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Object Timeline
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Sidewall (France)
This is a sidewall. It is dated 1850–60 and we acquired it in 1976. Its medium is block printed on machine made paper. It is a part of the Wallcoverings department.
Medallion a la Mode
This sidewall is a lovely example of a mid-nineteenth century “medallion-style” wallpaper, and represents an oddly specific niche in the world of fashionable Victorian wallcoverings. Picturesque vignettes of a harborside town show seagulls and tiny little people busily living their lives against backdrops of windmills, sailing ships and even a chateau. The vignettes are arranged in a diaper pattern, and are framed by a diamond trellis composed of craggy rocks, narrow staircases and knobby trees. Vines dangle from the tops of the frames, and waterfalls cascade down the trellis. The waterfalls are highlighted in a pleasant cornflower blue, which is also utilized in the harbor waves of the vignettes. The rest of the paper is printed in monochrome shades of brown on a taupe background, so the blue waters stand out strikingly from the rest of the images. The use of one bright color against a more neutral background was considered quite fetching at the time this paper was produced (c.1850). The imagery, as well as the color scheme, was very popular, and according to Richard Nylander in Wallpaper in New England, “repeating views of a spired and turreted building next to a body of water…framed by a fantastical structure of bridges and meadows” were made by a number of different manufactures.
This particular wallpaper found its way across the Atlantic and into the archive of Thomas Strahan & Co, who donated it to Cooper Hewitt in 1976. Strahan began as a wallpaper retailer in Boston, MA in the 1880s, and shortly thereafter began producing his own papers. The company remained in business until 2005. This imported example from Strahan’s inventory was of the type that was eagerly snapped up for use in staircases by his New England customers. So, in conclusion: in the 1850s, in New England, people wanted wallpapers featuring scenes of waterside castles framed by bridges and trees, rendered in a neutral palate except for one bright color, to decorate their staircases; because, why not?
This object was featured in our Object of the Week series in a post titled Medallion a la Mode.
This object was
donated by
Thomas Strahan & Co., Manufactory.
It is credited Gift of Thomas Strahan Company.
- Bandbox And Lid, Windmill and Rail Road
- block-printed on handmade paper, pasteboard support.
- Gift of Eleanor and Sarah Hewitt.
- 1913-17-18-a,b
Its dimensions are
67.3 x 48.3 cm (26.5 x 19 in. )
Cite this object as
Sidewall (France); block printed on machine made paper; 67.3 x 48.3 cm (26.5 x 19 in. ); Gift of Thomas Strahan Company; 1976-46-33
This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition Rooms with a View: Landscape & Wallpaper.