Showing posts with label C. P. H. Gilbert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C. P. H. Gilbert. Show all posts

Monday, February 2, 2015

THE ORIGINAL "WINFIELD HALL"

Hyde, E. B. Atlas of Nassau County, Long Island. 1914
   The North Country Colony was formed in 1893. It was a deliberately exclusive residential enclave whose large estates were protected by restrictive covenants enforced by the officers of the North Country Company. Their jurisdiction covered water front properties to the west of North Country Colony. 

   In 1900 C. P. H. Gilbert, the favored architect of the Gold Coast "colonists", built this Mediterranean-style villa for Alexander C. Humphrey. It was then sold to Emmett Queen, a Pittsburgh banker, in 1906 and in turn to F. W. Woolworth in 1914.   


GARAGE TOWER, "WINFIELD HALL"
The driveway to the garage tower with its tiled roof and clock blended into the sixteen acre estate with its grand hedges over walls and the sculpted pebble driveway with the grand trees.

STABLE, AT THE RESIDENCE OF EMMETT QUEEN, GLEN COVE, L. I. 
C. P. H. Gilbert, Architect 

GARAGE & STABLE, "WINFIELD HALL"
The garage had a built in turn-table for Woolworth's car to spin around on for driving directly out.
 GREENHOUSE & GARAGE, "WINFIELD HALL"
 Above is the greenhouse and garage with a clock tower and a series of apartments for servants.

CUTTING & VEGETABLE GARDEN, "WINFIELD HALL"
SOUTH FRONT, RESIDENCE, A. C. HUMPHREYS, GLEN COVE, L. I. 
C. P. H. Gilbert, Architect

QUEEN ESTATE
Large Norway Maples supplied and moved by Isaac Hicks & Son for Mr Emmett Queen, three years before this photograph was taken in 1911.


SOUTHWEST FRONT, "WINFIELD HALL"
FOUNTAIN, RESIDENCE, "WINFIELD HALL"

"WINFIELD HALL"
One of the first Mediterranean villa-style residences in the New York area, the house balanced Spanish and Renaissance details to create a formal, symmetrical villa. 


"WINFIELD HALL"
The walls were of rough-cast stucco over brick, and the red-tiled roof featured pyramidal gables at each end, with heavily trimmed segmental-headed dormers over the end pavilions and pyramid-capped dormers flanking the baroque scrolled pediment at the center of the main facade.
SOUTHEAST FRONT, "WINFIELD HALL" 
"WINFIELD HALL"
Within the formal volume of the house, outdoor rooms, some sheltered and some open to the sun, let the sun 
and breeze into the house in a dozen places.

NORTH FRONT, RESIDENCE, A. C. HUMPHREYS, GLEN COVE, L. I. 
C. P. H. Gilbert, Architect
ROSE GARDEN, "WINFIELD HALL" 
 Above is the formal rose garden on the north side of "Winfield Hall" facing Long Island Sound and golf course the Woolworth family enjoyed. 

ROSE GARDEN, "WINFIELD HALL" 
ROSE GARDEN, "WINFIELD HALL" 


ROSE GARDEN, "WINFIELD HALL" 

ROSE GARDEN, "WINFIELD HALL" 



HALL, RESIDENCE, A. C. HUMPHREYS, GLEN COVE, L. I. 
C. P. H. Gilbert, Architect 

ENTRANCE HALL,  "WINFIELD HALL" 
Above is the entrance hall to "Winfield Hall" in 1916, with carved mahogany walls and woodwork of fluted crowned columns decorated with Renaissance chairs flanking the main entrance with Persian rugs and ornate fire-irons resting in front of the mantel on the left side. To the right on the flocked brocade paper is a photograph of the Woolworth building in New York City.
To the right is the south end of the entrance hall with its paneled walls flocked paper and the staircase with its impressive moldings. Several nineteenth century French oil paintings adorn the mantel and coved panned wall with Persian prayer rugs draped over the railing reflects the ideals of the Edwardian age. To the right is the entrance to the Music room with its Renaissance furnishings and grandfather clock.



ENTRANCE HALL, "WINFIELD HALL" 
The north end of the entrance hall with its rich paneled walls, mantel, and staircase is decorated with nineteenth century French and American oil paintings and a Persian prayer rug is draped over the railing with the grand light fixtures, which reflects the ideals of the Edwardian age of grand comfort.


