History of Furniture Styles
History of Furniture Styles
History of Furniture Styles
Styles
Throughout history, the diversity of cultures has found expression in many directions, including
the way people have designed and furnished their built environment. Design is shaped by many
factors, including environmental, religious, and political circumstances. As these factors change,
design reflects these changes while building on previous design theories and philosophies. Styles
of design, therefore, reflect these social surroundings and their foundations.
The term style generally refers to a segment of design history that is typical of an individual, a
period, or a philosophy of design. Style may also refer to a particular culture or region. Style
categories are developed by historians in an attempt to organize history. In reality, however, styles
do not necessarily have sharp starting and stopping points. History is fluid. Designs from one
region may influence others, and therefore styles intermingle.
Having a working knowledge of these styles is essential. Such understanding deepens the interior
designer’s aesthetic appreciation of design and serves as a basis to foster creative energies.
Designers study styles of the past and present to enrich current interior environments. This
pectoral essay briefly outlines the major styles that have had an impact on architecture and interior
design. The first section, Historical Styles and Their Evolution, reviews classical design styles and
how these styles have been adapted through history. The pages on Ancient, Middle Ages,
Renaissance, and Baroque eras define universal design styles based on time period classifications;
the French, Chinese, Hispanic, African, Japanese, English and American pages define styles that
are more typically associated with their respective regions. The second section, Evolution of
Modern Design, looks at the development of modern design and how these styles and philosophies
have been applied.
Historical Styles and Their
Evolution
Interior design and decoration dates back to the Upper Paleolithic era (30,000-10,000
B.C.). Drawings found in caves in Spain and France show evidence of wall
decorations using grouping and spacing concepts as well as limited understanding of
perspective. Sculptured figures of stone, ivory, and clay depicted the human form
and often included enlarged reproductive organs, perhaps to influence fertility and
thus the continuation of the species. These drawings and artifacts represent the
following important concepts:
1. Creative expression is instinctive.
2. The art of interior design dates from early humankind and serves as an integral
part of the human psyche.
Design evolved rapidly through the last several millennia. The Egyptians (circa 3000
B.C) with their sophisticated art and architecture, made a lasting contribution to the
interior design field.
Ancient- Egyptian (4500-330 B.C.)
Known for their pyramids built as
tombs for kings and pharaohs
Developed trabeated construction, in
which vertical posts support a
horizontal lintel
Used hieroglyphics (a system of
writing using pictorial
symbols)inscribed on walls
Columns, perhaps originally made
from papyrus reeds lashed together,
Egyptian chair w/blocked feet created vertical lines, which led to
fluting on columns in later designs
Utilized the mortise and tenon joint in
their furniture
Used straw for flooring, therefore
furniture was raised on small blocks
so animal-shaped legs could be seen
Motifs included the lotus bud, reeds,
papyrus and lilies
Trabeated construction
Ancient – Greek
(3000 B.C.-A.D. 150)
Know for their order, proportion, and refinement of
design
Built temples to honor their gods, surrounded by
open porticos(porches) and columns
Developed the truss system, a triangulated load-
bearing construction to allow for sloped roofs. The
triangle formed by the truss is called a pediment
Developed a system of naming the designs and
details of columns. These classical orders of
architecture, still used today, include the Doric The Parthenon Athens, Greece. 438
(plain square capital on top of the column), Ionic B.C.Doric Columns form a portico
(capital with spiral design called volute), and around the building
Corinthian (capital with two rows of acanthus
leaves)
Mastered the art of carving marble into a human
form. When used for support the human form is
called a caryatid
Developed the Kilmsos chair
Klismos Chair
Ancient – Rome
(750 B.C.-A.D. 40 0)
Known for their engineering expertise,
particularly the development of roads and
aqueducts
Adapted Greek designs
Added two classical orders the Tuscan and the
Composite order
Developed concrete arch, barrel vault and
dome
Developed pilasters (columns partially
embedded in the walls)
Motifs included dolphins, eagles, ribbons,
swans and grotesques (fanciful human/animal
forms)
Roman Column Orders
Cathedral in Chartres,
France
Renaissance Style (1400-1660)
Means rebirth
Major influence came from Italy (1400-1580),
although it spread throughout Europe
Rejected Middle Ages design and returned to
classic design motifs
Included work by Andrea Palladio, Michelangelo,
and Leonardo da Vinci
Villa Rotunda, 1550 A.D.
