Modern Gothic Cabinet
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Modern Gothic exhibition cabinet ( 1877–80) is a piece of Modern Gothic furniture now in the collection of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York City, colloquially "the Met", is the largest art museum in the Americas. Its permanent collection contains over two million works, divided among 17 curatorial departments. The main building at 1000 ...
. Although its design was once attributed to
Philadelphia Philadelphia, often called Philly, is the List of municipalities in Pennsylvania#Municipalities, largest city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the List of United States cities by population, sixth-largest city i ...
architect Frank Furness and furniture maker
Daniel Pabst Daniel Pabst (June 11, 1826 – July 15, 1910) was a German-born American cabinetmaker of the Victorian Era. He is credited with some of the most extraordinary custom interiors and hand-crafted furniture in the United States. Sometimes working i ...
, MMA now credits its design and manufacture to Pabst alone. At tall, it is an unusually large and
polychromatic Polychrome is the "practice of decorating architectural elements, sculpture, etc., in a variety of colors." The term is used to refer to certain styles of architecture, pottery or sculpture in multiple colors. Ancient Egypt Colossal statu ...
American example of the rare style.


Style and description

Modern Gothic (also called Reformed Gothic) was an important Aesthetic Movement style that began in England about 1860, and lasted some twenty years.Madigan, Mary Jean, ed. (1982). ''Nineteenth Century Furniture: Innovation, Revival and Reform''. Arts & Antiques. Unlike the Gothic Revival, it sought not to copy Gothic designs, but to adapt them, abstract them, and apply them to new forms. Its parting zenith was the English and American furniture exhibited at the 1876
Centennial Exposition The Centennial International Exhibition of 1876, the first official World's Fair to be held in the United States, was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from May 10 to November 10, 1876, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the ...
in Philadelphia. The cabinet is made of walnut and maple, with poplar and white pine secondary woods. It features a shingled "roof," ebonized and banded compressed columns, and carved and
incised Incision may refer to: * Cutting, the separation of an object, into two or more portions, through the application of an acutely directed force * A type of open wound caused by a clean, sharp-edged object such as a knife, razor, or glass splinter ...
decoration throughout. Its two sets of doors are separated by a highly carved drawer front. Its eight inset panels – four on the doors of the front, and a pair on each of the sides – are of veneered maple, cameo-carved to reveal the darker walnut beneath. Its strap hinges and hardware are of brass, and the locks on its doors are stamped "PAT. SEP. 29 '74." The cabinet's shelf features three reverse-painted ribbed-glass tiles backed with gold foil. The cabinet is unsigned. Pabst's shop employed dozens of woodworkers, and presumably produced thousands of pieces over half a century. Only two of his pieces are signed and very few are documented, therefore identification of his works must be done through attribution.


Design

The design is reminiscent of Furness's Philadelphia bank buildings, especially the forward-thrusting central pavilion of his 1879 Provident Life & Trust Company (image below). Furness used similar reverse-painted ribbed-glass tiles backed with reflective foil on the facade of The
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) is a museum and private art school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
(1871–76), designed with then-partner George Hewitt; on his Brazilian Pavilion at the
1876 Centennial Exposition The Centennial International Exhibition of 1876, the first official World's Fair to be held in the United States, was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from May 10 to November 10, 1876, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the ...
, and on his
Centennial National Bank The Centennial National Bank is a historic building in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Designed by noted Philadelphia architect Frank Furness and significant in his artistic development, it was built in 1876 as the headquarters of the eponymous bank ...
(1876). These buildings may have influenced Pabst, who executed Furness-designed Modern Gothic furniture for PAFA, but the most direct influence for the cabinet seems to have been British designer Bruce James Talbert. Talbert's ''Gothic Forms Applied to Furniture, Metal Work and Decoration for Domestic Purposes'' was published in Boston in 1873. The Pabst cabinet's "roof," columns, and corbels are closely related to a wall cupboard in Talbert's book, plate 12 (image below); and the cameo-carved panels of its upper doors are copied directly from the doors of a cabinet in Talbert's book, plate 20 (image below). Pabst used a cameo-carved panel and reverse-painted ribbed-glass tiles on an earlier Modern Gothic cabinet, now at the Brooklyn Museum (image below). Originally, this seems to have been the center section of a larger piece, with an attached bookcase on either side.


