tables that supported specimen-marble tops. Exported from Italy, and predominantly circular in form, they were usually inlaid with segments or geometrical patterns of specimen marbles, often on white marble or black slate grounds. Initially these featured Siena (yellow/ red), rose antico (deep red), and Sicilian Jasper (green-flecked browny/orange) marbles, as well as alabaster and various precious and semi-precious stones such as lapis lazuli and Egyptian porphyry. From 1830 Russian malachite, imported from mines in the Urals, was much used. Such specimen marble gueridons became fashionable throughout Europe, and although Italian quarries satisfied much of the demand, northern Europe, especially Russia which had huge mineral reserves, and Britain, produced their own specimen tops. However, the availability of Italian marbles and hardstones was restricted, and they were often prohibitively expensive, so from the mid-19th century, polished slate and granite were used as inexpensive substitutes.

NESTS OF TABLES also called quartette tables; often the height of these tables has been reduced, so look for uninterrupted decoration on the legs; check for revenecring or crossbanding of a later date – patina and consistency of colour should be an indication of this; there are usually four tables in a nest, and if one is missing it will affect value; look for consistency of colour with each table, and note how the colour may change if a table has been protected from the light by the one above
COACHING TABLES many examples were made in the 19th and 20th centuries.
SPECIMEN MARBLE TABLES many fake examples exist: generally one of the giveaways is that in fake tables resin has been used between the specimens, and when a pin is pushed into this it will make a hold; on the original tables, the specimens would have been set in solid bases of slate or marble, which will remain unmarked by the pin.

Antique Pembroke and Sofa Tables

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

Pembroke and sofa tables
The elegant dropleaf table known as the Pembroke table, so called, according to Thomas Sheraton (1751-1806) in his pattern-book The Cabinet Dictionary (1803), “from the name of the lady who first gave orders for one of them”, was part of the evolution of the breakfast table. The Pembroke table was eventually replaced in the fashionable drawing-room by the sofa table, an extended version of the type, v developed in the last years of the 18th and the first decade of the 19th century.
Pembroke table
This English mahogany serpentine Pembroke table is an elegant example of its type. It has square-tapered legs, brass feet, and casters, which are all typical features of Pembroke tables of this period.
PEMBROKE TABLES
Recorded in accounts from the 1750s, Pembroke tables were placed in the drawing-room and the boudoir where they were used for taking meals, playing cards, writing, and needlework. By the 1770s this elegant, useful form was well established, and was often a vehicle for the finest cabinet-making of the Neo-classical period. The basic structure, with its two side flaps supported on hinged brackets, lent itself to almost limitless variations. The opened table may form a rectangle or a square, an oval or an octagon; it can be straight or bow-fronted, with rounded, serpentine, or D-shaped flaps; the wood can be plain or crossbanded, with marquetry, painting, or carved decoration; and the legs may be of cabriole or straight-tapered shape, of round or square section.
A drawer in the frieze is usual, but some examples have sliding sections concealing compartments, while the rare “harlequin” type includes a mechanism to raise and lower compartments of drawers and pigeon holes within the centre. Most 18th-century Pembroke tables are Supported on their four legs without understretchers, while others have decorated base supports or small platforms. Appropriately for a highly mobile piece of furniture, nearly every example is fitted with casters.
While examples are known in the Gothic and Chinese tastes of the 1760s, those produced between 1770 and 1800 reflect the Neo-classical taste at its most refined.
Veneers are of mahogany, satinwood,
or other luxurious woods; lines
are simple, proportions carefully
considered, and ornament is of the greatest delicacy. The examples illustrated by George Hepplewhite (4.1786) in The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer’s Guide (1788-94) are typical of those available to the gentry during the last quarter of the 18th century. Pembroke tables with tapering legs of attenuated cabriole form, ending in the thinnest of scroll feet, were the result of French influence toward the end of the 18th century. Some had finely chiselled gilt-brass mounts.
