Decorative Art, PEA-RED
People appreciate the usefulness of things like glassware and furniture, but they appreciate such objects even more when they’re aesthetically pleasing, too. That’s where decorative art comes in. Explore the world of basketry, metalwork, pottery, interior design, tapestry, and more.
Decorative Art Encyclopedia Articles By Title
pearl, concretion formed by a mollusk consisting of the same material (called nacre or mother-of-pearl) as the......
pebble mosaic, type of mosaic work that uses natural pebbles arranged to form decorative or pictorial patterns.......
Pembroke table, light, drop-leaf table designed for occasional use, probably deriving its name from Henry Herbert,......
pendant, in jewelry, ornament suspended from a bracelet, earring, or, especially, a necklace. Pendants are derived......
Sir Roland Penrose was a British artist, collector, and writer known best for his curatorial work and promotion......
peplos, garment worn by Greek women during the early Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic periods (i.e., up to about......
Charles Percier and Pierre Fontaine were a pair of French architects and interior designers who carried out many......
perfume, fragrant product that results from the artful blending of certain odoriferous substances in appropriate......
pergola, garden walk or terrace, roofed with an open framework over which plants are trained. Its purpose is to......
peridot, gem-quality, transparent green olivine in the forsterite–fayalite series (q.v.). Gem-quality olivine has......
peristerite, iridescent gemstone in the plagioclase (q.v.) series of feldspar minerals. The name (from Greek peristera,......
Charlotte Perriand was a French designer known for iconic 20th-century furniture, such as the LC “Fauteuil Grand......
Grayson Perry is a British potter who embedded in his work images of violence and other disturbing social issues.......
peruke, man’s wig, especially the type popular from the 17th to the early 19th century. It was made of long hair,......
petasos, wide-brimmed hat with a conical crown worn in ancient Greece. The petasos worn by men had a rather low......
petit point, form of canvas embroidery similar to cross-stitch embroidery (q.v.), but even finer because of its......
Petit porcelain, French hard-paste porcelain produced by Jacob Petit (b. 1796). Petit worked at the porcelain factory......
petticoat, in modern usage, an underskirt worn by women. The petycote (probably derived from the Old French petite......
pew, originally a raised and enclosed place in a church designed for an ecclesiastical dignitary or officer; the......
phenakite, rare mineral, beryllium silicate, Be2SiO4, used as a gemstone. Phenakite has long been known from the......
photomontage, composite photographic image made either by pasting together individual prints or parts of prints,......
Phrygian cap, soft felt or wool conical headdress fitting closely around the head and characterized by a pointed......
Duncan Phyfe was a Scottish-born American furniture designer, a leading exponent of the Neoclassical style, sometimes......
Pablo Picasso was a Spanish expatriate painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist, and stage designer. He was one......
picturesque, artistic concept and style of the late 18th and early 19th centuries characterized by a preoccupation......
pierced work, in metalwork, perforations created for decorative or functional effect or both; the French term for......
pietra dura, (Italian: “hard stone”), in mosaic, any of several kinds of hard stone used in commesso mosaic work,......
pileus, close-fitting, brimless hat worn by the ancient Romans and copied from the Greek sailor’s hat called the......
pilgrim bottle, vessel with a body varying from an almost full circle, flattened, to a pear shape with a shortish......
pillar and scroll shelf clock, wooden shelf clock mass-produced in the United States from the second decade of......
pin, the small, pointed and headed piece of stiff wire used to secure clothing or papers. In mechanical and civil......
Nicolas Pineau was a French wood-carver and interior designer, a leader in the development of interior decorating......
Pinxton porcelain, English porcelain produced in Derbyshire from 1796 to 1813. The factory was established by John......
piqué work, decorative technique, usually employed on tortoiseshell, in which inlaid designs are created by means......