ENTRANCE HALL. "WINFIELD HALL" 
Above is the south end of the entrance hall with its paneled walls flocked paper holding a drawing of the Woolworth Buildings above the renaissance table of flowers. The grandfather clock between the fluted columns and the armed renaissance chair flank the front door entrance.

DINING ROOM, RESIDENCE, A. C. HUMPHREYS, GLEN COVE, L. I. 
C. P. H. Gilbert, Architect

DINNING ROOM, "WINFIELD HALL" 
Above is the formal dining room designed by Jennie Woolworth, with its hand-painted, imported Zuber French mural wall coverings. The walls are papered by a wall covering whose pear-wood hand-carved wood block printed papers date back 200 years. The design process takes over one year to produce and requires 20 artisans to engrave heavy wood-blocks with specific details of the panorama. Over 1,500 wood blocks go into each single mural. The mahogany dining table and chairs are Chippendale and the entrance on the left in the dining room leads to the conservatory breakfast room.


DRAWING ROOM & MUSIC ROOM"WINFIELD HALL" 
Above is the formal drawing room and music room of "Winfield Hall', which consists of Renaissance furnishings, Persian carpets, crystal vases, and nineteenth century French and American oil painting's. The ornate carved mahogany mantel holds the famous Woolworth clock. Wall sconces flank the paneled alcove.


DRAWING ROOM & MUSIC ROOM"WINFIELD HALL" 
Above is the organ and Renaissance furnishings in the drawing room, music room of "Winfield Hall". The paneled wall with the draped windows face south to the main entrance and belvedere leading to the mansion. The paneled grill wall behind the crystal lamps contains part of the sound system of organ pipes for the organ.


CONSERVATORY BREAKFAST ROOM"WINFIELD HALL" 
Facing north on Long Island Sound is the Woolworth conservatory breakfast room in "Winfield Hall". 
PIAZZA, "WINFIELD HALL" 
Above is the piazza at the east end of "Winfield Hall" that offered a view of the rose garden and Long Island Sound to the north. 


SLEEPING PORCH, "WINFIELD HALL"

FIRST FLOOR PLAN, RESIDENCE, A. C. HUMPHREYS, GLEN COVE, L. I. 
C. P. H. Gilbert, Architect


SECOND FLOOR PLAN, RESIDENCE, A. C. HUMPHREYS, GLEN COVE, L. I. 
C. P. H. Gilbert, Architect


   On November 11, 1916, Frank and Jenny Woolworth stood in shock as their stately mansion had burned to the ground. The flaming inferno began with the antiquated electrical wiring on the third floor. This allowed the servants to save some of the nineteenth century French, English, and America paintings on the first floor, along with Jennie's jewelry, the Woolworth clock in the drawing room, and some of the porcelain china in the dining room. What remained were the vast garage, green houses, and clock tower to the grand estate.

   Woolworth already had plans of rebuilding a new "Winfield Hall" with $10,000,000 in cash.


Follow THIS LINK for a post on the construction of the new "Winfield Hall".



Sunday, January 6, 2013

Residence, Capt. J. R. De Lamar, Madison Avenue and 37th Street, New York

Residence, Capt. J. R. De Lamar, Madison Avenue and 37th Street, New York.
C. P. H. Gilbert,  Architect.


  This imposing Beaux-Arts style mansion, designed by the noted New York architect, C. P. H. Gilbert, in the great scale and elegance of the limestone mansions that once lined Upper Fifth Avenue, was built for Joseph Raphael De Lamar in 1902.    De Lamar was born in Amsterdam in 1843 and emigrated to this country in the 1860s, settling in Massachusetts where he worked as a ship-contractor. ***He eventually became owner and captain of his own merchant ship and reportedly visited nearly every port in the world.***  With the discovery of gold in Colorado in the late 1870s, De Lamar went west and soon amassed a fortune.***He studied chemistry and metallurgy to inform himself about the mining business. He sold his interest for $10 million in 1898.***After a brief period in local politics, he returned east in 1883 and settled in New York City where he died in 1913.

