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Desk Section of a Desk and Bookcase

c. 1780

The Cleveland Museum of Art

The Cleveland Museum of Art
Cleveland, United States

During the 1700s, a desk and bookcase, sometimes called a bureau in early inventories, was among the largest and most expensive pieces of furniture in a household. Their owners were chiefly businessmen and community leaders, and because of their function as repositories for personal letters and documents, they were usually placed downstairs in a back parlor or hall. A desk and bookcase consisted of two parts: usually a slant-top desk below and a cabinet above that sat within moldings applied to the desktop to hold it in place. The form often included elements derived from contemporary architecture. Like much New England furniture of the later 1700s, the lower section of this example is block-fronted, in which the profile recedes in the center and protrudes at either side. Though some European precedents can be found for block fronting, this type of cabinetry was clearly more popular in America than anywhere else.

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  • Title: Desk Section of a Desk and Bookcase
  • Date Created: c. 1780
  • Physical Dimensions: Overall: 241.9 x 106 x 56.5 cm (95 1/4 x 41 3/4 x 22 1/4 in.)
  • Provenance: Col. Christopher Toppan (1735-1818), Hampton, New Hamsphire; his son Edmund Toppan (1777-1857); his daughter Sarah Jane Parker Toppan (b. 1822) who married Rev. Samuel J. Spalding, Newburyport, Massachusetts; their granddaughter Helen Chapin Hitchcock (Mrs. Lawrence).
  • Type: Furniture and woodwork
  • Rights: CC0
  • External Link: https://clevelandart.org/art/1990.96.a
  • Medium: mahogany and pine, brass hardware, gilding
  • Fun Fact: This desk is the lower section of a desk and bookcase. A desk and bookcase in the 1700s, often equipped with several locks and keys as in this example, served as a self-contained office for the gentleman of the household.
  • Department: Decorative Art and Design
  • Culture: America, Massachusetts, Boston or vicinity
  • Credit Line: Bequest of Mrs. Lawrence Hitchcock
  • Collection: Furniture
  • Accession Number: 1990.96.a
The Cleveland Museum of Art

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