Pitkin glass, a glassware originating from a glasshouse established by the Pitkin family in East Hartford (now......
plain weave, simplest and most common of the three basic textile weaves. It is made by passing each filling yarn......
platform rocker, rocking chair with rockers fixed to move on a stationary base rather than on the floor. Introduced......
pleached alley, garden path, on each side of which living branches have been intertwined in such a way that a wall......
plique-à-jour, (French: “open to light”), in the decorative arts, technique producing translucent enamels held......
Plymouth porcelain, first hard-paste, or true, porcelain made in England, produced at a factory in Plymouth, Devon,......
point Colbert, (French: “Colbert lace”), needle-made lace developed at Bayeux in France in 1855, inspired by 17th-century......
point de France, (French: “French lace”), the 17th-century school of French lace set up by Louis XIV’s minister......
point de gaze, (French: “gauze lace”), needle lace produced in Brussels, principally from 1851 to around 1900,......
point de Paris, (French: “Paris lace”), product of a lace industry known to have existed around 1634 in the Île......
poke bonnet, hood-shaped hat tied under the chin, with a small crown at the back and a wide projecting front brim......
polonaise, in clothing, a coatlike dress, originally worn by Polish women, that was extremely popular in the 1770s......
Polonaise carpet, any of various handwoven floor coverings with pile of silk, made in Eṣfahān and other weaving......
pomander, small metal (sometimes china) container designed to hold a ball of aromatic spices or herbs. Worn suspended......
pompadour, style of dressing the hair in which the front hair is rolled back and the side hair up to meet it in......
poncho, article of clothing of ancient origin, a cloak made of a square or rectangle of cloth with a hole in the......
Gio Ponti was an Italian architect and designer associated with the development of modern architecture and modern......
poplin, strong fabric produced by the rib variation of the plain weave and characterized by fine, closely spaced,......
Lyubov Sergeyevna Popova was one of the most distinctly individual artists of the Russian avant-garde, who excelled......
porcelain, vitrified pottery with a white, fine-grained body that is usually translucent, as distinguished from......
porcelain enamelling, process of fusing a thin layer of glass to a metal object to prevent corrosion and enhance......
porkpie, round hat with a turned-up brim and a flat crown. The porkpie, so called because of its shape, became......
Portland Vase, Roman vase (1st century ad) of dark blue glass decorated with white figures, the finest surviving......
potpourri, in pottery, a decorative ceramic vessel with a perforated cover originally made to hold a moist mixture......
pottery, one of the oldest and most widespread of the decorative arts, consisting of objects made of clay and hardened......
- Introduction
- Porcelain, Glazing, Firing
- Drying, Turning, Firing
- Glazing, Decoration, Techniques
- Painting, Glazing, Firing
- Ceramics, Glazing, Firing
- Iron Age, Ceramics, Crafts
- Greek, Roman, Ceramics
- Early Islamic, Glazing, Firing
- Persian, Ceramics, Art
- European, Ceramics, Glazing
- Majolica, Glazing, Ceramics
- French, Belgian, Ceramics
- Stoneware, Glazing, Firing
- Dutch, Earthenware, Ceramics
- Slipware, 17th Century, Decoration
- Scandinavian, Clay, Ceramics
- Stoneware, Earthenware, Glazing
- Ceramics, Glazing, Techniques
- East Asian, Southeast Asian, Ceramics
- Chinese, Ceramics, Song Dynasty
- Ming Dynasty, Ceramics, Porcelain
- Qing Dynasty, Ceramics, Porcelain
- European Influence, Export Trade
- Japanese Ceramics, Glazes, Techniques
- Edo, Japan, Ceramics
- Native American, Clay, Art
- Pre-Columbian, Ceramics, Clay
potter’s mark, device for the purpose of identifying commercial pottery wares. Except for those of Wedgwood, stonewares......
pouncet-box, small silver box, the sides of which are “pounced,” or pierced, with holes, containing a sponge soaked......
Harriet Powers was a seamstress whose 19th-century quilts gained renewed interest in the 1970s for their spirited......