***Attracted by the financial opportunities in  New York City, he gained additional riches on Wall Street, where his quiet manner garnered him the title "Man of Mystery". 
(His estate paid claimants for the losses they suffered in the stock market because of his death.)  De Lamar never became a part of the inner circle of Society. In the later half of the 1800s he lived in Paris most of the time; wealthy Americans who were shunned by Society often tried their luck in European capitals. In 1902, Joseph bought a choice piece of property at the northeast corner of Madison Avenue and 57th Street, for which he paid the then-astounding price of a quarter of a million dollars. He gave Architect Charles P. H. Gilbert "a free hand so far as the dwelling itself was concerned." However in 1904 he seemed to have lost interest and contemplated selling. NYTimes - Mr. De Lamar will finish the house, but it is said his desire to be the owner of one of the finest dwellings in the city and the costliest one on Murray Hill is not nearly so strong".  De Lamar did not try to break into the socially elite "millionaires row" of Fifth Avenue but took a site in an area Society had long since abandoned.***

  After De Lamar's death, the mansion was sold to the National Democratic Club in 1923 for use as their headquarters. The Polish Peoples' Republic purchased the building in 1973.***there was a lawsuit filed in a purchase dispute between the estate and the Bible Society. They won their deposit back but were barred from moving in.***

  The main facade and entrance of the mansion face 37th Street. The facade is designed in a tripartite division both vertically and horizontally. The vertical division is the dominant one, reinforced by projecting end pavilions. The horizontal division is created by a wide, smooth-faced, molded bandcourse above the ground floor and by the roof cornice above the third floor.

  One of the most attractive features of the design is Gilbert's subtle use of asymmetry within symmetry. The first three floors display a careful balance of architectural elements while the upper two stories introduce an asymmetrical composition creating a sense of height that belies the size of the mansion and gives the building its most striking feature.   The sense of asymmetry and height are further emphasized by the continuation of the rustication of the lower floors up into the fourth floor of the western pavilion, giving it a tower-like appearance.

  The major windows of the first three floors of the building are paired, with the exception of those on the recessed section of the Madison Avenue facade. All have smooth-faced enframenents which provide contrast with the rusticated wall surfaces. At the second floor of the end pavilions, tall paired windows with wide stone mullions and transom bars are set behind balustrades supported on massive console brackets which are decorated with classical swags. Over the windows are dentiled cornices carried on console brackets that are extended up to serve as sills for the third floor windows, uniting them vertically. The windows of the third floor have handsome ornamented, curved transom bars. Above the third floor is a dentiled and modillioned cornice carried on massive, paired console brackets at the corners.

  One of the most impressive elements of the mansion is the recessed entrance facade. The double oak doors of the entrance are flanked by engaged columns and sidelights ornamented with bronze grillework, all set within the outer enforcements. A lintel decorated with cherubs, resting above a foliate cartouche, surmounts the doorway. Decorated urns flank the cherubs and a rectangular transom behind them lights the entrance hall. A stone balcony carried on vertical console brackets crowns the doorway. Behind this balcony is an imposing elliptical arched window with French doors, emphasizing the high main floor. Gracefully curving brackets and a keystone are swept up from the top of the arch to carry a handsome wrought-iron balcony at the third floor paired window.

  The commanding feature of the mansion is the treatment of the upper stories and the great mansard roof above the roof cornice. On the 27th Street facade, the fourth &nd fifth floors of the central section, and the eastern pavilion are generally similar, although their design is quite different from that of the higher tower-like western pavilion where the fourth floor is rusticated and pierced by a tripartite window. By contrast, at the fourth floor, the central section and the eastern pavilion are smooth-faced.  The central section has a semi-dormer window which rises up above the smooth-faced wall and has an elaborate round-arch pediment.  It is flanked by two small, narrow windows with cornice slabs set in the front wall. The eastern pavilion has a double dormer window with a segmental arch that is crowned by a very deep arched pediment with a central scroll motif. The mansard roof rises from mid-height of the fourth floor of these sections, while the mansard roof of the western tower begins at the fifth floor level. Small round-arched dormers mark the fifth floor of the central section and the eastern pavilion. The covering mansard roof of the western pavilion is pierced by a central, square-headed dormer window, on each exposed side, crowned by a pediment similar to the one above the recessed central portion. The lines of this very elegant mansard roof are emphasized by copper crestings decorated with shell motifs. Text from the description and analysis report  Landmarks Preservation Commission 1975. 

Click HERE to see at wikimapia. HERE for Google Street View. New York Times Streetscapes De Lamar Mansion.

Accessed from a sidewalk elevator is a automobile storage room


Interior photos are rare. Click HERE and HERE and HERE for descriptions of the furnishings sold during a three day auction held in November 1919.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Stately Homes of a Five-and-Dime Store Founder - "Winfield Hall"

Stately houses once owned by Frank Winfield Woolworth, like the one in Glen Cove, N.Y., and others in Manhattan, exist today in various states of grace.

