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  2. Mid-century modern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-century_modern

    Mid-century modern (MCM) is a movement in interior design, product design, graphic design, architecture and urban development that was present in all the world, but more popular in North America, Brazil and Europe from roughly 1945 to 1970 during the United States's post-World War II period.

  3. Gothic Revival decorative arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_Revival_decorative_arts

    At the end of the Restoration (1814–1830) and during the Louis-Philippe period (1830-1848), Gothic Revival motifs start to appear in France, together with revivals of the Renaissance and of Rococo. During these two periods, the vogue for medieval things led craftsmen to adopt Gothic decorative motifs in their work, such as bell turrets ...

  4. Daniel Pabst - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Pabst

    Born in Langenstein, Hesse, Germany, Pabst immigrated to the U.S. in 1849 and settled in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he would make his professional career.The excellence of his craftsmanship elevated him above his peers, as did the strongly architectonic (building-like) quality of his furniture designs—often massively scaled, with columns, pilasters, rounded and Gothic arches, bold ...

  5. John Jelliff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Jelliff

    One of the best-known undertakings of Jelliff & Miller is a parlor suite from the 1870s, consisting of a sofa, armchair and four side chairs, now in the Ballentine House, which adjoins the Newark Museum. Jelliff's crowning achievement in carved furniture is the bishop's throne, dating to about 1850, in Newark's St. Patrick's Roman Catholic ...

  6. Elizabethan and Jacobean furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabethan_and_Jacobean...

    Settees were made at this time whose backs consisted of several just such immense scallops as those of these Holland House Gilt Chamber chairs; [3] and the same idea of decoration peeps out in fan-like frills at every spare corner of the Neo-Jacobean revival of the style. These shell forms of furniture might befit an oceanside home, but they ...

  7. Bruce James Talbert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_James_Talbert

    Bruce James Talbert (1881). Bruce James Talbert (1838 – 28 January 1881) was a Scottish architect, interior designer and author, best known for his furniture designs.. In the United States, he influenced the Modern Gothic work of the Herter Brothers, Kimbel and Cabus, Frank Furness, and Daniel Pabst.

  8. Victorian decorative arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_decorative_arts

    There was not one dominant style of furniture in the Victorian period. Designers rather used and modified many styles taken from various time periods in history like Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, English Rococo, Neoclassical and others. The Gothic and Rococo revival style were the most common styles to be seen in furniture during this time in ...

  9. Modern Gothic style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Gothic_style

    Modern Gothic, also known as Reformed Gothic, was an Aesthetic Movement style of the 1860s and 1870s in architecture, furniture and decorative arts, that was popular in Great Britain and the United States.

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