00 Louis XIV, regency, rococo, neoclassical, empire, art nouveau, and historicist pastiche: furniture styles march across French history as regimes rise and fall. In this extraordinary social history, Leora Auslander explores the changing meaning of furniture from the mid-seventeenth to the early twentieth century, revealing how the aesthetics of everyday life were as integral to political events as to economic and social transformations. Enriched by Auslander's experience as a cabinetmaker, this work demonstrates how furniture served to represent and even generate its makers' and consumers' identities. Louis XIV, regency, rococo, neoclassical, empire, art nouveau, and historicist pastiche: furniture styles march across French history as regimes rise and fall. In this extraordinary social history, Leora Auslander explores the changing meaning of furniture from the mid-seventeenth to the early twentieth century, revealing how the aesthetics of everyday life were as integral to political events as to economic and social transformations. Enriched by Auslander's experience as a cabinetmaker, this work demonstrates how furniture served to represent and even generate its makers' and consumers' identities.Now what defined neighborhoods was not the type of goods produced there a furniture, clothing, leather, jewelry a it was their focus as sites of production or of consumption. The contrasts drawn by contemporary commentators between the retail stores on the grands boulevards, aquot;temples ... the customers concerning the appearance, function, and use of the objects they produced. ... Most of the custom furniture shops were split between the faubourg St-Antoine and the rue de Clery.
Title | : | Taste and Power |
Author | : | Leora Auslander |
Publisher | : | Univ of California Press - 1996 |
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