Image representation for Bayou Bend Period Rooms

Bayou Bend Period Rooms

In 1957, philanthropist and collector Ima Hogg gave Bayou Bend and her collection to the MFAH. She spent the next nine years transforming the mansion with room settings that suggest early American interiors from particular periods. In 1966, Bayou Bend opened to the public.

The selection of art on view is ever-changing, so stop by to see what is new in the elegant rooms throughout the mansion!

View Period Rooms.

Image representation for Murphy Room

Murphy Room

Completed in 1959, the Murphy Room was named for Ima Hogg’s friend and fellow collector, Katharine Prentis Murphy, who closely advised on creating the room—the first museum interior at Bayou Bend. The painted, black-and-white checkerboard floor was inspired by the ones seen in late-17th-century Boston portraits. The art on view in this room includes the oldest objects in the Bayou Bend Collection, from the Late Renaissance (1620–90) and Early Baroque (1690–1730) periods.
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Massachusetts Room

The dramatic blue hue of the Massachusetts Room’s walls was inspired by a piece of 18th-century Portuguese chintz, a type of colorful textile. The room’s selection of sophisticated Salem and Boston furniture includes a rare, complete suite of a double chair-backed settee and eight matching side chairs, all upholstered in brilliant yellow wool.
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Image representation for Pine Room

Pine Room

Originally a library, the Pine Room was once lined with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves. When Ima Hogg was preparing the home to become a public museum, she covered the shelves with new pine paneling patterned after mid-18th-century woodwork that she admired in a period room installed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (now in the Hogg Family Legacy Room at the Lora Jean Kilroy Visitor and Education Center). Today, the Pine Room displays many objects in the Early Baroque style (1690–1730), including a high chest of drawers made by skilled cabinetmakers and distinguished portraits that retain their original carved frames.
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Drawing Room

The largest space in the house, the Drawing Room reflects the Georgian architecture of mid-18th-century American interiors and displays furniture designed in the Rococo style (1755–90). The handsome portraits on view in this room were painted by distinguished early American artists, including John Singleton Copley and Charles Willson Peale
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Image representation for Philadelphia Hall

Philadelphia Hall

A 1971 portrait of Ima Hogg presides over the wide central hall that leads to a gracious terrace and to the lush gardens. The Philadelphia Hall borrows its name from the city where its Rococo-style furniture was made. The hall’s curving staircase may have been inspired by a similar one in the Governor’s Mansion in Austin, where she lived as a child when her father, James Stephen Hogg, served as governor from 1891 to 1895. She and her brothers would sometimes slide down the banister for fun, and when her youngest brother, Tom, broke his arm doing so, Governor Hogg hammered nails down the banister to discourage their games!
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Dining Room

Rooms specially designated for dining did not exist in the United States until after the American Revolution. Even then, only the wealthy could afford the rooms since they required new, extravagant furniture forms such as the sideboard, which was used for displaying and storing tableware. The Dining Room’s shimmering, gold-leaf canvas wall covering, designed in 1927–28 by New York artist William MacKay, is hand painted with peonies, Texas dogwood branches, and garden creatures such as field mice and butterflies.
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Image representation for Washington Hall

Washington Hall

The Washington Hall highlights some of the most important glass objects in the Bayou Bend Collection. Made and used in early America from the 1700s through the 1800s, the arrangement of glass exhibits a range of techniques employed by glassmakers: including free-blowing, mold-blowing, cutting, engraving, and pressing.
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Image representation for Belter Parlor

Belter Parlor

The furnishings in the Belter Parlor reflect the Rococo Revival style (1845–70). The parlor takes its name from John Henry Belter, a cabinetmaker who was a leading manufacturer in New York City during the 1850s. Belter’s factory made the matching set of furniture that is on view in the room. In 1971, Ima Hogg completed the Belter Parlor, the last of her room installations. The furnishings reflect a strict adherence to historical accuracy; the wallpaper is based on fragments of French wallpaper used at a home in Salisbury, Connecticut, and the carpet is a reproduction of an English design from the Rococo Revival period.
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Music Room

The Music Room reflects an important interest of Ima Hogg, who was an accomplished pianist as well as a founder of the Houston Symphony. The room’s centerpiece is the exquisite Square Piano by Gibson & Davis. Scenic wallpapers were popular with wealthy Americans in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Installed in 1993, the example that covers the Music Room’s walls features a French reproduction of an 1806 design called Hindustan, which signals the contemporary Western interest in the exotic.
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Image representation for Chillman Suite

Chillman Suite

The Chillman Suite, which includes a foyer and parlor, is named in honor of interior decorator Dorothy Dawes Chillman—wife of James H. Chillman, Jr., the first director of the Museum—who helped Ima Hogg develop Bayou Bend’s period rooms during the 1950s and 1960s. With vibrant greens and golds, the Chillman Suite brings to life the classical taste so popular in the United States in the first half of the 19th century. The wall-to-wall carpeting was reproduced from a period example. Details of the objects on view evoke classical forms.
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McIntire Bedroom