LINK to New York Times article on "Winfield Hall". Click HERE for all past post on "Winfield Hall" including rare photos of the second floor bedrooms in post titled "The Age of Light".

Friday, August 10, 2012

The Age of Light - "Winfield Hall"

***Wall Sconce in Dining Room, "Winfield Hall"***

WEIGHT, color, decorative scale are perhaps the three most essential elements in determining the fitness of chandeliers, candelabra, floor standards, lamps and other accessories of modern electric lighting, either in private dwellings or in public places of assembly.


The apparent weight, the richness or lack of richness in color, and the size of the ornamental details are fundamental principles always apparent to the trained decorator's eye. But to the uninitiated, the words weight, color tone and decorative scale often have very little real significance when applied to lighting fixtures or house furnishings in general.

Because of this widespread lack of aesthetic discernment and artistic appreciation among modern home makers, it is customary to describe furniture, textiles and other necessary objects and materials about well-appointed homes in terms of the historic styles.

Little explanation is necessary to make the inexperienced understand that furniture was rather gorgeous and substantial in the time of Louis XIV; that it became festive in line and quite "feminine" in the days of Louis XV; that there was a return to more sober "classic" forms in the periods of Louis XVI; and that the "classic" forms were still further emphasized under Napoleonic influences. All this is convenient kindergarten talk for the designers of fine furniture. It has been comparatively easy to establish this world-wide rule of historic styles in the minds of modern home makers, because they are perfectly able to compare modern furniture and textiles with authentic examples of the several periods always on exhibition in our museums.

     REVOLUTIONARY TREND OF LIGHTING AGENTS 

WHEN one comes to design handsome lighting fixtures in the several styles, the problems of artists and practical lighting constructors seem much more difficult than the questions of design that confront furniture makers and textile manufacturers.

The usages to which chairs, tables, beds and nearly all varieties of upholstery materials are put today, are practically the same as when European civilization came into being.
The principal changes in domestic life that have influenced home making during the long centuries of Europe's upbuilding have been in some way associated with light and attendant sanitary improvements. On the use of lace as window curtains, the author pointed out the gradual evolution of modern windows and the greatly increased importance of window openings during the last two centuries. The development of the modern lighting fixture, on the other hand, has been ever so much more sudden than that of modern curtains and windows. Precedents in electric lighting are extremely difficult to establish, for unparalleled improvements and scientific discoveries have radically changed the world within the last thirty years.

      HARMONIZING LIGHTS WITH PERIOD ROOMS

WE LIVE in an age of light. Every home maker wants more light in his domicile. While he may accept stylistic restrictions regarding his chairs and tables, when it comes to lighting fixtures the practical conditions of agreeable luminosity are, in the home maker's mind, all important. The cautious advice of architects and decorators is all too frequently disregarded when electric fixtures are under consideration. This revolutionary tendency among modern people is very often made a source of profit, in an unscrupulous manner,  by the agents of certain electric lighting companies.

Second-class manufacturers of fixtures also profit by the home maker's confusion and "put it over" on careful, conservative competitors, by offering more brass and a greater number of sockets for less money. The leaders of the lighting fixture industry ought, even if merely as an act of self-preservation, to instigate an educational propaganda for a more intelligent popular understanding of chandeliers, lamps, wall brackets and similar electrical accessories, in relation to furniture and the varied problems of interior decoration. Undoubtedly, the stylistic use of electrical attachments will be the most successful way of relating lighting fixtures to furniture and architectural decoration.

To illustrate the skilful use of historical styles in decorative electrical illumination, the editors of Good Furniture Magazine publish the following interiors in which the modern use of light has been harmonized with elaborate "period" rooms.

       STYLISTIC PATTERNS BROUGHT UP TO DATE

  Crystal Chandelier of Palatial Character is the Outstanding Feature of the Music Room, and differs widely from other Types of Lights in the Woolworth Residence.



IN CERTAIN instances, as in the use of elaborate crystal chandeliers in the music room, well-known patterns have been followed out quite faithfully, while in other eminently successful designs, new forms and shapes have been devised to meet the exigencies of "style" as well as to satisfy the practical requirements of the rooms. But these new forms and shapes being harmonious in apparent weight, color and ornamental scale are successfully incorporated in the several period schemes shown in the illustrations.


