Decorative Art, CYM-ERS
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
cymophane, variety of the gemstone chrysoberyl...
Dada, nihilistic and antiaesthetic movement in the arts that flourished primarily in Zürich, Switzerland; New York......
Dagestan rug, usually small floor covering woven in the republic of Dagestan in the eastern Caucasus (Russia).......
Gerhard Dagly was a royal Kammerkünstler, or chamber artist, who, as one of the greatest craftsmen in European......
damascening, art of encrusting gold, silver, or copper wire on the surface of iron, steel, bronze, or brass. A......
Damascus rug, usually small floor covering, often attributed to Damascus, Syria, in the 16th or 17th century in......
damask, patterned textile, deriving its name from the fine patterned fabrics produced in Damascus (Syria) in the......
Henry Darger was an American outsider artist and writer known for his epic fantasy more than 15,000 pages long......
Daryā-e Nūr, largest and finest diamond in the crown jewels of Iran. A pale pink tablet-shaped stone weighing about......
Daulat was an important Mughal painter who worked during the reigns of both the emperors Akbar and Jahāngīr and......
Dave the Potter was an American potter and poet who, while a slave in South Carolina, produced enormous stoneware......
davenport, in modern usage, a large upholstered settee, but in the 18th century a compact desk having deep drawers......
Davenport ware, cream-coloured earthenware made by John Davenport of Longport, Staffordshire, Eng., beginning in......
Arthur B. Davies was an American painter, printmaker, and tapestry designer known for his idylls of classical fantasy......
Stuart Davis was an American abstract artist whose idiosyncratic Cubist paintings of urban landscapes presaged......
dazhuan, in Chinese calligraphy, script evolved from the ancient scripts jiaguwen and guwen by the 12th century......
De Beers S.A., South African company that is the world’s largest producer and distributor of diamonds. Through......
Paul de Lamerie was a well-known Dutch-born English silversmith. De Lamerie’s parents were Huguenots who probably......
Elsie de Wolfe was an American interior decorator, hostess, and actress, best known for her innovative and anti-Victorian......
Deccani painting, style of miniature painting that flourished from the late 16th century among the Deccani sultanates......
decorative art, any of those arts that are concerned with the design and decoration of objects that are chiefly......
decoupage, (French: “cutting out”), the art of cutting and pasting cutouts to simulate painting on a wood, metal,......
The Book of Deer, illuminated manuscript written in Latin, probably in the 9th century, at a monastery founded......
Dehua porcelain, Chinese porcelain made at Dehua in Fujian province. Although the kiln began production some time......
Sonia Delaunay was a Russian painter, illustrator, and textile designer who was a pioneer of abstract art in the......
delftware, tin-glazed earthenware first made early in the 17th century at Delft, Holland. Dutch potters later brought......
Luca della Robbia was a sculptor, one of the pioneers of Florentine Renaissance style, who was the founder of a......
denim, durable twill-woven fabric with coloured (usually blue) warp and white filling threads; it is also woven......
Derby ware, porcelain figures and servicewares made in Derby, central England, about 1750–1848. The best-known......
Deruta ware, outstanding tin-glazed earthenware, or majolica, produced during the first half of the 16th century......
desk, a table, frame, or case with a sloping or horizontal top particularly designed to aid writing or reading,......
Donald Deskey was an American industrial designer who helped establish industrial design as a profession. Deskey......
Alexandre-François Desportes was a French painter who specialized in portraying animals, hunts, and emblems of......
deutsche Blumen, in pottery, floral decoration consisting of naturalistically painted “German” (i.e., European)......
Deutscher Werkbund, important organization of artists influential in its attempts to inspire good design and craftsmanship......
dhoti, long loincloth traditionally worn in southern Asia by Hindu men. Wrapped around the hips and thighs with......
diamond, a mineral composed of pure carbon. It is the hardest naturally occurring substance known; it is also the......
diamond cutting, separate and special branch of lapidary art involving five basic steps in fashioning a diamond:......
dinanderie, type of late medieval brass ware made in and around Dinant, Belg. Brass does not appear to have been......
ding, type of ancient Chinese cooking or holding vessel, usually with two handles on the rim, that is supported......
Ding ware, Chinese glazed stoneware produced for many centuries, beginning in the 8th century ad. Usually white......
diptych, two writing tablets hinged or strung together, used in the Roman Empire for letters and documents. The......
Directoire style, Neoclassical style of dress, furniture, and ornament popular in France during the period of the......
Frank Dobson was an English sculptor who was influential in the promotion and development of modern sculpture in......
Doccia porcelain, porcelain produced at a factory near Florence founded by Marchese Carlo Ginori in 1735; until......
doorstop, usually decorative and invariably heavy object used to prevent doors from swinging shut. Doorstops came......
dou, type of ancient Chinese bronze vessel used to contain food. The dou is usually a circular bowl supported on......
doublet, chief upper garment worn by men from the 15th to the 17th century. It was a close-fitting, waisted, padded......
Doulton ware, English pottery established in 1815 by John Doulton at Lambeth, London, in association with John......
Arthur G. Dove was an American painter who was one of the earliest nonobjective artists. Dove graduated from Cornell......
dragon rug, any of the most numerous group of the Kuba carpets and a great favourite among rug fanciers because......
dravite, a brown, magnesium-rich variety of tourmaline. See...
drawn thread work, in fabric, a method of producing a design by drawing threads out of the body of a piece of material,......
dreadlocks, hairstyle consisting of ropelike strands of knotted hair formed by methods including twisting, backcombing,......
dress, clothing and accessories for the human body. The variety of dress is immense. The style that a particular......
