Old House Journal – September 2019

(Marcin) #1

An ebonized
Renaissance Revival
pedestal with Neo-
Grec accents, by
Kimbel and Cabus,
is highlighted with
bronze plaques
and gilded incising.
(collection of
Ian Burke)


Carved flowers and
fruits embellish a
ca. 1860, laminated
and carved, Rococo
Revival American
parlor chair
with needlepoint
upholstery.
souhantq.com

A very rare American Renaissance
Revival inlaid and ebonized side
cabinet by Herter Brothers,
ca. 1870, is decorated with a pietra
dura plaque and side panels painted
en grisaille. doyle.com

An American Rococo
rosewood love seat, ca. 1860,
makes a statement with
elaborate, pierced floral carving.
souhantq.com

The Rococo Revival
console table with a marble top
is another John Henry Belter
antique. joanbogart.com

A John Henry Belter ‘Fountain
Elms’-pattern rosewood love seat is
upholstered in a Scalamandre silk
damask. joanbogart.com

Victorian Rococo


and Renaissance


furniture overlapped


in popularity during the


1860s through the 1870s.


Rococo was French and


florid; the more geometric


Renaissance style had


Italian roots.


A Victorian Rococo Revival marble-top
rosewood cabinet with a pierced fretwork
crest is attributed to J. & J.W. Meeks of
New York. joanbogart.com

A serpentine recamier
or “fainting couch,”
ca. 1870, is upholstered
in period-appropriate,
button-tufted
peacock-blue silk.
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