Back to objects
Wardrobe by Herter Brothers
Artist
Herter Brothers
Date
1875–1883
Medium
Cherry
Dimensions
78 1/2 x 49 1/2 x 26 in. (199.4 x 125.7 x 66 cm)
Culture
American
Department
The American Wing
Gallery
743
Location
743
Credit
Gift of Kenneth O. Smith, 1969

Description

Overview Wardrobe Herter Brothers American 1875–1883 On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 743 Herter Brothers, the firm of Gustave and Christian Herter, produced furniture and integrated interior designs in a great variety of styles. This wardrobe epitomizes their Anglo-Japanesque style of the 1870s, incorporating many of the design principles that the British critic Charles Locke Eastlake (1793–1865) promoted in the most widely read primer of the Aesthetic movement, his "Hints on Household Taste" (1868), published in America in 1872. The wardrobe is spare, rectilinear, and, as Eastlake espoused, has no "extravagant contour or unnecessary curves." Despite its apparent simplicity, however, the wardrobe is a highly sophisticated object. It references Ming-dynasty cupboards of the seventeenth century that are nearly identical in form, and the marquetry decoration is one of the most remarkable examples in the Herter oeuvre. View more