Decoration took the form of plain stringing or crossbanding, or marquetry borders of anthemion, husks, guilloche, or scrolling acanthus, with such
embellishments as shells, medallions, or florets. These could also he painted, although garlands, beribboned swags, or tapering trails were the most usual.
The proportions of late 18th-century Pembroke tables are crucial; the side flaps are usually (but not always) equal to half the width of the central section, and should be one-third of the table height in their fall postion. There should be a frieze drawer at one end with a dummy drawer oil the opposite end. An oval table usually also displays bow-fronted end friezes to match the curve of the top. Each flap should have one or two fly-bracket Supports, opening sideways on wooden hinges. The legs should be tapered and the tops of the legs should continue upward to form the side frame of the drawer.
Pembroke tables continued to be made in the 19th century, the most advanced design having a central column with splayed legs (called a pillar and claw), which Sheraton illustrated in The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer’s Drawing Book (1791-1802). A slightly later variant was the platform base. Pembroke tables of the 1820s and 1830s are of characteristically squat proportions, with turned tapered legs, and often have two frieze drawers, one above the other.
A Pembroke table
The top of this British oval Pembroke table is set with segmented satinwood veneers and decorated with marquetry The large oval paten medallion in the centre of the top is surrounded by a band of sycamore set with scrolling plants and flowerheads, with similar decoration on the outer moulded border. Its delicate construction and graceful appearance give it especially feminine associations. As with many tables of this type, this sofa table has a real and an opposing dummy drawer; the legs are decorated with pendent husks typical of late 13th-century Neo-classical ornament.
SOFA TABLES
The sofa table was as varied as the Pembroke table in the details of its design and decoration and, like its predecessor, it followed a defining form. According to Sheraton in The Cabinet Dictionary (1803), the sofa table was specifically for use “before a sofa” where “the Ladies chiefly occupy them to draw, write or read upon
Sofa tables are usually between 1.52m (5ft) and 1.83m (6ft) long, when fully extended, and 61cm (24m) wide. The flaps, supported on fly brackets, are each about one-quarter of the width of the central section. Some examples have sliding-topped compartments in the middle for games, or rising desks for writing and drawing, but the majority have one long or two short drawers on one side of the frieze, with corresponding dummy drawers on the opposite side.
The edges of sofa-table tops are always straight, and the corners of the flaps rounded, or chamfered to form “octagon corners”, but the bases are hugely varied and closely reflect the evolving design styles of the Regency period. The top may be set on end supports, with or
without stretchers across the middle, or central supports rising from a platform base. The legs are so designed that the feet can fit a little way under a sofa, allowing the table to be pulled close to the sitter. They arc nearly always on casters.
The plainest sofa tables have plank-shaped supports dividing into splayed tapered or sabre legs with brass cappings and casters. Alternatively after c.1810, rectangular plinths were set at right angles to the uprights, often with scrolls in the angles and with scrolled feet. For more luxurious sofa tables lyre-shaped end supports or patterns of decorative spindles were favoured, and while the lion monopodia that were advocated by George Smith (active c.1786-1828) in A Collection of Designs for Household Furniture and Interior Decoration (1808) were rarely executed, the lion mask often appears on the decorative brass drawer handles. “Hipped” sabre or cabriole legs were also popular; they appear often on sofa tables with central supports. All of these shapes could be embellished with reeding, lines of inlaid wood or brass, or strategically placed carved paterae or leaves. Cross-stretchers provided many, opportunities for decorative turnings. Inlaid brass decoration on the table top and frieze was sometimes matched on the legs, and/or on the fronts of the fly brackets.
The timbers used for sofa tables range from plain mahogany or more fashionable timbers such as rosewood to exotic woods including calamander; lightly coloured woods such as satinwood for veneering were now no longer in vogue in the 19th century, except for crossbandings as a foil to the dark woods now in favour; common timbers such as beech could be stained or ebonized to simulate these. By c.1815 brass inlays in the manner advocated by George Bullock (c.1777-1818) were generally used to create decorative contrasts; the most lavish examples have ormolu mounts as well as inlaid brass. A rare but significant form of surface decoration on sofa tables was black and white penwork, painted by ladies to imitate inlaid ivory decoration.
