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Baroque Furniture: Embracing the Aristocratic You

Lexington Living Room Rangoon Chair 4011-1092-956771

Lexington Living Room Rangoon Chair 4011-1092-956771

Baroque furniture was the latest in furniture fashion in the late 17th century. The likes of Francesco Borromini and Gianlorenzo Bernini were famous architects that made baroque more innovative. It was during the last quarter of that century showed a lot of changes in terms of design. Scroll patterns and caryatids were presented for the world’s perusal. These designs were unique because they made use of the female figure along with spiral and scroll-shaped legs. By the end of that century, baroque architecture showed curved fronts on chests and wardrobes.

French Baroque

One of the most luxurious furniture pieces of baroque was handcrafted for Louis XIV, King of France. These lovely pieces were created by no less than André Charles Boulle. He combined exotic forms embellished with inlays created with tortoise shell, metals, and ebony. These pieces had gilded columnar legs which supported chairs, tables and chests. These gilded carvings seemed like imported Roman fresco.

French baroque means the artist spent a great deal of time on the furniture piece’s workmanship.

English/American Baroque

During the reign of William and Mary, baroque design on furniture also reigned supreme. The pieces there were greatly gilded in order to show the wealth that ancient England had.

In America, master craftsmen used Tudor and Elizabethan basics inspired the designs of the Pilgrim style often made from oak. This style was simple yet exquisitely designed by famous designers. The baroque design jumpstarted the evolution of furniture from ornate carvings to minute-details on the same materials used.

Fine Furniture Design Accessories Mirror 1160-953

Fine Furniture Design Accessories Mirror 1160-953

Ornamentally Baroque

Baroque style became ornamental by the 17th and 18th centuries. Though this is the case, it has been making a comeback into many modern homes as of late. The baroque of today is less fussy, though. It is so simple that minimalists can even use them.

The designers of today know that baroque style has the following elements – jewel tones ornate mirrors, gilded finishes, opulent moldings, curvy lines, and the most intricate architectural details. The elegance of marble is also often used by pairing it with contemporary elements.

Mixed Baroque

Baroque elements can be combined to create a balance among different time periods. For instance, you can fuse antique Louis XV lantern with ornate console table and curved ironwork.

A home office can also become more interesting if you use metallic wallpaper as a backdrop to an interesting art piece. Italian glass chandelier can also be used to balance a modern desk lamp and a modular credenza.

The Baroque Focal Point and Accents

Use an ornate island chandelier as the central element inside your kitchen. Light cabinetry and backsplash will make this same kitchen look more updated.

If you’re not keen into jumping on the baroque bandwagon, then you can just use baroque inspirations such as crown moldings and cornices. Add gilded touches onto your ceiling right on the areas that you designated as the sitting room. Plush upholstery and soft colors can tone down the intricate elements.

Rococo: Born From Baroque

You can actually play with baroque elements. A rustic bathroom fuses tramp art with baroque. Use a Rococo-form mirror framed in wood and bottle caps.

Rococo was born from the Baroque movement and is also referred to as Late Baroque.

Juxtaposition in Baroque

Light, neutral colors, dark and black woods can all be married to produce a new traditionalist theme. Don’t limit yourself to the usual church exterior mode where baroque’s distinctive elements show complex features. Ceilings are often decorated with images while plant motifs are used on walls.

Use baroque design as an inspiration to your shabby chic, bohemian, traditional and even modern settings.

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This entry was posted on Monday, July 4th, 2016 at 8:20 am and is filed under Furniture, Interior Design 101, Interior Design Themes. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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