As the
century progressed, and countries such as Italy and Germany became unified, a
sense of nationalism pervaded in Europe. This led to a revival of the dominant
styles of the previous 500 years, including Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque and
Rococo. New methods of mass production made goods more affordable and available
but it also provoked the Arts and Crafts movement as a reaction against it.
Motifs from
architecture
The first
of these revival styles was Neo-Gothic. Motifs taken from architecture, such as
pointed arches, latticework and quatrefoils, and heraldy, were used on
furniture, fabrics and tablewares. Stained glass was revived for domestic use.
In France
and Italy, there was a return to the Renaissance style. Oak and walnut
furniture was carved with spindles and fretwork. Meissen and Sèvres produced
porcelain decorated with classical figures, grotesques and scarabs. In Britain,
many factories began making a form of richly glazed ceramic known as ‘majolica’.
Its name was based on that of maiolica, a type of tin-glazed earthenware
produced in Italy from the Renaissance period.
Neo-Baroque
furniture – based on 17th-century Baroque pieces – was carved with
foliage and elements from classical architecture, such as pediments. Decorative
technique from that era were revived, including Boulle marquetry (inlaid
bronze), marquetry (inlaid wood) and pietra dura (inlaid marble). The Rococo
style also enjoyed a revival. The Industrial Revolution had brought advances in
veneer cutting, carving and metal casting. This enabled Rococo furniture to be
produced at a fraction of what it had cost in the 18th century.
Meissen
excelled at production porcelain encrusted with floral ornament and heavily
decorated with gilding and enamel.
A mix of
styles
Neoclassicism,
which had been popular at the beginning of the century, was revived. The
driving force behind this styles was the new Emperor of France, Napoleon III,
who ruled from 1848 to 1870. Some pieces were direct copies of examples from
the 17th and 18th centuries; others combined details from
several styles, often at the expense of decorative cohesion.
The sinuous
Art Nouveau style was also a reaction to the glut of revival styles in the late
19th century and a desire for a fresh approach. The style has spread
from Paris to the major cities of Europe by 1895 and the rest of the world by
1900.
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