Because they have been highly desirable for a long time many sofa tables have been “improved” or even fabricated beyond acceptable levels of repair and restoration. As well as “marriages” between tops and associated bases, decoration such as crossbandings or brass inlays may have been added to tops to enhance the commercial value. Bases may have been legitimately repaired, but many sofa tables have been “made up” with the trestle supports from old (and much less expensive) cheval mirrors. These arc liable to look somewhat flimsy in proportion to the table tops. Wood grain running the length of a sofa-table top, rather than across it, may indicate a top made up from another larger piece of old furniture.
PEMBROKE TABLES beside the genuine repairs that may be necessary in the course of time, collectors should beware of later restorations and alterations to Pembroke tables: these include substituting an oval top for a (less valuable) square or rectangular one; inserting decorative veneers or crossbandings into a plain surface to increase the value, or later painting, on a previously undecorated table – usually identifiable by the quality
SOFA TABLES those tables that have low stretchers are generally less popular than those with higher stretchers, which allow more leg room; sometimes lower stretchers have been moved, and the scars that are left should be visible, although often these areas have been re-veneered to hide them; satinwood or rosewood tables are more desirable than mahogany, and end-support tables more sought after than those with central pedestals; the best sofa tables have cedar-lined drawers
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ART DECO. Origins & Development of Art Deco.

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

Origins & Development of Art Deco.
L’Exposition International des Arts Dedcoratifs et In - dustriels Modernes was held in Paris, France, from April to October in 1925. This international exhibit was arranged for the purpose of showing the work of current artists, craftsmen and designers who attempted to project a view of contemporary and future trends in artistic decoration. The event had been planned much earlier, but the onset and aftermath of World War I caused the Exposition to be postponed until 1925. As the title implied, the purpose of the Exposition was to demonstrate that elements of art and industrial techniques could be combined as applied art to make both utilitarian and attractive products. These were desirable to accommodate the changing life styles occurring because of the industrial progress of the 20th century.
Countries which participated at the Expostion set up pavilions to house the respective displays of their selected artisans. In addition to France, Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, England, Greece, Holland, Italy, Japan, Monaco, Poland, Russia, Spain, Sweden and Turkey were represented. Two major countries did not participate. Germany was not invited because of the strained relations resulting from the war. The United States did not accept the invitation because according to “Herbert Hoover … there was no modern art in the United States” (Arwas, p. 14). For a full description of the 1925 Exposition, see the book by Frank Scarlett and Marjorie Townley (Arts Ddcoratifs 1925, London: St. Martins Press, 1975).
The 1925 Exposition captured the current world of design and had a profound influence on design over the succeeding years. The styles and designs of the work shown at the Exposition were not identical. As years passed, the styles displayed in 1925 were emulated, but they were not copied slavishly or duplicated precisely. In fact, varied interpretations and other innovative designs emerged during the following years. The style highlighted in 1925 served as the basis for developing the “modern” look of the decorative arts over the next generation.
Because of assorted opinions about Art Deco, its history is controversial. Numerous individuals and groups, various schools of design, many social and world events, and several philosophical ideas or “isms” are considered instrumental in the development of Art Deco. A wealth of material has been written on these various aspects of the subject. It is not my purpose to present a detailed historical survey. Rather, readers are encouraged to consult the selected entries in the Bibliography for a thorough review of Art Deco’s complex background.
Rarely does a consensus exist about the precise dates of artistic or historical periods. Prior developments are important and will inevitably lead to some point that later is identified as the beginning of the period. The literature which describes the development of the Art Deco style has several different views about when the era began and ended and about where and why it originated. There is even disagreement about what Art Deco actually is.
Art Deco is sometimes seen as a reaction against Art Nouveau, the immediately preceding period of decorative design (1890’s-1910. Art Nouveau is a style based on romantic and naturalistic images, dominated by a graceful, curvilinear line. It is highly decorative, having a sensuous, dreamy, more subtle quality than the gaudy ornamentation typically associated with the Victorian period.
