Currently not on view
Chest of Drawers,
1901
Charles Rohlfs, 1853–1936; born New York, NY; died Buffalo, NY
y1972-24
This chiffonier, or high chest of drawers (from the French term “chiffon,” for cloth), is the largest of an important group of Rohlfs furnishings donated by his son in recognition of the Museum’s pioneering exhibition “The Arts and Crafts Movement in America, 1876-1916” (1972), which promoted and revived interest in the style. Like the chair beside it, the chiffonier was used in the Rohlfs home, although another, closely related example was widely seen by visitors to the Pan-American Exhibition, held in 1901 in Buffalo, New York, where the family lived. It is distinguished by the expressive, Art Nouveau-inspired carving of its side panels and revealed through-tenon construction, with large vertical keys holding the tenons in place and providing a rhythmic decorative element. The use of richly grained oak was typical of Rohlfs’s production and that of Arts and Crafts furniture makers, generally.
More About This Object
Information
Title
Chest of Drawers
Dates
1901
Maker
Medium
Fumed oak with metal key
Dimensions
166 x 80 x 40.5 cm. (65 3/8 x 31 1/2 x 15 15/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Roland Rohlfs, son of Charles Rohlfs
Object Number
y1972-24
Signatures
Signed with initial inside emblem and dated, bottom of proper right side, near front edge: R [in rectangular emblem] / 1901
Culture
Subject
- Robert Judson Clark, et. al., The arts and crafts movement in America, 1876-1916: an exhibition organized by the Art Museum, Princeton University and the Art Institute of Chicago, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1972)., no. 25 (illus.)
-
"Acquisitions 1972", Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 32, no. 1 (1973): p. 20-30.
, p. 26 (illus.); p. 30 - Isabelle Ascombe and Charlotte Gere, Arts & crafts in Britain and America, (New York: Rizzoli, 1978)., fig. 115