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Antique American Furniture 1620-Present - Periods Makers Types Etc / Scarce Book

$ 21.09

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Condition: Very Good

    Description

    Given 100 color pictures and 1,300 black-and-white photographs, this early comprehensive text is a definitive pictorial guide to the identification of American furniture from 1620 to the 1970s.
    AMERICAN FURNITURE 1620 TO THE PRESENT
    by Jonathan L. Fairbanks and Elizabeth Bidwell Bates,  Richard Marek Publishers, NY, 1981.
    Profusely illustrated, this book covers by chapter: The Beginnings; The William & Mary Period (1690-1725); Queen Anne & Early Georgian (1725-1760); Japanned Furniture (1710-1820); The Chippendale Period (1750-1780); Neoclassicism (1780-1835); Away from the Mainstream; Victorian America (1830-1900); The Frontier and Vernacular Traditions (1800-1850); Craft Revival, Reaction & Reform (1870-1930); and Modern to Contemporary (1917-1980). This book has a text which places furniture in its social and historical context and includes not only the furniture centers of New York, New England, and Pennsylvania, but also furniture of the Southwest; furniture made in Dutch, Spanish, French, and Norwegian settlements; furniture made in religious enclaves or as a part of social and aesthetic movements; furniture, that new today, will become classic tomorrow. Furniture makers include Townsend, Frothingham, Dunlaps, Belter, Meeks, Galusha, Roux, Wooten, Stickley, Greene and Greene, and many more. The narrative in this text is rich; the photography is sharp. This is a must-buy book for the serious collector, dealer, curator, or historian of American antique furniture.
    Heavy 9.2" x 10.2" hardback with dust cover in good condition. 561 pages.
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