(1)  This richly-carved Alabaster lamp, placed in the Main Hallway to break the heavy shadow cast by the Stairwell Lantern, prove a clever subsidiary light Source.


 As long as the spirit of style is understood, the designers can improvise new and novel shapes, and still remain in harmony with the general character of the decorative scheme. Figures 1 and 3 give an excellent idea of the grand stairway and the general appearance of the entrance hall in this splendid residence on Long Island.


(3)  A Stairwell Lantern of Famous Italian Renaissance Design adds much to the sumptuous Effect of the Grand Stairway.



The sumptuous lantern above the stair-well is similar in general pattern to thoroughly familiar and authentic lighting fixtures of the historical period suggested by the architectural details and the handsome furniture. Fitted with electricity, such a lantern gives far more light than in the days of the Italian renaissance, when such monumental lanterns were equipped either with huge candles or smoky, fat oil lamps. But even when equipped with our most modern appliances, the luminosity of such a fixture is either too dim or too concentrated in power for our twentieth century ideals. People dislike dark shadows and piercing lights, especially on stairways.

While this hanging lantern, with its handsome display of metal workers' craft, forms a ponderous, palatial and well-poised lighting center for a truly splendid hall, it is far from meeting the everyday requirements of modern lighting. So the decorators established subsidiary sources of light to break the heavy shadows that the lantern would likely cast.

    A THE MODERN ANSWER TO AN AGE-OLD PROBLEM 

A NOVEL lighting fixture that quite escapes casual observation in daylight, should be noted. It is placed at the left of the large door leading from the main hallway at the foot of the "Grand Escalier." This lighting fixture of richly carved alabaster carries a powerful electric bulb in the urn-shaped top. The translucent qualities of alabaster make it possible to entirely conceal a very powerful source of light at any level which the resources of the illuminator's experience suggests. High-powered electric bulbs are, as everybody knows, often hidden behind cornices or hung inside inverted bowls or metallic vases placed well above the level of the eye.

In a very lofty salon or especially in a palatial stair hall, such an arrangement of concealed lights is apt to leave the floor unpleasantly dark, concentrating the main light on the ceiling.

                                                      ***
THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL LOBBY - Hotel Commodore - New York City
                                                      ***

Sometimes, as in the lobby of the Hotel Commodore, this indirect radiation is most fascinating. In the hall and stairway illustrated in Figure 3, unpleasant effects might easily be produced through the careless use of open luminous vases or urns, because people mounting the stairway would certainly at some point look down on the raw and disagreeable electric bulb. So this alabaster urn, at the foot of the stairs where shadows are apt to fall, is an eminently useful piece of furniture.

In the lighting of this stairway, the period traditions of the past and the resources of modern ingenuity are successfully combined to give a splendid effect.

But the varied problems suggested prove beyond a doubt that it is far more difficult to select or design suitable lighting fixtures than to secure well-appointed chairs or tables. In furniture it suffices for the architect or decorator to say that he wishes a chair or table from this or that epoch of the period styles, and he is sure to get something that matches up fairly well with the architectural details of the place. On the other hand, the unimproved lighting fixtures of the period might be either a smoky oil lantern, or a chandelier always dripping wax, and with half the candles blowing out whenever the front door is opened.

             A MARIE ANTOINETTE CHANDELIER 

(9) Another Contrast—the Marie Antoinette Chandelier, of surpassing Delicacy, in keeping with other Appointments of the Room.



(10)  These finely modeled Lighting Devices in the Marie Antoinette Bed Room assume New and Charming Qualities when seen from different Points of View.


IN STRIKING contrast to the majestic style expressed by the lighting fixtures shown in Figures 1 and 3, we have in the same mansion on Long Island, numerous light and airy forms of craftsmanship, utilized in contrasting decorative schemes, as in the Marie Antoinette bed room shown in Figures 9 and 10. The skilfully-wrought flowery details, the lightsome sprays of leaves and blossoms that decorate the almost fairylike chandeliers, illustrate the meaning of the words "apparent weight and color." Whereas the huge central light on the main stairway has the virtue of looking truly ponderous, and its well considered weight gives an added sense of dignity to the place, the virtue of the Marie Antoinette chandelier is that it looks lightsome and gay, hardly seeming to have any real weight. Indeed, the less that the lighting fixtures in this room appear to weigh, the better they conform to the architectural qualities of the place, as exemplified by the details above the door and along the walls, or that find agreeable expression in the well-chosen pieces of furniture. The same fairy-like patterns are utilized for the wall brackets with their delicately colored shades.

