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- Modern_Gothic_style abstract "Modern Gothic, also known as Reformed Gothic, was an Aesthetic Movement furniture and decorative-arts style of the 1860s and 1870s, that was popular in Great Britain and the United States. A rebellion against the excessive ornament of Second Empire and Rococo Revival furniture, it advocated simplicity and honesty of construction, and ornament derived from nature. Unlike the Gothic Revival, it sought not to copy Gothic designs, but to adapt them, abstract them, and apply them to new forms.The style's leading advocates were English designers Christopher Dresser and Charles Eastlake. Eastlake's Hints on Household Taste, Upholstery, and Other Details, published in England in 1868 and in the United States in 1872, was one of the most influential decorating manuals of the Victorian Era. The Eastlake Movement argued that furniture and decor in people's homes should be made by hand or by machine-workers who took personal pride in their work. Eastlake lectured in the United States in 1876.French architect Eugène Viollet-le-Duc advocated similar principles in Entretiens sur l'architecture (in 2 volumes, 1863–72), which was translated and published in the United States as Discourses on Architecture (1875). He incorporated modern materials, such as cast iron, into his historicist designs and building restorations. He also designed furniture.Other designers who worked in the Modern Gothic style include Bruce James Talbert, Edward William Godwin, and Thomas Jeckyll in England; and Kimbel and Cabus, Frank Furness, and Daniel Pabst in the United States.By 1878, the American critic Clarence Cook was already pronouncing the style passé:"There was a little while ago quite a rage for a certain style of furniture that made a great display of seeming steel hinges, key-plates, and handles, with inlaid tiles, carving of an ultra-Gothic type, and an appearance of the ingenuous truth-telling in the construction. The chairs, tables and bedsteads looked as if they had been on the dissecting-table and flayed alive,—their joints and tendons displayed to an archaeologic and unfeeling world. One particular firm [Kimbel and Cabus] introduced this style of furniture, and, for a time, had almost the monopoly of it. It had a great run."".
- Modern_Gothic_style thumbnail Dining_Room-Examples-of-Ancient-and-Modern-Furniture-1876.jpg?width=300.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageExternalLink 147.htm.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageID "40932235".
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageLength "5956".
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageOutDegree "40".
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageRevisionID "663086964".
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink 1876_Centennial_Exposition.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Aestheticism.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Bruce_James_Talbert.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Campeche_chair.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Category:Decorative_arts.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_furniture.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Centennial_Exposition.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Eastlake.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Christopher_Dresser.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Clarence_Cook.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_Pabst.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Eastlake_Movement.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Edward_William_Godwin.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Eugène_Viollet-le-Duc.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Frank_Furness.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Gothic_Revival_architecture.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Harpers_Weekly.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Herter_Brothers.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink High_Museum_of_Art.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Indianapolis_Museum_of_Art.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Kimbel_and_Cabus.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Los_Angeles_County_Museum_of_Art.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Philip_Webb.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Pinakothek_der_Moderne.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Red_House,_London.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Red_House_(London).
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Rococo_Revival.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Second_Empire_architecture.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Sideboard.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Jeckyll.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink William_Morris.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Wolfsonian-FIU.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink Wolfsonian-FIU_Museum.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLink File:Dining_Room-Examples-of-Ancient-and-Modern-Furniture-1876.jpg.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLinkText "Modern Gothic style".
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageWikiLinkText "Modern Gothic".
- Modern_Gothic_style hasPhotoCollection Modern_Gothic_style.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clear.
- Modern_Gothic_style wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Modern_Gothic_style subject Category:Decorative_arts.
- Modern_Gothic_style subject Category:History_of_furniture.
- Modern_Gothic_style hypernym Furniture.
- Modern_Gothic_style type Agent.
- Modern_Gothic_style comment "Modern Gothic, also known as Reformed Gothic, was an Aesthetic Movement furniture and decorative-arts style of the 1860s and 1870s, that was popular in Great Britain and the United States. A rebellion against the excessive ornament of Second Empire and Rococo Revival furniture, it advocated simplicity and honesty of construction, and ornament derived from nature.".
- Modern_Gothic_style label "Modern Gothic style".
- Modern_Gothic_style sameAs m.0yt0_b3.
- Modern_Gothic_style sameAs Q17146855.
- Modern_Gothic_style sameAs Q17146855.
- Modern_Gothic_style wasDerivedFrom Modern_Gothic_style?oldid=663086964.
- Modern_Gothic_style depiction Dining_Room-Examples-of-Ancient-and-Modern-Furniture-1876.jpg.
- Modern_Gothic_style isPrimaryTopicOf Modern_Gothic_style.