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We have 1018 guests online| Furniture Specific: Elegant (?) Eastlake |
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| Written by Fred Taylor |
| Tuesday, 07 April 2009 08:45 |
![]() Eastlake. Yuck! Those two words are often found together in many discussions of 19th-century American furniture. Other terms that may be lurking close by in those same conversations include ugly, clunky, gaudy and cheap. And in most cases the terms are aptly used since what is commonly called Eastlake furniture often fits nicely with those disparaging words. But the problem is with the application of the terms since most of what we refer to as Eastlake has absolutely nothing to do with the original ideals and concepts of one our favorite Englishmen whom we love to hate - right up there with George III. But Eastlake, unlike George, is undeserving of our enmity. In the long run he actually provided a valuable service to the American furniture industry and its consumers. Charles Locke Eastlake was born in England in 1836 with the proverbial silver spoon firmly in place. Trained as an architect, he traveled Europe as a young man and became an art and architecture critic. At the age of 19 he was appointed secretary of the Royal Institute of British Architects. From this lofty vantage point he began to notice the ground swell of activity in the field of design reform. What had begun as a vague discontent with the stagnation of original English thinking on the subject crystallized into openly expressed distaste at the 1851 Crystal Palace Exposition. Early English reformers such as architect Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin and artist John Ruskin were very much put off by the rococo "French antique" movement of the mid-19th century, characterizing it as vulgar, cheap and poorly constructed. This handful of tasteful radicals advocated a return to indigenous English medieval Gothic forms that involved individual craftsmanship and visible honesty in design and construction. The concept so moved a young decorator, William Morris, that he founded a firm that made wholly handcrafted furniture and accessories for its wealthy clientele.
But his ideas were fairly modest. He believed that the design of a piece of furniture - and everything else for that matter - should appropriately reflect the use for which the article was intended. Superfluous decoration was just that, superfluous and entirely unnecessary. Even those articles that were designed to be decorative should also have a useful function. A well-shaped piece of wood incorporated into a well-done design was ornamentation enough and little else was required, especially a French polish. To Eastlake's way of thinking, when wood became shiny it began to lose interest.
As influential as he was in England, he was even more of a hit in America. Hints on Household Taste was first published in Boston in 1872 and was subsequently reprinted five more times before 1890. The influence was monumental and contemporary writers did their best to sound like him and espouse his principles, even to the point of outright plagiarism.
The Centennial Exposition was pivotal in the history of American furniture design, not because it focused on the Colonial Revival, which was the original concept, but because for the first time it brought furniture manufacturers from all over the country together in one place. This was important because major centers of furniture production had moved from the East Coast to the Midwest, and there was isolation among factories and design centers. Now the second-tier furniture makers were able to see firsthand what was hot in the East, and what caught their attention were the simple lines and obvious construction techniques of the Eastlake school. Here was a concept that fit like a glove with the manufacturing technology of the period.
Eastlake was a realist and, like his acceptance of veneer, he was not totally averse to the application of machinery to the production of furniture so long as the end result was better furniture for more people. But the application of his principles by the lower end furniture manufacturers of the day, especially in America and especially to such poorly designed and built inventory eventually led to his public disclaimer of the "Eastlake style." By the 1878 London reprinting of Hints on Household Taste, he had had enough. He felt compelled to author a new preface to the book distancing himself from "What American tradesmen are pleased to call ‘Eastlake' furniture, with the production of which I have had nothing whatever to do, and for the taste of which I should be sorry to be considered responsible." Send your comments, questions and pictures to Fred Taylor at P.O. Box 215, Crystal River, FL 34423 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . Visit his Web site at www.furnituredetective.com.
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| Last Updated on Monday, 11 May 2009 10:04 |








Fred Taylor is a freelance writer based in central Florida, who earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in finance from the University of Florida. While he is perhaps better known in his role as a nationally syndicated columnist on the subject of antique furniture, he is interested in almost all things related to Florida. He has covered many auctions both inside and outside the Sunshine State for leading antiques trade publications. Fred and his wife, Gail, love to travel Florida’s highways and byways on a Harley-Davidson motorcycle.
