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A Pair of Napoleon Hat Biedermeier Chairs in Zagreb

Profile picture for user Lovejoy
By Lovejoy, 3 February, 2018
Accurate Description of Item
A Pair of Napoleon Hat Biedermeier Chairs in Zagreb
Appraiser Remarks
From our files regarding this style

"The Biedermeier style was a simplified interpretation of the influential French Empire Style of Napoleon I, which introduced the romance of ancient Roman Empire styles, adapting these to modern early 19th-century households. Biedermeier furniture used locally available materials such as cherry, ash and oak woods rather than the expensive timbers such as fully imported mahogany. Whilst this timber was available near trading ports such as Antwerp, Hamburg and Stockholm, it was taxed heavily whenever it passed through another principality. This made mahogany very expensive to use and much local cherry and pearwood was stained to imitate the more expensive timbers. Stylistically, the furniture was simple and elegant. Its construction utilised the ideal of truth through material, something that later influenced the Bauhaus and Art Deco periods."

Furniture in this style is currently more collectible than the Empire style it's based on, but values have taken a drop since the 1990's.
Estimated Value
$1000.00- $1500.00
Profile picture for user InstAppraisal

InstAppraisal

7 years 5 months ago

Re: A Pair of Napoleon Hat Biedermeier Chairs in Zagreb

A Pair of Napoleon Hat Biedermeier Chairs in Zagreb

From our files regarding this style

"The Biedermeier style was a simplified interpretation of the influential French Empire Style of Napoleon I, which introduced the romance of ancient Roman Empire styles, adapting these to modern early 19th-century households. Biedermeier furniture used locally available materials such as cherry, ash and oak woods rather than the expensive timbers such as fully imported mahogany. Whilst this timber was available near trading ports such as Antwerp, Hamburg and Stockholm, it was taxed heavily whenever it passed through another principality. This made mahogany very expensive to use and much local cherry and pearwood was stained to imitate the more expensive timbers. Stylistically, the furniture was simple and elegant. Its construction utilised the ideal of truth through material, something that later influenced the Bauhaus and Art Deco periods."

Furniture in this style is currently more collectible than the Empire style it's based on, but values have taken a drop since the 1990's.

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