Art Deco, in contrast, is often considered as an interpretation of the future based on the use of straight angles and clean lines without superflous decoration. This opinion is contradicted by observers who point out that early Art Deco did not fit that description. It was neither all lines and angles nor were all examples plain and austere. These writers believe Art Deco grew out of Art Nouveau or was a refinement of that earlier style. They emphasize that early pieces often were richly executed with lavish materials and were quite luxurious.
Some authors describe Art Deco as being a “nevi, art” which did not imitate previous designs. Critics of that view believe that the “true” Art Deco was derived from the restrained neo-classical 18th century styles. Another view is that Art Deco borrowed from cultures such as the Egyptian, African and American Indian.
In addition to the origin and characteristics of style. the original audience for Art Deco is debatable. On the one hand, it is seen as intended for the wealthy. Some experts accept only the work of the top designers ant craftsmen as being representative of true Art Deco. Certain individuals who exhibited at the Paris Exposition are usually cited as the most important names associates with the style. Others insist the style was developed primarily for the middle classes. Mass produced ware_ which strived to imitate the “modern” trends of the 1920’s and 1930’s are scorned by some. Such example_ are often lumped under the heading of “kitsch, — a Ge– man term literally defined as “trash,” or the debasement of original works. Today, however, many of those items have become extremely collectible and comprise the major part of many collections.
Another dispute in the literature is that Art Deco :synonymous with France. Deco items of French origi- are considered superior to examples from other countries. France, in fact, is usually considered the birthplace of Art Deco, especially because of the 1925 Exposition. Yet knowledgable writers trace its development through other European centers such as Austria and Germany. :ndeed, the list of countries exhibiting at the 1925 Ex.:position is evidence that craftsmen in many countries were designing their work simultaneously along lines hick now are identified as Art Deco. Thus, it is apparent -hat other countries expressed their own views of modern design. And while the United States did not participate n the 1925 event, that certainly does not mean that modern” design was not developing here as well.
Purists say Art Deco ended in 1925, with the peak of the style culminating in the Paris Exposition. They do not believe that the work which followed was worthy of :he name. Others, less dogmatic, differentiate between “Art Deco” and “Art Moderne. – Art Deco would include design up to 1925, and Art Moderne would describe the style followed after that year and on into the 1930’s. This dear division separates the components of elegant style ollowing Art Nouveau from the purely angular and stark designs brough forth in the late 1920’s.
Other critics maintain that Art Deco includes the en-:ire period of the 1920’s through the 1940’s. Alternative-.y, Art Deco is referred to as the style popular between :%vo World Wars-1918-1940. Other definitions of the era confine the period between the years of 1925, the date of the initial French exhibit, and 1940.
If the general consensus is that 1940 or World War II signifies the end of the main production of Art Deco, :hen World War I is usually considered the most impor:ant event influencing the development of the Art Deco period. Life styles certainly changed during and after the war. Servants left their positions to fight, or in the case of women, work for the war effort. The sons and daughters of the wealthy also became involved in wartime activities. After the war, many former domestics -efused to return “downstairs,” seeking more regular jobs and their own living quarters. Because of the war, both servant class and upper class women began to become more independent. A desire to enjoy life and a relaxation of morals are also often cited as important consequences of the war. A “middle” class began to emerge which demanded a release from the encumbered Victorian way of life steeped in heavy traditions, pious attitudes and elaborate rituals of dressing, entertaining and running households.
Although World War I might be the focal point for recognizing a change in the world’s life styles, other important factors also occurred before and after the war which helped bring about this change. The first 40 years of the 20th century witnessed unsurpassed progress in industry which led to a more convenient way of life in all areas: ‘from horse and buggy to automobile, train and plane; from gas lighting to electricity; from outdoor to indoor plumbing; from hand delivered calling cards to telephone, telegram and radio. This period of rapid change in transportation, communication and manufacturing resulted in a smaller world, as is often quoted, by making distant people and places more accessible. But
it also made the world larger for the average person by making more goods and services available and thereby allowing more individual freedom. It is not surprising that as life became more efficient, especially for the average person, all aspects of style and design were influenced.