Tete-a-tete Commode
French Styles – Neoclassic-Louis XVI
(1760-1789)
Coincides with reign of Louis XVI and
Marie Antoinette
Similar to Rococo, but focused on straight
lines, rectangular forms, and symmetrical
balance
Motifs and designs influenced by the
discovery of Pompeii, an ancient Greco-
Roman resort city in southern Italy, which
had been buried by the eruption of Mt.
Vesuvius in A.D. 79
French Styles – Empire
(1604-1850)
Coincides with reign of
Napoleon
Characterized by return of
classic Greek, Roman and
Egyptian designs
Massive, asymmetrical
designs
French Styles – Provincial
(18th Century - Present)
Designs for lesser nobility
and merchants
Copied or adapted rococo
and Neoclassic designs in
simpler and unadorned
styles
Eglish Styles
Elizabetha, ad
Jacobea
(circa 1440-
1700s)
Heavy masculine designs
Architecture characterized
by half-timbering and oriel
windows (bay windows)
Interiors characterized by
plain, plastered walls or
ornately carved panels
Furniture frequently made of
oak
Elizabethan furniture had
bulbous legs
Jacobean furniture had
turned legs
Eglish Styles
Early Georgia with
Quee Ae
1.(1700-1745)
Symmetrical designs
exhibited dignity and
formality, reflecting classic
Greek and Roman
architecture
Queen Anne furniture based
on cyma (S) curve
Most significant piece of
furniture was splatback or
fiddleback chair with cabriole
leg and pad or club foot.
Later chairs had ball and
claw foot
Eglish Styles
Middle Georgia with
Chippedale
Furiture
(1700-1745)
Golden Age of
cabinetmakers, including
Thomas Chippendale
Chippendale chairs
characterized by yokebacks
with Chinese, Queen Anne,
Gothic, French and
Neoclassic influences
Georgia/Neoclassic
with Adam,
Hepplewhite, ad
Sherato Furiture
(1760-1810)
Architecture influenced by Roman
Palladian style; even more formal
Coincided with French Neoclassic
style and the discovery of Pompeii
Robert Adam and his four sons
designed classical interiors. Known
for their sideboard designs. Utilized
paterae (oval shaped decorations)
George Hepplewhite designed
furniture with straight, square,
tapered legs usually terminating
with a spade foot. Known for his
shield and heart-shaped chair backs
Thomas Sheraton designed
furniture with straight lines, and
classical motifs such as urns,
festoons, and scrolls
Styles
Coloial
America
(1600-1700)
Influenced by Dutch,
German, Swedish, English,
French, and Hispanic styles
Most common styles: Salt
Box, Garrison Jetty, Gambrel
and Cape Cod
Styles
Coloial
America
(1600-1700)
Most common Early
American interiors included
Tudor, Elizabethan,
Jacobean, and Spanish
Mission/Colonial style
influences
In southwest America,
furniture designs were called
the Santa Fe style and
incorporated bold colors and
geometric forms
America Styles
Coloial Georgia
(1600-1700)
Greatly influenced by
English Georgian styles with
variations in wood usage,
specific ornamentation, and
proportions
America
Styles
Neoclassic
(1790-1845)
Distinctive designs including Federal,
Greek Revival, Duncan Phyfe furniture
and Empire Furniture
Duncan Phyfe furniture characterized by
fine proportions and simple lines
Empire furniture was bold and
monumental
Industrial Revolution (circa 1830s-1900)
brought about machine-made, mass-
produced furnishings and a decline in the
fine art of furniture making
Federal design emphasized Greek and
Roman design, rejecting English
influence. Thomas Jefferson was an
advocate
Greek Revival architecture prominent in
the South for plantation homes
Victoria Era
(1840 1920)
Coincided with reign of Queen
Victoria
Nostalgia for past styles prevailed
with machinery producing intricate
designs, details and carvings
referred to as gingerbread
Four major architectural styles in
America included the following:
Gothic Revival, Italianate, Mansard,
and Queen Anne
Interiors were profusely decorated
with patterned wall paper, fabrics
and rugs
Prominent designers include John
Belter and Thomas Eastlake
Early Moderism
(1830 1870s)
Coincided with Victorian Era
and Traditional Revivals
Pioneer designers rebelled
against historical eclecticism
Utilized technological advances
in iron frame construction,
laminated wood, and plate glass
windows
Bridged art and technology
Earliest designs came from the
Shakers
Austrian designer Michael
Thonet developed process for
bending wood into gentle curves
Thonet’s designs still used
today, including the famous
bentwood rocker and café chair
Arts ad Crafts
Movemet
(1860s 1920s)
Revolted against machine-
made products
Advocated handcrafted
furnishings
Prominent American
architects and designers
included Gustav Stickley,
Frank Lloyd Wright, Henry
Hobson Richardson, and
Charles and Henry Greene
Greene brothers developed
the bungalow
Early Moderism -
Skyscrapers
(1880s 1920s)
Louis Sullivan, father of the
skyscraper, is credited with
coining the phrase “Forms
follows function” Many
skyscrapers reflect the three
parts of a column: the base, the
shaft, and the capital
The Home Insurance Company
Building (1883-1885), Chicago,
by William LeBaron Jenney,
was the first fully steel-frame
building. Jenney studied in
Paris at L’Ecole Centrale des
Arts et Manufactures.
