Oct 22

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A deeper understanding of antique Victorian furniture begins with some knowledge of the Victorian Era itself, the period of time in which this remarkable furniture was made. The Victorian Era takes its name from Queen Victoria, who ruled in the United Kingdom from June 1837 to January 1901. During Victoria’s reign, the British people grew very prosperous, both through their empire and through industrial progress at home. This prosperity led to the rise of a large and highly educated middle class.

The Victorians were fascinated with novelty, and the era witnessed much conflict with regard to style, including the famous Battle of the Styles, which pitted Gothic against Classical. The Great Exhibition, which took place in London’s Hyde Park from May 1 to October 15, 1851, was the first World’s Fair. It featured the Crystal Palace, which the famous critic John Ruskin, who supported Gothic style, called the epitome of mechanical dehumanization.

The Victorian Era was also greatly influenced by the development of photography, which scholars link to the rise of Impressionism and Social Realism in the latter part of Victoria’s reign.

The decorative arts were characterized by an eclectic revival and influences from Asia and the mid-east. Here at The Antique Victorian Furniture Blog we are particularly interested, of course, in the furniture of the era. No particular style dominated the creation of Victorian furniture. Rather, the designers drew inspiration from Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, English Rococo, Neoclassical and other periods.

Gothic and Rococo were perhaps the most popular and common styles. The Gothic style of Victorian furniture, which flourished from approximately 1830 to 1860, follows the design and motifs of churches, with arches, quatrefoils, spires and crockets. Rococo, prevalent in the 1850s and 1860s, is characterized by sinewy curved lines, C and S scrolls, and elements of nature such as leaves, vines and flowers.

On the other hand, one of the most famous Victorian furniture designers, Charles Eastlake, despised Rococo and ushered in an era known as the Eastlake era in response. This was noted for its trend toward less showy and less complicated designs, with more stylized natural elements, shallow incisions and turnings.

It’s important to understand that the styles of antique Victorian furniture vary greatly. It can be a tricky business for the novice collector, especially given that the furniture is rarely labeled and attribution is largely a matter of opinion. I’d recommend that you start by reading a few good books, such as Jeremy Cooper’s Victorian and Edwardian Furniture and Interiors. Pick the brains of people who know the business. Find and observe local auctions that deal in antique Victorian furniture.

And visit websites, like The Antique Victorian Furniture Blog and others that I will point you toward, which are devoted to giving you reliable information and to helping you deepen your understanding and appreciation of this glorious period of the decorative arts.

Thanks for the visit. Hope to see you again soon!

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Jun 23

Here is a wonderful article from the American Collector Archives at Collectors Weekly. The article was first published in the March 1943 issue of American Collector, a magazine that ran from 1933-1948. The author of the article is a man named Richmond Huntley. Collectors Weekly titles it “Flashback: Victorian Furniture.” I can’t tell if that reflects the original title, but no matter.

Huntley’s prose is engaging and educated, a style largely lost in the journalism of today. Huntley’s perspective on Victorian furniture is decidedly negative and gives interesting insight into current tastes for the furniture.

Huntley lets us know that it was only recently (remember, recently as of 1943) that anything made after 1830 was considered antique. And only “recently” has Victorian furniture “been taken seriously at all.”

He gives an abbreviated but informative history of Victorian furniture, mentioning Greek, Roman and Egyptian sources and styles like Louis XV and Gothic. He himself favors the furniture made before the Civil War and says little of what came after, perhaps out of contempt.

He makes no bones about his feelings for the “whatnots and overstuffed armchairs of the 1880’s.” If you have to keep one of those horrible chairs around because it belonged to a great-grandfater, you can always hide “its worst features” with a a slip cover. As far as the whatnots go, “family sentiment can be carried too far.”

Very funny. But there is a gloom these days resulting from a shift in taste away from the excess of antique Victorian furniture. As this article shows, though, it was hardly popular in the first half of the 20th century either.