Miuccia Prada is an Italian fashion designer best known as the head designer at the Prada fashion house. She is......
prayer rug, one of the major types of rug produced in central and western Asia, used by Muslims primarily to cover......
President Vargas diamond, Brazilian stone weighing about 727 carats in rough form. It was discovered in the Santo......
prie-dieu, praying desk for one individual with a knee bench close to the floor and a vertical panel supporting......
Francesco Primaticcio was an Italian Mannerist painter, architect, sculptor, and leader of the first school of......
princess style, in dress design, style of women’s clothing characterized by garments that are closely fitted to......
promenade, place for strolling, where persons walk (or, in the past, ride) at leisure for exercise, display, or......
Jean Prouvé was a French engineer and builder known particularly for his contributions to the art and technology......
psykter, ancient Greek pottery vessel with a tall, cylindrical foot, rounded body, and short neck, used for cooling......
Jean Pucelle was an outstanding miniature painter and manuscript illuminator. He excelled in the invention of drolleries......
Pueblo pottery, one of the most highly developed of the American Indian arts, still produced today in a manner......
punch’ŏng pottery, decorated celadon glazed ceramic, produced in Korea during the early Chosŏn period (15th and......
punto a groppo, (Italian: “knotted lace”), ancestor of bobbin lace (q.v.). It was worked in 16th-century Italy......
punto in aria, (Italian: “lace in air”), the first true lace (i.e., lace not worked on a woven fabric). As reticella......
pusher lace, lace made in the 19th century at Nottingham, Eng., on the “pusher” machine, patented in 1812 by S.......
Andrée Putman was a French designer, known for her Minimalist, avant-garde furnishings and interior designs. Putman......
puttee, covering for the lower leg consisting of a cloth or leather legging held on by straps or laces or a cloth......
pyrope, magnesium aluminum garnet (Mg3Al2), the transparent form of which is used as a gemstone. Its colour varies......
pâte-sur-pâte, (French: “paste on paste”), method of porcelain decoration in which a relief design is created on......
Pénicaud Family, French enamelers active in Limoges during the 16th century, considered to be among the finest......
qalamkārī textile, painted textile of a type produced during the 17th century at various centres in India, notably......
Qashqāʾī rug, floor covering handwoven by the Qashqāʾī people, who have the reputation of making the best rugs......
Queen Anne style, style of decorative arts that began to evolve during the rule of King William III of England,......
quillwork, type of embroidery done with the quills of a porcupine, or sometimes with bird feathers. This type of......
quilting, sewing technique in which two layers of fabric, usually with an insulating interior layer, are sewn together......
Quimper faience, tin-enamelled earthenware produced by a factory at Loc Maria, a suburb of Quimper in Brittany,......
rabato, wide, often lace-edged collar wired to stand up at the back of the head, worn by both men and women in......
raden, Japanese decorative technique used for lacquerware and woodenware, in which linings of mother-of-pearl or......
raised work, form of embroidery practiced in England in the 17th century, characterized by biblical and mythological......
raku ware, Japanese hand-molded lead-glazed earthenware, originally invented in 16th-century Kyōto by the potter......
Raphael was a master painter and architect of the Italian High Renaissance. Raphael is best known for his Madonnas......
rapier loom, a shuttleless weaving loom in which the filling yarn is carried through the shed of warp yarns to......
Raqqah ware, type of Islamic lustreware produced at Al-Raqqah, Syria, between the 9th and 14th centuries. The body......
Robert Rauschenberg was an American painter and graphic artist whose early works anticipated the Pop art movement.......
George Ravenscroft was an English glassmaker, developer of lead crystal (or flint glass). It was a heavy, blown......
Rayy ware, in Islamic ceramics, style of pottery found at Rayy, near Tehrān, and dating from the 12th century.......
red-figure pottery, type of Greek pottery that flourished from the late 6th to the late 4th century bce. During......
redingote, fitted outer garment. The man’s redingote, worn in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, was a full-skirted,......