Decorative Art, BAR-BRU
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
bargello work, kind of embroidery exemplified in the upholstery of a set of 17th-century Italian chairs at the......
bark painting, nonwoven fabric decorated with figurative and abstract designs usually applied by scratching or......
Barney Barnato was a financier, diamond magnate, and gold baron who first rivaled and then later allied with Cecil......
baroque pearl, pearl that is irregularly or oddly shaped. Pearl formation does not always occur in soft-tissue......
Bartmannkrug, type of 16th-century German jug, characterized by a round belly and a mask of a bearded man applied......
basaltes ware, hard black vitreous stoneware, named after the volcanic rock basalt and manufactured by Josiah Wedgwood......
John Baskerville was an English printer and creator of a typeface of great distinction bearing his name, whose......
basket chair, chair made from plaited twigs, or osiers, shaped on a warp of stiff rods. Basketmaking is one of......
basketry, art and craft of making interwoven objects, usually containers, from flexible vegetable fibres, such......
Saul Bass was an American graphic designer and filmmaker who introduced a new art form with his imaginative film......
basse-taille, (French: “low-cut”), an enameling technique in which a metal surface, usually gold or silver, is......
Hester Bateman was a silversmith noted particularly for her domestic silver of elegant simplicity. Her husband,......
bath chair, chair on wheels intended for use by ladies and invalids. It was devised by James Heath, of Bath, Eng.,......
batik, method of dyeing in which patterned areas are covered with wax so they will not receive the colour. The......
Battersea enamelware, type of painted enamelware considered the finest of its kind to be produced in England during......
Bauhaus, school of design, architecture, and applied arts that existed in Germany from 1919 to 1933. It was based......
Herbert Bayer was an Austrian-American graphic artist, painter, and architect, influential in spreading European......
bead, small, usually round object made of glass, wood, metal, nut, shell, bone, seed, or the like, pierced for......
beadwork, use of beads in fabric decoration; beads may be individually stitched, applied in threaded lengths, or......
beard, hair grown upon a man’s chin and cheeks. Frequently a badge of full manhood, it has been held in high honour......
Romare Bearden was an American painter, whose collages of photographs and painted paper on canvas depict aspects......
Sir Cecil Beaton was a photographer known primarily for his portraits of celebrated persons. He also worked as......
Beauvais tapestry, any product of the tapestry factory established in 1664 in Beauvais, Fr., by two Flemish weavers,......
Domenico Beccafumi was an Italian painter and sculptor, a leader in the post-Renaissance style known as Mannerism.......
bed, piece of furniture upon which a person may recline or sleep, for many centuries considered the most important......
Behzād was a major Persian painter whose style as a miniaturist and work as a teacher were vital influences on......
Giuseppe Mario Bellanca was an airplane designer and builder who created the first monoplane in the United States......
Belleek ware, porcelain from the factory at Belleek, in Fermanagh, Ire. (now Northern Ireland). Extensive local......
John Henry Belter was a cabinetmaker and designer known for his superb Victorian Rococo pieces. Belter served as......
belvedere, (Italian: “beautiful view”), architectural structure built in an elevated position to provide lighting......
bench, long seat that may be freestanding, fixed to the wall, or placed against the wall. Paneled benches were......
Wladyslaw Theodor Benda was a Polish American painter, illustrator, and designer. Benda studied art in Kraków,......
Beneventan script, in calligraphy, southern Italian hand, cultivated in the mother house of the Benedictine order......
Asher Benjamin was an American architect who was an early follower of Charles Bulfinch. His greatest influence......
bentwood furniture, type of furniture made by bending wooden rods into the required shape after they have been......
Jean Berain, the Elder was a French draftsman, engraver, painter, and designer who was called by his contemporaries......
Bergama carpet, any of several types of village floor coverings handwoven in the vicinity of Bergama, western Turkey,......
Berlin ware, faience and porcelain pottery made in Berlin after 1678, when the first faience manufactory there......
Berlin woolwork, 19th-century amateur embroidery developed in Germany and based upon hand-painted charts from which......
Harry Bertoia was an Italian-born American sculptor, printmaker, and jewelry and furniture designer best known......
Jinny Beyer is an American quilt designer, the first to create a line of fabrics especially geared to the needs......
bi, in art, Chinese jade carved in the form of a flat disk with a hole in the centre. The earliest examples, which......
bianco sopra bianco, (Italian: “white on white”), mode of decoration originally practiced on 16th-century Urbino......
Max Bill was a Swiss graphic artist, industrial designer, architect, sculptor, and painter, primarily important......
Bilston enamelware, enameled products made in Bilston, Eng., which was one of the most prolific centres of enameling......
bird rug, floor covering woven in western Turkey, carrying on an ivory ground a repeating pattern in which leaflike......
biretta, stiff square hat with three or four rounded ridges, worn by Roman Catholic, some Anglican, and some European......
Birkin bag, handbag produced by French luxury retailer Hermès and named after English model, actress, and singer......