Featuring Massachusetts furniture made in the Neoclassical style (1790–1810), the McIntire Bedroom is named after the renowned Salem architect and woodcarver Samuel McIntire. Objects that reflect the role of women in early America are highlighted throughout the room, from the worktable made for storing sewing tools and projects to the needlework samplers hanging on the walls.
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Image representation for Metals Study Room

Metals Study Room

The Metals Study Room is organized to chronicle the development of metals, including silver, pewter, and gold, between the 1650s and the 1870s. The survey presents not only an evolution of design, but also testifies to changes in production technology, regional preferences, marketing, and social history over more than two centuries.
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Image representation for Chippendale Bedroom

Chippendale Bedroom

Originally a guestroom, the Chippendale Bedroom borrows its name from a style of 18th-century furniture inspired by the influential English cabinetmaker Thomas Chippendale. The brilliantly red centerpiece, a bedstead, would have been the room’s most labor-intensive piece of furniture to create in the 1700s. It required the skills of many artisans, including a cabinetmaker, an upholsterer, and a carver.
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Maple Bedroom

The Maple Bedroom, inspired by early-19th-century country bedchambers, displays many objects common to rural areas of the American Northeast. Peaceable Kingdom by Pennsylvania artist Edward Hicks hangs over the fireplace, which includes 18th-century-style paneling. The walls are crowned by a stenciled border of pinecones and leaves.
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Image representation for Queen Anne Suite

Queen Anne Suite

Several of Bayou Bend’s rooms reflect Ima Hogg’s taste and arrangement when she lived in the house, including the bedroom and sitting room of the Queen Anne Suite. This space formed her personal suite on the second floor. The bedroom, which incorporates period 18th-century woodwork and flooring, shares blue-green paneling with the adjoining sitting room. The suite is furnished with objects in the Late Baroque style (1730–55), such as the New England armchair that inspired her to begin collecting American furniture.
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Folk Art Room

This interior originally accommodated Ima Hogg’s bath and dressing room. Following her death in 1975, the area was renovated to become a room to recognize her many interests and civic contributions. Thanks to the addition of the Lora Jean Kilroy Visitor and Education Center in 2010, the art objects and memorabilia conveying her and her family’s philanthropy moved to the Hogg Family Legacy Room. In 2010, the interior pictured here was turned into a gallery space dedicated to American folk art. Folk artists are often self-taught. They may not know of the historic traditions of visual art, may choose not to observe them, or may adapt them in personal ways. Some of the objects here were made for practical purposes, while others were just meant to be visually enjoyed.
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Ceramics Study Room

The Ceramics Study Room is organized to chronicle the development of ceramic design, production, marketing, and usage between the 1620s and the 1870s. The survey, which includes objects from England, Europe, America, and China, incorporates many of the most important ceramic objects in the Bayou Bend Collection, and in this setting they are more accessible than in the period room settings.
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Image representation for Federal Parlor

Federal Parlor

When Bayou Bend was a residence, this room was the bedroom of Ima Hogg’s older brother, Will Hogg. The Federal Parlor displays a period-appropriate room setting of the Federal, or Neoclassical, period in the United States (1790–1810). The parlor was the room in which the family drank tea, played cards, danced, and entertained guests. The colorful wallpaper is an accurate reproduction of a French-inspired paper printed in Boston around 1790.
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Newport Room

The Newport Room’s paneling is based on the parlor of the Hunter House, built in 1748 in Newport, Rhode Island. The influence of Newport’s regional style of this time is evident elsewhere in the room as well. The motif of a carved, stylized shell, synonymous with Newport furniture, appears in the room’s concave alcoves and on the elegant mahogany desk and bookcase. When Bayou Bend was the family’s residence, this area served as a bedroom for Ima Hogg’s younger brother, Mike Hogg.
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Image representation for Texas Alcove and Hall

Texas Alcove and Hall

The Texas Alcove displays mid-19th-century Texas decorative arts, such as an imposing Wardrobe and a significant collection of stoneware pottery, including examples made at African American-owned potteries.
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Image representation for Texas Room

Texas Room

In the mid-1800s, Texas experienced a surge of German immigrants who brought a taste for furniture with simple, comfortable designs and fine craftsmanship. The Texas Room, paneled with cedar woodwork, is inspired by a home in Independence, Texas. The room features objects made by Germans in Central Texas during this period, as well as English ceramics that commemorate the Texas War of Independence and the Mexican-American War. The space was originally used as a tiled bath and dressing rooms for Will and Mike Hogg.
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Image representation for Lora Jean Kilroy Visitor and Education Center

Lora Jean Kilroy Visitor and Education Center

Displayed in exhibit cases at the Kilroy Center are groups of objects that represent some of Miss Ima Hogg’s and Bayou Bend’s collecting interests: English, American, and imported ceramics; glass; Texana; and silver and other metals. Nearby, the Hogg Family Legacy Room celebrates the Hogg family's deep commitment to civic responsibility and their vision of Houston as a metropolis of international importance. There, you’ll find some collection objects given by the Hogg family to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
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The MFAH Collections

To explore all of the Museum's works of art, search the collection.