In spite of the various views of its origin and development, Art Deco is a recognized age just as its immediate predecessors, the Victorian and Art Nouveau periods. Like those well known categories of collector interests, Art Deco, too, has become firmly established. In 1965, a revival of the 1925 Exposition, Les Annees ‘25, was held in Paris. World attention once again took a look at what had been hailed as “modern” in 1925. The success of this subsequent exhibit brought forth a new “Period” for collectors. “Art Deco,” derived from the lengthy French title of the original Exposition, quickly caught on as an apt descriptive term not only for the style showcased in 1925, but perhaps more importantly also evolved to identify the modernistic designs which were either continued or initiated after 1925 until the 1940’s.
Today, auctions specialize in sales devoted to artifacts from the period. General price guides include Art Deco as a specific entry, listing a variety of examples and current prices fetched at auctions or in the collectibles market. As collector interest in the subject grew, the definition of Art Deco has expanded to include a much broader scope than purists might prefer.
Today, Art Deco is quite loosely interpreted to include a very wide range of objects from fine art to the mundane and produced as early as the first decade of the 20th century until the beginning of the fifth decade. The style is characterized by several different elements of design which may include the following: an understated and restrained elegance; sharply angular and geometric lines, often void of any decoration; futuristic concepts; suggestions of speed and movement; both vivid and contrasting colors; Jazz age and Flapper influences; Aztec, African and Egyptian cultural symbols; and certain materials which became popular such as bakelite, celluloid, chrome and dark colored glass.
Anything which exhibits one or more of these traits is generally classified as part of the Art Deco period. It does not matter if it is an original work by a famous person or merely a mass produced dime-store novelty. Consequently, and fortunately, Art Deco can be enjoyed by collectors as diverse as its many dimensions.
Serious wealthy collectors purchase creations by top designers, artists and manufacturers identified with the early years of the era. Prices for such examples can easily mount to five figures. Many who like Deco cannot compete in that market. But as in other collecting areas, once the top of the line has been singled out and record prices paid for choice pieces, a second level of collecting surfaces which attracts a wider, though perhaps less affluent, group. Consequently, a middle ground of Deco collecting has arrived on the scene. From the offerings at shops and shows across the country, as well as a perusal of most general value surveys on the subject, interest in Art Deco with medium to moderate prices is quite strong.While many pay thousands of dollars for Art Deco rarities and originals, perhaps seeing such purchases as investments and true works or art, there is also a growing number of enthusiasts who collect Art Deco for the fun of it! Possible future value is usually only a secondary consideration. Some might take issue with the assertion, but Art Deco is fun. Other collecting periods cannot really be characterized in that way. For instance, Victorians is intriguing, and collectors search for the many “necessities” and unique items of everyday life, obsolete today, but vital at that time. Likewise, primitives are very interesting. Collectors seek the ingenuity of those individuals who had to fashion their own tools, dishes and furniture from whatever materials were at hand. Such articles may be curiosities, but they would hardly be described as “fun.” Most items commonly associated with Art Deco today, however, usually evoke a smile or sense of amusement because of their exaggerated lines, bold colors, ultra sophisticated or irreverent nature or cleverness of design.
The focus of this book is on a very general interpretation of Art Deco. It is intended for the collector who enjoys the vibrant spirit of Art Deco and who collects according to individual whimsy and moderate pocketbook, perhaps splurging at times on certain irresistible objects! Pieces illustrated include some examples by famous “names” with prices of over $1,000.00 but many other items are representative of the mass productions of numerous manufacturers. Those prices are certainly more now than when the articles were first produced, but they are still affordable. There are also other objects made by little known or unknown creators whose prices are quite nominal. Examples are not limited to items of French origin but include Deco from many other countries. Art Deco made in America, Czechoslovakia and Japan is especially becoming more and more popular with collectors. Concentration on Deco shapes and motifs instead of particular designers or manufacturers can often yield unexpected Art Deco treasures!