Birmingham enamelware, enameled objects made in Birmingham, Eng., an important centre for the production of 18th-century......
birthstone, gemstone associated with the date of one’s birth, the wearing of which is commonly thought to bring......
Bizen ware, pottery manufactured at and near Imbe, Okayama ken (prefecture), on the Inland Sea of Japan, from at......
black letter, in calligraphy, a style of alphabet that was used for manuscript books and documents throughout Europe—especially......
black-figure pottery, type of Greek pottery that originated in Corinth c. 700 bce and continued to be popular until......
Blaschka glass, glass models, primarily of natural history specimens, made by Leopold Blaschka (died 1895) and......
blonde lace, any of several light-coloured laces. Originally the term referred to continuous-thread bobbin laces......
blood diamond, as defined by the United Nations (UN), any diamond that is mined in areas controlled by forces opposed......
bloodstone, dark-green variety of the silica mineral chalcedony that has nodules of bright-red jasper distributed......
bloomers, “rational dress” for women advocated by Amelia Jenks Bloomer in the early 1850s. The entire costume,......
blow molding, in glass production, method of forming an article of glass by blowing molten glass into a mold. This......
blue-and-white ware, white porcelain decorated with blue under the glaze. At least as early as the 9th century,......
bobbin, Elongated spool of thread, used in the textile industry. In modern processes, the spun fibres are wound......
bobbin furniture, heavy furniture made in the late 17th century, whose legs and other parts were lathe-turned to......
bobbin lace, handmade lace important in fashion from the 16th to the early 20th century. Bobbin laces are made......
Wilhelm von Bode was an art critic and museum director who helped bring Berlin’s museums to a position of worldwide......
Giambattista Bodoni was an Italian printer who designed several modern typefaces, one of which bears his name and......
body modifications and mutilations, intentional permanent or semipermanent alterations of the living human body......
Boeing Company, American aerospace company—the world’s largest—that is the foremost manufacturer of commercial......
Germain Boffrand was a French architect noted for the great variety, quantity, and quality of his work. Boffrand......
Bohemian glass, decorative glass made in Bohemia and Silesia from the 13th century. Especially notable is the cut......
Bohemian school, school of the visual arts that flourished in and around Prague under the patronage of Charles......
bokuseki, calligraphic style of the Buddhist sects known as Zen in Japan and Ch’an in China. This calligraphic......
bone china, hybrid hard-paste porcelain containing bone ash. The initial development of bone china is attributed......
bonheur du jour, small, dainty writing table, introduced in the 1760s, which became one of the most popular varieties......
bonsai, living dwarf tree or trees or the art of training and growing them in containers. Bonsai specimens are......
bookcase, piece of furniture fitted with shelves, often enclosed by glass doors, to hold books. A form of bookcase......
bort, one of the varieties of industrial diamond...
boshan xianglu, Chinese bronze censer common in the Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220). Censers (vessels made for burning......
botanical garden, originally, a collection of living plants designed chiefly to illustrate relationships within......
François Boucher was a painter, engraver, and designer whose works are regarded as the perfect expression of French......
André-Charles Boulle was one of France’s leading cabinetmakers, whose fashion of inlaying, called boulle, or buhl,......
boustrophedon, the writing of alternate lines in opposite directions, one line from left to right and the next......
Bow porcelain, English soft-paste porcelain made at a factory in Stratford-le-Bow, Essex, from about 1744 to 1776.......
bracket clock, English spring-driven pendulum clock, more properly known as a table clock or spring clock. The......
Barbara Brackman is an American quilt historian noted for her extensive compilations of American quilt patterns.......
bracteate, thin, gold, disk-shaped pendant peculiar to early Scandinavian civilizations. Bracteates were produced......
Marianne Brandt was a German painter and Bauhaus photographer and designer who specialized in metalwork. Brandt......
Georges Braque was a French painter, one of the important revolutionaries of 20th-century art who, together with......
Marcel Breuer was an architect and designer, one of the most-influential exponents of the International Style;......
Fritz A. Breuhaus was a German architect who specialized in interior design, particularly for transportation. Breuhaus......
Brewster chair, chair made in New England in the mid-17th century, characterized by rectilinear design and turned......
bright-cut, type of decorative engraving used on metal objects, especially those made of silver. The decorative......
brilliant cut, method of faceting a diamond to take best advantage of the optical properties of the stone and produce......
Bristol ware, hard-paste porcelain products that were produced between 1770 and 1781 at the porcelain manufactory......
brocade, in textiles, woven fabric having a raised floral or figured design that is introduced during the weaving......
broderie, type of parterre garden evolved in France in the late 16th century by Étienne Dupérac and characterized......
broderie anglaise, (French: “English embroidery”), form of whitework embroidery in which round or oval holes are......
bronze work, implements and artwork made of bronze, which is an alloy of copper, tin, and, occasionally, small......
brooch, ornamental pin, usually with a clasp to attach it to a garment. Brooches developed from the Roman clasp,......
Ford Madox Brown was an English painter whose work is associated with that of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, although......
Brussels carpet, type of machine-made floor covering with the loops of the pile uncut. All colours run with the......