- Adam style
The Adam style (or Adamesque) is a style of neoclassical
architecture and design as practised by Scottish architectRobert Adam (1728 -1792 ) and his brothers. A book of engraved designs made the "Adam" repertory available throughout Europe. A parallel development of this early phase of neoclassical design is French "Louis XVI style .Robert Adam's main rivals were
James Wyatt , whose many designs for furniture were less known outside the wide circle of his patrons, because he never published a book of engravings, and Sir William Chambers, who designed fewer furnishings for his interiors, preferring to work with able cabinet-makers likeJohn Linnell ,Thomas Chippendale andInce and Mayhew . So many able designers were working in this style in London from ca. 1770, that the style is currently more usually termed Early Neoclassical.It is typical of Adam style to combine decorative neo-Gothic details into the classical framework. So-called "Egyptian" and "Etruscan" design motifs were minor features.
The "Adam style" is identified with:
* Roman style decorative motifs such as framed medallions, vases, urns and tripods, arabesque vine scrolls,sphinx es andgryphon s.
* Flat grotesque panels
* Pilasters
* Painted ornaments such as swags and ribbons
* Complex color schemesThe Adam style found its niche from the late 1760s in upper-class residences in 18th century
England ,Scotland ,Russia where it was introduced by Scottish architect Charles Cameron, and post-Revolutionary WarUnited States (where it became known as Federal style and took on a variation of its own). The style was superseded from the end of the 1780s by a more massive and self-consciously archeological style, connected with theFirst French Empire .A revived "Adams" style, initiated by a spectacular marquetry cabinet by
Wright & Mansfield exhibited at theParis Exposition of 1867 , competed with revived Sheraton andHepplewhite styles that lost momentum afterWorld War I .ee also
*
House of Dun External links
* [http://ah.bfn.org/a/DCTNRY/a/adam.html Buffalo Architectural Museum]
References
* Eileen Harris, "The Furniture of Robert Adam"
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