If you like it, buy it. Why worry what everyone else thinks? Eventually tastes will come around to it. If you’re a dealer with an inventory of Victorian furniture, well, tastes may come around sooner than you fear. A bad economy may actually help that along. Have a look at this post.

On the positive side, as far as Huntley is concerned, are Belter, Marcotte, J&J Meeks, and Seibrecht. The article contains a single photo – a bed by Belter. Surprise. Huntley knew the good stuff. An investment-minded person might have taken note. Check out this post to see how far the appreciation for beds by Belter has come. And imagine if your grandparents had bought up Belter in 1943 and left it to you!

Click here to read this delightful article. While you’re there, take a look around the antique Victorian section of Collectors Weekly. It’s well worth the visit.

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Jun 11

I just found an excellent article from Antiques And The Arts Online about the Rhinebeck Antiques Fair that took place over Memorial Day Weekend in Rhinebeck, NY.

The gloomy economy was definitely a presence, but show promoter Bruce Garret said, “Overall, I’m happy with what occurred. The show was right on the mark, the weather was nice and sales seemed to be steady.”

Lots of good details. Take a look.

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Jun 1

Take a look at this article from Auction Central News, written by Terry Kovel. Did you know that the Victorian era saw desks that turned into beds, chairs that turned into bathtubs, or highchairs that turned into strollers? Victorian furniture is an endless source of fascination for those of us with a historical perspective.

Now, if you have your eye on that highchair for you own baby, just read far enough to learn that it wouldn’t pass modern safety standards. Inventiveness and safety aren’t always compatible, are they?

Read the article here.

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May 27

Long Sutton, as I have come to understand, is a market town in Lincolnshire, England. I’m geographically out of my element here, but what’s going on there very soon is something that will amaze any lover of antique Victorian furniture and Victorian antiques. Dealers and collectors will be licking their chops over this one.

An English woman named Edna Northam collected and dealt in Victoran antiques for more than 40 years and decorated every room of her house with an astonishing array of antiques.

She had ceramics, glass, china, porcelain, furniture, metalware, and taxidermy. Auctioneer Clinton Slingsby says, “This is one of the most remarkable collections I have ever seen and probably one of the best examples of Victoriana remaining in the country.” And that means England itself!

Every room in Mrs. Northam’s house was themed by color: cranberry glass, blue glass, green glass. Her Victorian furniture was in mahogany, walnut and rosewood.

I’ll let the article tell you the rest. It’s from a publication called Cambs Times 24, and it has a link to a gallery of photos. Wow. Click here to read it.

The sale takes place on June 16 and 17. A full catalogue will be online a week before the sale. Let’s keep our eyes out for it.

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Mar 11

On Feb. 21 I posted about a Victorian bed by Herter Bros that exchanged hands for $326,000 at a Bonhams & Butterfields auction that took place in New York City on Jan. 22. Well, the high end of antique Victorian furniture continues to soar. A bed made by John Henry Belter gaveled down at $201,250 at an estate sale held by Hal Hunt Auctions in Northport, AL on February 21. Somebody seems to be surviving the current economy.

“There were some great bargains that might have brought stronger prices in better times,” Mr. Hunt is quoted as saying, “but serious buyers paid top dollar for the high-quality merchandise.”

The collection at this estate sale must have been something to behold. The Belter bed was the top of the lot. It’s an exceptionally rare piece, the only other extant example of which is in the Brooklyn Museum. But there were plenty of other pieces by Belter, not to mention Alexander Roux, J and JW Meeks, Mitchells & Rammelsburg and more.

A mint condition, 10-piece laminated rosewood parlor suite in the Milwaukee pattern by Belter went for $132,250. And many of the other pieces were well into five figures.

Mr. Hunt feels that people are putting their money into hard assets these days, instead of stocks and bond. He remarks that “the nice thing about quality antiques is, you can actually enjoy them while you own them, and they almost always appreciate in value.” Note the words “quality antiques.” A lot of the despair these days is taking place at the low end.