In the photographs, decorative objects for the home
and personal accessories are grouped under 10 categories which comprise some of the most popular Art Deco collectibles. These categories are not meant to be comprehensive. The broad scope of the subject does not make such a survey possible. Hopefully, a sample of items in these categories will serve to suggest other Deco collecting possibilities as well as Art Deco’s open ended nature. The majority of examples were available on the open market: that is, items sold at antique shops and shows rather than from private collections or museums. A price range has been established for individual items based not only on what the dealer was asking for the piece but from information gathered from numerous other sources on similar or identical pieces.
From the items featured, certain earmarks of what is currently collected as Art Deco can be seen. For instance, typical subjects of decoration are dominated by human figures either in a nude or semi-nude state, and depictions of the sun, moon and earth are prevalent. Suggestions of the future and of speed are shown either by items actually shaped in the form of an airplane, ship or rocket, or as a decorative motif.
All types of geometric shapes and lines can be found incorporated into the designs of most objects. The cube, triangle or pyramid, and stepped or zig-zagged lines are common. Crescent or half-moon shapes made into rainbows or fans, spheres representing the world, and many sundry other shapes such as a diamond, cylinder, ellipse or oval, square, hexagon and octagon stand out as well.
Repetitive, tangential, overlapping and ziggurat patterns plus juxtaposed designs appear in the design or decor of a number of pieces. Also quite noticeable are many different construction materials, ranging from ceramic, glass, ivory, marble, metals and wood to metal alloys and synthetics. From the Art Deco pictured, perhaps it will also be clear why Art Deco often is described not only by such words as chic, clever, elegant, smart, sophisticated, streamlined and tailored but also as amusing, flippant, risqud and fun!

art deco 1920s dresser
art deco 1920s drop leaf dining table
art deco 1920s throug 1940s
art deco 1940 club chairs green vinly
art deco 5 drawer dressing table with round mirror
art deco antique figurine
art deco antique tube  chair
art deco arm chair
art deco artist’s palate shaped oak table
art deco ashtray
art deco bar black lacquer
art deco bar commode
art deco barley twist
art deco bars for the home
art deco bartender cigarette dispenser
art deco barware
art deco bergere wood back
art deco black fabric chair
art deco– black grooved table lamps (large )
art deco black laquer screen
art deco bowles
art deco brass, round vertical shade, nude figure, antique table lamp,
art deco british furniture
art deco bronze art style lamp
art deco cabinet 1928
art deco cabinet legs
art deco cabinet sliding glass doors
art deco cabinets and chests
art deco candle sticks glass
art deco cane and wood chair
art deco carved tables
art deco cat statues
art deco ceramic  figurines
art deco ceramic figurine maker jd
art deco ceramic figurines
art deco ceramic horse
art deco ceramics decoration jean luce
art deco chair concept
art deco chair facts
art deco chair lacquer
art deco chair materials
art deco chair wood inlay lightning bolt
art deco chairs
art deco chairs rosewood
art deco chest of drawers 1940’s
art deco chest with radio
art deco china cabinets
art deco china pattern
art deco china patterns
art deco china set
art deco china sets
art deco chinese enameled brass
art deco chinese redwood jewellery box
art deco chrome and vinyl arm chairs
art deco cigarette cigar stand
art deco cigarette dispenser bar
art deco clear glass
art deco clear glass rocket vase
art deco club chair inlaid wood
art deco club chair scroll arm
art deco club chair triangular arms
art deco club chairs + wooden applied handles
art deco cocktail
art deco commode
art deco commode inlaid
art deco consol
art deco corner cabinet
art deco curved front buffet
art deco denmark pavilion
art deco design cromer
art deco desk and chair
art deco diner figure
art deco diner germany
art deco dining chairs
art deco dining furniture d.r. patent
art deco dining furniture of the 1920’s