Whether one views these electric fixtures in relation with the mirrors and fireplace or in the close contact with the delicate suggestions of carvings about the room, the effect is always harmonious. These finely modeled pieces assume new and always charming qualities of decorative design when seen from different points of view.

Certainly, fine electric lighting fixtures are among the most eminent examples of modern craftsmanship which our century has produced, but the adroit artisans, craftsmen and welltrained designers work without applause. Their achievements are often slightly valued instead of being recognized as masterpieces of ingenuity. The best praise they now receive is that a competitor occasionally steals their patterns and brings them out in cheaper form, manufactured of inferior material in quantities, to sell at cutrate prices. It is a pity that the most gifted creators of modern lighting fixtures have been such a very timid crowd that our people fail to recognize the splendid form of art now being created to meet the requirements of "The Age of Light" and to satisfy the natural desires of home makers who now utilize the endless resources of electricity.

     KEEPING IN ACCORD WITH ARCHITECTS' PLANS

(5)  Ornate Wood-Carving on the Walls of the Dining Room finds ready reflection in the Lighting Devices, particularly in the Wall Brackets with their Brilliant Mirrors and Italianized Putti.



IN FIGURE 5 we see another harmonious association of fine furniture, architectural details and lighting agents. While the chandelier and brackets in this room are less ponderous than the stair-well lantern, they are decidedly more substantial and magnificent than the ones shown in the airy bedroom, furnished in the style of Marie Antoinette. This difference in style corresponds in a happy manner to the wall decorations and to the architectural details, like the doorways and window mouldings.

By force of logic, lighting fixtures ought to be in closest accord with the architect's plans because the electrical devices, for the most part, are definitely attached to the structure of the building. While chairs and tables are easily moved about from one room to another and from an old home to a new one, chandeliers, wall brackets and all similar necessities to modern illumination remain, for the most part, where they are first placed, and are quite as much an integral part of the original decorative designs as are the ornamental wall mirrors or fireplaces.

The side table and accompanying ornament of this dining room established the dominant features of design that were followed in all its decorative details. The main chandelier is possibly a little lacking in the fanciful and ornate charm expressed by the carvings of the panel above the side table. But the wall brackets are delightful examples of the fixture maker's enchanting art.

In fact, the wall brackets, with their brilliant mirrors and their Italianized putti, supporting garlands of fruit and flowers, repeat as minor accents the major ornamental motives of the main composition. Such a spirited and intelligent adaptation of delightful patterns, to the practical exigencies of lighting, ought to receive widespread commendation, and will undoubtedly, in future days, seem to have marked an epoch for the history of lighting fixtures in the United States.

             LIBRARY LIGHTS FOLLOW THE GOTHIC MODE

(6)   The Restful Beauty of the Gothic Library is enhanced by the simplicity of the Chandelier.



STILL another successful rendering of a historic style, adapted to modern circumstances, is clearly exemplified by Figure 6. Here the restful quality of the library is enhanced by the simple beauty of the chandeliers.

If the reader will compare the different types of lighting fixtures in this article, noting the different qualities of apparent weight, of curving lines, and of angular or substantial patterns, an instructive understanding of "the styles" is at once apparent. In every instance, the first purpose has been that of creating a thoroughly practical lighting system, but the final results have been in every case quite in harmony with the general architectural layout of each room.

In the past, all too frequently, the selecting of lighting fixtures has been either a matter of artistic ignorance or cultural despair. All too frequently the home maker's choice has been doomed because it has often been a question of selecting the least bad out of an unlovely lot.

The hope of finding electrical attachments on a similar artistic plane with the furniture and other decorative features of the interior has commonly been abandoned at the beginning of the search. This necessity continues, not because fine fixtures are not produced, but because the buying public has little chance of seeing them or finding out about their fitness and beauty.

(2)  Mantel in the French Gothic Bed Room, with Wrought Iron Candlesticks which harmonize with the Chandelier and the Tall Candlesticks on the Dressing Table.


The varied treatments of electrical appliances are capable of infinite refinement. For instance, the French Gothic bed room, shown in Figure 2, is somewhat similar in character to the Gothic mouldings and carvings of the library; but even the slight architectural differences of these two rooms have found expression in the enchanting mill craftsmanship employed to design the chandeliers, wall brackets and candelabra.

