Designed by
Lockwood de Forest
American (1850 - 1932) Primary
Manufactured by
Ahmedabad Wood Carving Company
Indian Manufacturer
Armchair
ca. 1881-1886
Wood
45 in. x 24.5 in. x 29 in. (114.3 cm x 62.23 cm x 73.66 cm)
Bryn Mawr College
Accession Number:
Deanery.360
Geography:
North and Central America and Asia, United States and India
Classification:
Furnishings and Furniture; Furniture
Culture/Nationality:
American design; Indian manufacture
Collection:
Deanery Collection
Keywords
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This object has the following keywords:
- armchairs - Term applied to a wide variety of chairs with arms, to distinguish them from side chairs which have no arms.
- Arts and Crafts - An aesthetic and social movement of the late 19th century that originated in England and spread to the United States, Germany, and Northern Europe. A reaction against industrialization and the quality of manufactured goods, the movement is marked by a desire to revive the craftsmanship associated with traditional arts, a form follows function philosophy, and an idealized view of the medieval craft guilds.
- carvings - Refers to works executed by cutting a figure or design out of a solid material such as stone or wood. It typically refers to works that are relatively small in size, are part of a larger work, or are not considered art. For large and medium-sized three-dimensional works of art, use the broader term "sculpture" or another appropriate term.
- Indian - Nationality, styles, and culture of the modern nation of India, or more broadly to cultures that developed on the subcontinent of India, which is bounded by the Arabian Sea, the Indian Ocean, the Bay of Bengal, and the Himalayn Mountains. It may also refer even more broadly to cultures of India, the East Indies, and the former British Indian Empire. It was formerly used less specifically to refer to any Oriental or Asian culture. Do not use this term to refer to the indigenous populations of North or South America; see "Native American" or other appropriate terms.
- teak - Wood of the species Tectona grandis, native to south and southeast Asia, including India, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Myanmar; it is cultivated in many additional areas, including Africa and the Caribbean. Teak is a golden brown wood with a straight grain and coarse texture, very resistant to insects and decay. It is used for high quality furniture, boxes, chests, doors, shipbuilding, railway carriages, veneer, and in India also for building houses. Teak wood retains an aromatic leathery smell for over a hundred years or more.
Additional Images
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Exhibition List
This object was included in the following exhibitions:
- "All-Over" Design: Lockwood de Forest between Ahmedabad and Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr College , Oct 24, 2019 – Mar 1, 2020
Bibliography List
The following Bibliography exist for this object:
-
Roberta A. Mayer,
Lockwood De Forest
University of Delaware Press.
Newark, NJ, 2008
Page Number: 145-147, Figure Number: 122-125 -
Manufacturers' Appraisal Company,
1949 Manufacturers' Appraisal.
1949
Page Number: 19 -
Manufacturers' Appraisal Company,
1954 Manufacturers' Appraisal.
1954
Page Number: 26
Related Object(s)
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Armchair
Deanery.361
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