- Introduction
- Mesopotamian, Sumerian, Babylonian
- Ancient Greece, Tunics, Robes
- Ancient Rome, Tunic, Toga
- Pre-Columbian, Americas, Styles
- Middle East, 6th Century, Clothing
- Medieval, Europe, Fashion
- European Fashion, 1500-1800
- Colonial America
- 20th Century, Fashion, Styles
- Eastern, Cultural, History
- Japanese Kimono, Yukata, Haori
- Function, Fashion, Culture
- Regulation, Laws, Customs
- Rebellion, Gender, Fashion
- Cultural Variations, Textiles, Styles
dresser, a cupboard used for the display of fine tableware, such as silver, pewter, or earthenware. Dressers were......
Christopher Dresser was an English designer whose knowledge of past styles and experience with modern manufacturing......
dressing table, a table used for the toilet. The term originally was applied in the 17th century to small tables......
drop cut, method of faceting gemstones into a pear shape suitable for pendants, earrings, and other jewelry. A......
drop-leaf table, table with one or two hinged leaves supported by articulated legs, arms, or brackets. An early......
drum table, heavy circular table with a central support, which was introduced in the late 18th century. The deep......
Duccio was one of the greatest Italian painters of the Middle Ages and the founder of the Sienese school. In Duccio’s......
duchesse lace, Belgian bobbin lace, sometimes with needle lace inclusions, named for Marie-Henriette, duchess of......
duck, (from Dutch doek, “cloth”), any of a broad range of strong, durable, plainwoven fabrics made originally from......
Raoul Dufy was a French painter and designer noted for his brightly coloured and highly decorative scenes of luxury......
dui, type of Chinese bronze vessel produced in the late Zhou dynasty (c. 600–256/255 bc), it was a food container......
Asher B. Durand was an American painter, engraver, and illustrator, one of the founders of the Hudson River school......
Dutch ware, principally tin-enameled earthenware, with some porcelain, manufactured in the Netherlands since the......
W.A. Dwiggins was an American typographer, book designer, puppeteer, illustrator, and calligrapher, who designed......
John Dwight was the first of the distinguished English potters, known for his works in stoneware. After taking......
Thomas W. Dyott was a British-born American patent-medicine king, glassmaker, temperance advocate, and reformer.......
décor bois, (French: “wood decoration”), in decorative arts, trompe l’oeil decoration of porcelain and faience......
díszmagyar, ceremonial dress worn by Hungarian nobility and later by other public figures. It evolved in the second......
dīwānī script, cursive style of Arabic calligraphy developed during the reign of the early Ottoman Turks (16th–early......
dōtaku, thin elongated bell-shaped bronze forms, evidence of a short-lived bronze culture, localized in the centre......
Early American furniture, furniture made in the last half of the 17th century by American colonists. The earliest......
earplug, type of ear ornament usually inserted in pierced and distended earlobes and generally worn by traditional......
earring, a personal ornament worn pendent from the ear, usually suspended by means of a ring or hook passing through......
earthenware, pottery that has not been fired to the point of vitrification and is thus slightly porous and coarser......
Charles Locke Eastlake was an English museologist and writer on art who gave his name to a 19th-century furniture......
ecclesiastical heraldry, the conventions affecting the use of the arms associated with the church’s administrative......
egg and dart, in architecture, design shape used in moldings. It consists of a series of bas-relief ovals alternating......
eggshell porcelain, Chinese porcelain characterized by an excessively thin body under the glaze. It often had decoration......
Aleksandra Aleksandrovna Ekster was a Russian artist of international stature who divided her life between Kiev,......
emblema, central panel with figure representations—people, animals, and other objects—or occasionally another featured......
embroidery, art of decorating material, primarily textile fabric, by means of a needle and thread (and sometimes......
emerald, grass-green variety of beryl (q.v.) that is highly valued as a gemstone. The name comes indirectly from......
emollient, any substance that softens the skin by slowing evaporation of water. Sesame, almond, and olive oils......
en résille, in the decorative arts, technique of enamelwork in which the design is incised on rock crystal or glass......
enamel miniature, portrait on a small opaque, usually white, enamel surface annealed to gold or copper plate and......
enamelwork, technique of decoration whereby metal objects or surfaces are given a vitreous glaze that is fused......
Enghalskrug, German faience ewer with an ovoid body and a long narrow neck, which has a hinged pewter lid, a slight......
English garden, type of garden that developed in 18th-century England, originating as a revolt against the architectural......
engraved glass, glassware decorated with finely carved, three-dimensional patterns or pictures. The most common......
ensi rug, floor covering, usually about 1.4 × 1.5 metres (4.5 feet × 5 feet), of a type apparently woven by all......
ensign, a flag, especially the national flag. The term is most often applied to the flag flown at the stern by......
epergne, dining table centrepiece—usually of silver—that generally sits on four feet supporting a central bowl......
Epictetus was a Greek potter and painter who worked in Athens. His work is praised for its care, grace, vitality,......
Max Ernst was a German painter and sculptor who was one of the leading advocates of irrationality in art and an......
Ersari carpet, any of a colourful variety of floor coverings handmade by Ersari Turkmen of Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.......