(7)  In the Empire Bed Room, the Architectural Details, Furniture and Draperies make a Handsome Setting for the Modern Empire Chandelier.


(4) Interesting Detail in Empirc Bed Room, with Side Lights contributing to the Doorway Decroration.



The Empire bed room, with its elaborate twentieth century fixtures, shown in Figure 7, take on an added significance if we remember the enormous changes that have taken place since the creation of this style regarding what people in general consider adequate lighting for their homes. In Figure 4 the dresser, the mirror and the architectural details to the right and left all seem combined to give a handsome setting for electric lighting. Thus we see that all the historic styles may be skilfully adapted to the decorative handling of modern electric lighting.

          COORDINATING USE OF LIGHTS AND MIRRORS

THE use of handsome candlesticks as table ornaments is a practical arrangement that has much to commend it to housekeepers, for it offers endless resources of decorative grace and charm when such candlesticks are suitably arranged with mirrors, wood carvings or other wall decorations. While neither the table with its candlesticks nor the wall mirrors in themselves are important enough to make imposing ornamental features if standing alone, when skilfully combined, as shown in Figure 2, such a composition may become the most decorative center in the room.

The mirror and frame makers, the furniture designers and the manufacturers of electric lighting fixtures ought to be trained in the same schools and should always work together with a common artistic purpose. They ought also to institute a common propaganda for a greater and more widespread appreciation of their artistic and decorative achievements. 

The general use of mirrors in the homes of any but multimillionaires is a comparatively recent custom, because mirrors were formerly outrageously expensive. Only the expeditious methods of modern glass manufacturers have brought large mirrors practically within the reach of all. This use of large reflecting surfaces is an added resource for modern arrangements of well-designed illuminating attachments, and should be made much of.

               ADAPTING ORIENTAL ART TO LAMPS 

TODAY we are overwhelmingly influenced by the splendor of the Orient. Above all, we are alert to the extensive color schemes which Oriental home furnishers employ so tastefully. Colorful objects are consequently being put to use by our merchants, manufacturers and artists. 


(20)    Allowing Color and Light to Dominate the Decorative Scheme.
(18)  Making Oriental Materials Serve American Taste.


From China and Japan come many pieces of porcelain, and many pieces of enamel metal ware which we are able to adapt and incorporate in our electric lighting fixtures, as illustrated by Figures 18 and 20. Brilliant patterns worked out in silks and brocades, supplemented by highly ornamental fringes and tassels, have served to increase and greatly enhance the native beauty of imported craftsmanship from the Orient.

Inevitably, as we give more attention to our lighting fixtures, the important details of house furnishings come to play a greater decorative part in all the different uses to which they are put. By day, as well as by night, the lighting fixture is likely to become a dominant feature of our living room. Plain and otherwise unattractive wall surfaces may become extraordinarily brilliant and gracious through the introduction of an adequate wall bracket, as illustrated in Figure 15.


(15)  Simple Wall Space in the Writing Room of the F. W. Woolworth Home are made Fancifully Attractive by Colorful Oriental Wall Brackets.



This handsome room, designed by C. P. H. Gilbert, gives an idea of how the simplest wall space may become fancifully attractive through the utilization of Oriental color motives. The chandelier is still another indication of how modern  systems of lighting lend themselves to artistic treatment, and to the varying character of architectural details. But no matter how one considers this handsome room, the wall panel with its mirror and its two electric lighting fixtures to the right and left, are bound to create a center of interest, and to remain one of the most important features of ornamentation.


(13)  Centering lnterest by Means of Oriental Lighting Fixtures in the Chinese Bed Room of the F. W. Woolworth Residence, Glen Cove, L. I.

(14)  Lighting Fixtures in the Chinese Sleeping Room are Largely Decorative, a Powerful Bulb in the Central Pendent being the Real Light Source.


Views of the Chinese bed room in this same sumptuous mansion, Figures 13 and 14, show us again how the modern lure of the Oriental is having a beneficial effect on our decorative schemes. The central chandelier in the sleeping room is ingeniously arranged, so that the pendant of metalwork of Oriental design carries within it a powerful electric lighting bulb, which sends an indirect radiation of light throughout the room. The small candlesticks which show us the visible signs of illumination are satisfactory in their color and style, but would be entirely inadequate as lighting agents, were it not for this large central bulb placed below the level of the eye in the deep pendant ornamental in form and coloring.

By WM. Laurel Harris- 1921


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Color photos lifted from the Location Department.