Scholarship

Antique furniture dealer Robert Edwards purchased the exhibition cabinet in 1985, from the estate of Granville H. Triplett of Catonsville, Maryland. Edwards was an expert on American Aesthetic Movement and Arts and Crafts Movement designers, especially those from Philadelphia, and sold the piece to MMA that same year.Cabinet
from Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The MMA attributed the cabinet's design to Furness and its manufacture to Pabst, dated it "about 1876" (partially based on its reverse-painted ribbed-glass tiles), and said Furness and Pabst collaborated to produce some of "the finest examples of the Modern Gothic style in America."Metropolitan Museum of Art,
Recent Acquisitions: A Selection, 1985–1986
', (New York City, MMA, 1986), p. 53.
''In Pursuit of Beauty'', a major exhibition of Aesthetic Movement decorative arts, was mounted at MMA in 1986. The cover of its catalogue was a photograph of the cabinet. Contributor Marilynn Johnson wrote:
The most successful American interpretations of the Talbert style of Modern Gothic furniture were apparently the result of a collaboration between a highly skilled Philadelphia cabinetmaker and carver, DANIEL PABST, and FRANK FURNESS, a Philadelphia architect. Furniture believed to have been produced by Pabst and Furness includes ... most impressive of all, a cabinet that has only recently come to light. Its rooflike pediment, angular base, chamfered edges, truncated columns, elaborate strap hinges, and decorated door panels all link this cabinet to the Modern Gothic furniture of British architect-designers such as Burges. The
scrolling In computer displays, filmmaking, television production, and other kinetic displays, scrolling is sliding text, images or video across a monitor or display, vertically or horizontally. "Scrolling," as such, does not change the layout of the text ...
, finely carved brackets, however, specifically suggest the form of Talbert's wall cupboard, and the cutaway pattern of stylized flowers on the upper doors is reminiscent of the decoration on a sideboard that relates closely to the
Holland and Sons The English firm of Holland & Sons (1803–1942) became from 1843 one of the largest and most successful cabinet makers, and a rival to Gillows of Lancaster and London. The company's labelled Day books are now housed in the Victoria and Albert Mu ...
sideboard of 1867 and is illustrated as number 20 in ''Gothic Forms''. Talbert's work may well have been the source for the design of the cabinet.
Catherine Voorsanger, associate curator of American decorative arts at MMA, was dubious about the Furness attribution, arguing that the cabinet did not show the architect's hand. Edwards agreed with Voorsanger in 1985, and wrote in 2008: "When the late Catherine Voorsanger and I discussed what was to be written on the museum label, we both decided that, while there are many details tying the piece to Philadelphia and Pabst, there is little to suggest that Furness had a hand in the hodgepodge design other than as inspiration. To be sure, there is a relationship between the cabinet proportions and the cramped proportions of some Furness buildings that were designed to fit in Philadelphia's distinctive rows of narrow facades. In my opinion, the piece is an exhibition of the maker's varied technical skills, and its design does not have the logic I see even in the designs of an architect as eccentric as Furness." While acknowledging its "virtuoso woodwork," Edwards described the cabinet as a "circus wagon, ... all the bells and whistles crammed onto one piece ... radical just for the sake of being radical." MMA now attributes the cabinet solely to Pabst, and dates it "ca. 1877–80." It is currently on exhibit in Gallery 746 of the American Wing.


Gallery

File:ProvidentTrust.jpg, Provident Life & Trust Company (1879, demolished 1959–60), Philadelphia, Frank Furness, architect. File:Talbert Gothic Forms 1873 plate12.jpg, Bruce J. Talbert, ''Gothic Forms Applied to Furniture'' (1873), plate 12. The cabinet's shelf and "roof" are related to this illustration. File:Talbert Gothic Forms 1873 plate20.jpg, Bruce J. Talbert, ''Gothic Forms Applied to Furniture'' (1873), plate 20. The cabinet's upper door panels are copied from this illustration. File:Cabinet, Daniel Pabst, Philadelphia, c. 1875, walnut, burl ash, pressed glass, painted gold foil - Brooklyn Museum - DSC09623.JPG, Daniel Pabst, Modern Gothic cabinet ( 1875), Brooklyn Museum. Also features a cameo-carved panel and reverse-painted glass tiles. File:Cabinet, c 1877-80, attributed to Daniel Pabst & Frank Furness.JPG, On exhibit in MMA's Gallery 746.


References

{{Metropolitan Museum of Art 1880 works Cabinets (furniture) Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Culture of Philadelphia Individual pieces of furniture