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Back to North America 1700–1900
Sofa, ca. 1855–60
Attributed to John H. Belter (American [b. Germany], 1804–1863; active in New York City 1833–63)
New York City
Rosewood, replacement underupholstery and showcover; L. 66 in. (167.6 cm)
Purchase, Friends of the American Wing Fund and Lila Acheson Wallace Gift, 1999 (1999.396)

Description

This five-legged sofa exemplifies the Rococo Revival style, popular in America during the 1840s and 1850s, which combined curvilinear forms and cabriole legs from eighteenth-century French sources with the extremely detailed, naturalistic ornament favored in the mid-nineteenth century. A number of American cabinetmakers produced such furnishings for the luxury market, but the German-born Belter has long been recognized for his extraordinary talent. A prolific maker with a large factory by 1856 on what is now the Upper East Side, he was particularly known for his rosewood drawing-room furniture and for his thin, laminated construction and molded forms—as demonstrated here—which were achieved by using a patented method of steam and pressure.

Although hundreds of American pieces in this genre survive, few are documented and the best are almost always ascribed to Belter. Few examples are as accomplished or exuberant as this sofa, however, which is distinguished by a voluptuous serpentine crest: luxuriant bouquets emanating from vases flanked by paired griffins culminate in a central floral garland, which issues from cornucopias and is supported by a Renaissance-style urn and paired dolphins.

(Entry written by Catherine Hoover Voorsanger)

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