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  2. Klismos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klismos

    The klismos was revived during the second, archaeological phase of European neoclassicism.Klismos chairs were first widely seen in Paris in the furniture made for the painter Jacques-Louis David by Georges Jacob in 1788, to be used as props in David's historical paintings, where the new sense of historicism required visual authenticity. [12]

  3. Ancient furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_furniture

    Ancient Greek furniture was typically constructed out of wood, though it might also be made of stone or metal, such as bronze, iron, gold, and silver. Little wood survives from ancient Greece, though varieties mentioned in texts concerning Greece and Rome include maple, oak, beech, yew, and willow. [56]

  4. Klinē - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klinē

    Klinai (Greek; sg.: klinē), [1] known in Latin as lectus triclinaris, [2] were a type of ancient furniture used by the ancient Greeks in their symposia and by the ancient Romans in their somewhat different convivia. [3]

  5. History of the chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_chair

    The chair is made of papier-mâché with inlaid mother of pearl, gilded and painted decoration. Part of the Baltimore Museum of Art collection. Although English furniture derives so extensively from foreign and especially French and Italian models, the earlier forms of English chairs owed but little to exotic influences. [8]

  6. Furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furniture

    Other Greek seats included the klismos, an elegant Greek chair with a curved backrest and legs whose form was copied by the Romans and is now part of the vocabulary of furniture design, [30] the backless stool , which existed in most Greek homes, [31] and folding stool. [32]

  7. Triclinium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triclinium

    Reproduction of a triclinium. A triclinium (pl.: triclinia) is a formal dining room in a Roman building. [1] The word is adopted from the Greek triklinion (τρικλίνιον)—from tri-(τρι-), "three", and klinÄ“ (κλίνη), a sort of couch, or rather chaise longue.

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