Art Nouveau
(1890 1910)
Style based on nature,
employing organic flowing forms
Prominent proponents included
Victor Horta, Henri van de
Velde, Hector Guimard, and
Antonio Gaudi
Called Jugendstil in Austria and
Germany
Charles Rennie Mackintosh
combined aspects of Art
Nouveau with strong geometric
forms
Louis Comfort Tiffany is best
known for Art Nouveau stained-
glass designs
Art Nouveau
(1890 1910)
The Tassel House (1892-
1893) in Brussels,
Belgium, is one of Victor
Horta’s best-known town
houses and one of the
earliest private residences
designed in the Art
Nouveau style. Swirling
organic forms decorate
the entry. The graceful
stair railings and supports
are fashioned in iron.
Art Nouveau
(1890 1910)
Moder Styles
Orgaic
Architecture
(1920-1950)
Characterized by a building
that appears to “grow out of
the land” (Falling Water
(1936), Mill Run, PA)
Greatest proponent was
Frank Lloyd Wright
Wright developed prairie
style house
Moder Styles
Iteratioal Style
(1924 1950)
Style based on functionalism and purity of
line
“Form follows function” coined by
architect Philip Johnson
Common materials included reinforced
concrete, stucco, steel, and glass
Stark white finishes
Open floor plan and large expanses of
glass
International design movement leading to
the fully developed style included the
following:
1. The Secession – an artistic movement
in Austria led by Otto Wagner, Adolf
Loos, and Josef Hoffmann.
2. De Stijl – a movement in Holland that
reduced design to its basic elements,
including the use of only red, blue, yellow,
black, gray, and white
Moder Styles
Iteratioal Style
Made in Italy.
Period
most famous products of the Bauhaus. It is a club armchair with all
the stuffing taken out, leaving an almost skeletal framework and
taut lengths of fabric on which to sit and rest one's back and arms.
Marcel Breuer is considered one of the fathers of Modernism.
During his career he was an architect, teacher and furniture
designer. Breuer is famous for number of furniture designs, though
perhaps no chair design is more famous than his Wassily Chair.
Made in Italy.
Made in Italy.
Marcel
Breuer
Cesca Cae
Chair
Moder Styles -
Art Deco
(1909 1940)
Decorative style advocating
strong geometric forms
including the pyramid, ziggurat
(stepped pyramid), zigzag, and
sunburst
Inspired by the glamour of
movies and stage, jazz music,
African art, and new technology
Prominent designers included
Paul Frankl and Donald Deskey
Eliel Saarinen, a Finnish-born
designer, started the prestigious
Cranbrook Academy in
Michigan
Moder Styles
Post World War II
(1950s 1970s)
New architectural directions
New technology included air-
conditioning, suspended ceilings,
synthetic fibers, and plastics
Scandinavian designers included
Alvar Aalto, Eero Aarnio, and Hans
Wegner
Italian designers in particular
exploited the use of plastics
American designers included the
following:
1. Charles and Ray Eames –
pioneered chairs constructed of
molded plywood and fiberglass
2. Eero Saarinen – came to the
U.S.with his fater Eliel; known for
his womb and tulip chairs
3. Buckminster Fuller – known for
his geodesic domes
Moder Styles
Post Moderism
(1960s Preset)
The style borrows from the past but
in extremely contemporary terms
Major exponents include Michael
Graves, Robert Venturi,Robert
Stern, and Philip Johnson
Furniture styles include the Craft
Revival, Art Furniture, Ergonomic
Furniture, and most recently
furniture to meet the needs of a
mobile work force
Other design trends:
1. High tech Style
2. Memphis Style
3. Classic Modernism
4. Deconstructivism – Frank o.
Gehry
Moder Styles
Post Moderism
(1960s Preset)