Unknown American
Window Cornice

CultureAmerican
Titles
  • Window Cornice
  • One of a Set of Three
Datec. 1850–1860
Made inUnited States
MediumEastern white pine, gesso, and gilding
Dimensions27 1/2 × 71 3/4 × 13 in. (69.9 × 182.2 × 33 cm)
Credit LineThe Bayou Bend Collection, gift of Miss Ima Hogg
Object numberB.71.76.3
Not on view

Explore Further

Department
Bayou Bend
Description

As the nineteenth century progressed, window treatment became more and more elaborate, utilizing yards and yards of fabric in multiple layers. By midcentury, the voluminous drapes were “finished by heavy cornices and the richest corresponding decorations.” Such cornices were closely related to the pier and mantel mirrors that were essential to fashionable parlor decor, in either the Rococo Revival style, as in the Bayou Bend example, or the Renaissance Revival style. These cornices employ the same vocabulary of ornament—central leaf-and-scroll cartouche, flanking scrolls, and corner scroll-bordered reserves—and techniques of manufacture as did contemporaneous mirror and picture frames. It is likely they were made in a shop that specialized in those wares.

Related examples: Very similar deep cornices are part of the 1853 furnishings of the parlor at Lansdowne in Natchez, Mississippi. In a departure, while the furniture of this room is in the Rococo taste, the pier and mantle mirrors are in the Renaissance taste (Miller and Miller 1986, p. 60). Other examples: a deep triple example in the bay window of the parlor at Stanton Hall, Natchez, built 1850–58 (Garrett 1993, p. 95): an illustration in Godey’s Lady’s Book, February 1854 (Grier 1988. p. 33, fig. 8). 

Book excerpt: David B. Warren, Michael K. Brown, Elizabeth Ann Coleman, and Emily Ballew Neff. American Decorative Arts and Paintings in the Bayou Bend Collection. Houston: Princeton Univ. Press, 1998.



ProvenanceCharles Brackett (1892–1969), Providence, Rhode Island [1]; Corliss-Brackett House, Providence, Brown University; purchased through [Nino Scotti, Associated Appraisers, Inc., Providence], as agent for Miss Ima Hogg, 1970; given to MFAH, 1971.

[1] The window cornices were part of the furnishings of the George Corliss House in Providence, which had been left to Brown University. They was owned by Charles Brackett and was apparently placed in the Corliss house when Brackett redecorated it in the Rococo Revival style in the 1920s.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
[no inscriptions]
[no marks]

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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scan from file photograph
Unknown American
c. 1850–1860
Eastern white pine, gesso, and gilding
B.71.76.1
Window Cornice
Unknown American
c. 1850–1860
Eastern white pine, gesso, and gilding
B.71.76.2
Column
Unknown European
late 16th century
Pine
94.1157.1
Column
Unknown European
late 16th century
Pine
94.1157.2
Column
Unknown European
late 16th century
Pine
94.1157.3
Unknown European
late 16th century
Pine
94.1157.4
Chimneypiece
mid 18th century
Pine
96.1590
Door, Frame, and Key
Unknown Spanish
c. 1600–1620
Painted and stained walnut, and pine
94.1107
Chimneypiece
Paint, parcel-gilt
94.899
Door Panel
Unknown Indonesian
Late 19th century
Polychromed wood
2004.2413
Pair of Side Chairs
Benjamin Henry Latrobe
1808
Yellow poplar, oak, maple, eastern white pine, gold leaf, gesso, and cane
B.90.9.1,.2
Mantel
Robert Wellford
c. 1800
Wood, paint, and composition
B.67.43