I have two links for you here. This one is to a write up on the sale at PR-inside. This one is a preview of the sale at Auction Central News. I’ve included the preview because the photos are better, especially of that Victorian bed by Belter. I could sleep in it, to say the least. Don’t have the 200 grand to afford it at the moment, but it’s an object that I would find worthy of wealth if I ever had it.

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Mar 6

Take a look at the photos of this Victorian chair at the Tigerlilly Patch blog. Nice job of reupholstery. I’m always impressed by this kind of work.

Reupholstered Victorian chair

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Mar 1

Here’s Blake Kennedy again (see my post on Feb. 14). He has a few tips for you on how to sell your antique furniture. It’s a quick video, but the advice is sound.

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Feb 24

I’m not sure that “Economy slows antique sales” is the best headline for this article from The MetroWest Daily News, out of Framingham, MA. But that’s what you’ll see when you go to read it.

One hundred dealers showed up from around New England and New York for the Holliston Antique Show, sponsored by the Citizen Scholarship Foundation of Holliston. There were 400 people waiting to pay $6 at the door when the show opened for its first day on Saturday, despite weather conditions that kept some away. In the end the scholarship foundation was able to add $10,000 to $12,000 to its endowment.

Of the three dealers mentioned in the article, two were positive and one negative.

Phyllis and Sam Petnov of Millford, MA remarked that it wasn’t like the good old days, when they could make $10,000 to $20,000 at the show. “Those days are gone. It reflects the economy. It’s universal.”

Alan Seymour, on the other hand, owner of Franklin Street Antiques in Natick, MA, said he did well at the show, after setting various price points for broader appeal. He wants to remind people that antiques are a good investment.

And Tom Nagy of Hampton, CT, who sells 18th and 19th century accessories, also said it was a good show for him. His sales included an 18th century Sheraton server and a Victorian mirror.

Why put a negative headline over that? I prefer mine.

Here’s the article.

And here is my growing collection of posts about the current economy and its effects on antique Victorian furniture and on antiques in general: Feb. 17, Feb. 7, Dec. 9, Dec. 8, Nov. 27, Oct. 25.

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Feb 21

If you haven’t heard about the auction called American Furniture & Decorative Arts offered by Bonhams & Butterfields, which took place in New York City on January 22, you’ll want to take a look at the articles I’ve attached here.

There were over 300 lots at the auction, and total sales topped $2.3 million. Standing-room crowds gathered in particular to watch the auctioning of the Warner Brothers Studios collection of 15 pieces of furniture by the famed Victorian cabinetmakers Herter Brothers.

The prize lot was a Herter Bros bed — parcel-gilt, carved, inlaid, ebonized, and “considered by many scholars to be the finest American bedstead known to exist in the fully developed American Renaissance style.” It was originally commissioned as part of a bedroom suite for the master bedroom at Thurlow Lodge, home of former California Governor Milton Slocum Latham in Menlo Park, CA.

The final price of the bed was $326,000, purchased by collectors Max and Judy Foote of Louisiana, who also came away with a mirrored dresser ($103,700), a rare shaving stand ($61,000) and a pair of night stands ($23,180) from the same suite. The Footes already have in their collection a Herter Bros antique Victorian bed that appeared in Alfred Hitchcock’s movie Psycho.

Many of the pieces at the auction, and not just those by Herter Bros, brought in sums far exceeding top estimates. Quite a few others failed to attract any interest at all.

There’s a lot to read about, and you’ll want to see the photos of the bed, the dresser with its massive mirror and other pieces.

I have two links here for you to follow. This one is to the article at Bonhams’ website and this one is to an article at Antiques And The Arts Online.

My thanks to Ben Mijuskovic (see my posts on Oct. 23 and Nov. 20) for bringing this to my attention. He tells me that the price on the Herter Bros bed is a record or near-record for any piece of Victorian furniture.

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