art deco dining set birdseye maple
art deco dining table u shaped base
art deco dining table white cherry
art deco dining table with concave barrel pedestal
art deco dining tables
art deco display cabinet sun ray
art deco display cabinet with cupboards
art deco drawer construction
art deco drawers oak
art deco dress reprodutions
art deco dresser lamps
art deco dresser mahogany 1940’s
art deco dressers antique
art deco dressers california
art deco dressing table construction and materials
art deco dressing table plans
art deco drinks cabinets
art deco drop center dresser
art deco dropleaf dining table
art deco english gentlemans bar furniture
art deco escutcheons
art deco european
art deco exhibition jean luce
art deco exposition 1925
art deco extending table
art deco ferniture black lacquered
art deco figure ceramic
art deco figurine
art deco figurine gentleman
art deco figurine lamp
art deco figurines german
art deco figurines goldscheider
art deco finials
art deco floor ashtray pipe
art deco folding chair bed
art deco folding chairs
art deco folding open desk
art deco french breakfast dining set
art deco french clock
art deco french club chairs with flat arms
art deco french interior examples
art deco french original furniture+auction
art deco furniture + schoen
art deco furniture black lacquered jean dunand
art deco furniture black leather
art deco furniture in germany
art deco furniture kinds
art deco furniture parts
art deco furniture prices germany
art deco furniture/bar with glass sliding doors
art deco glass and silver inlaid candlestick
art deco glass door wood cabinet octagon
art deco glass heater
art deco glass nude dish
art deco glazed bureax
art deco hamered lamp
art deco harp table
art deco head straws
art deco hinged top bar and cabinet
art deco ice bucket top hat
art deco incense burner
art deco inlaid wood designs
art deco inlaid wood furniture
art deco inlay
art deco inlay bedroom suite
art deco inlay wooden flatware box
art deco inspired bookcase
art deco interior futures
art deco iron works
art deco jacobean furniture
art deco ladies smoking
art deco ladys desk
art deco lamp of kneeling woman
art deco lampen figurine
art deco laquered desk
art deco large earthenware jug
art deco lisbon antiques
art deco machine age furniture
art deco mahogany desk
art deco mahogany side chairs
art deco maple china cabinet
art deco metal screens
art deco mirrored console table
art deco mirrored end tables
art deco movement and its origins
art deco multi colored dresser aztec look
art deco music box cabinet
art deco oak dining room furniture antique
art deco oak gateleg table
art deco oak leaf
art deco office chair
art deco old chairs
art deco origen
art deco origins and  influences.
art deco oval dining tables
art deco palissy china
art deco patterns for glass platters
art deco pedestal dining table
art deco period+origins
art deco pieces chair
art deco plastic furniture paris
art deco porcelain italian
art deco pottery  in europe
art deco pottery italy
art deco pottery longwy
art deco rectangle pattern design
art deco representatives
art deco rocket cabinet
art deco screen doors
art deco seats
art deco secretary
art deco semicircular desk
art deco shape examples
art deco shapes with ottoman influence
art deco shelley plates block design
art deco shop france
art deco shops sweden
art deco skyscraper clock
art deco smoke
art deco smoking lamp
art deco smoking table
art deco sofa tables
art deco spindle desk
art deco stoneware cream and sugar with lids and bases large angular
art deco style candlesticks
art deco style dinner service
art deco style origin
art deco style side chair
art deco style stemware
art deco stylised figure lady dancer red italian alabaster
art deco swedish armchairs
art deco table centerpieces
art deco tallboy oak
art deco tulip watch penchant
art deco u base dining table maple
art deco u shape vase
art deco upholstered chair with one curving side c.1930
art deco upholstered chairs
art deco upholstery fabric
art deco walnut chairs
art deco walnut dresser
art deco wood chair legs
art deco wood dressers
art deco wooden armchairs
art deco wooden chair design
art deco wooden materials
art deco wooden round back armchair
art deco wooden screen
art deco writing bureau/display cabinet
art deco writing desk