Skip to main content
Federal Sideboard Table
Artist unidentified
Photo by John Parnell
Federal Sideboard Table
Federal Sideboard Table
Artist unidentified
Photo by John Parnell
Federal Sideboard Table Artist unidentified Photo by John Parnell
Record Details

Federal Sideboard Table

Date1810–1830
Place/RegionNew England, United States
MediumPaint on wood, with brass knob
Dimensions34 7/8 × 26 × 20"
Credit LineMuseum purchase, Eva and Morris Feld Folk Art Acquisition Fund
Accession number1981.12.6
Description

Two primary reasons are most often cited to explain why so much furniture of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries is painted. The first is that paint protected the surface of the furniture and often disguised the fact that several different woods were employed in a single piece. The routine use of primary and secondary woods was partly a measure of expediency—less expensive woods were used in areas that were not visible—and partly a response to function, as more durable woods were chosen for areas of highest use. The second reason was a desire to imitate and interpret urban high-style fashions in the inexpensive medium of paint. What has been more recently recognized, however, is that such decorative painting was also expressive of regional taste.

This small federal sideboard table features the functional aspects of such decorative painting but most strongly conveys a sense of aspiration in both painted decoration and construction. It displays the slender lines of federal-era furniture and combines a shaped backsplash with a cyma-curved overhanging tabletop in imitation of a drop-leaf table, though no parts move. The front panel under the “drop leaf” is deeper than the side, for purely ornamental purposes, as it has received the greatest painted embellishment. A symmetrical arrangement of Adam-inspired ovals and rectangles gives the appearance of inlays of birch, satinwood, and other expensive veneers. The overwhelming impression in both paint and construction is therefore one of imitation, albeit through the use of imaginative rather than literally imitative grain painting.

Stacy C. Hollander, "Federal Sideboard Table," in American Anthem: Masterworks from the American Folk Art Museum (New York: Harry N. Abrams in association with American Folk Art Museum, 2001), 314.

Artist unidentified, “Chest of Drawers,” New England, 1830, Paint on wood, brass hardware, 44 ×…
Artist unidentified
1830
1999.8.4
Blanket Chest on Chest of Drawers
Artist unidentified
Maine, United States
c. 1830–1840
Pai…
Artist unidentified
c. 1830–1840
2001.33.5
Johannes Spitler, (1774–1837), “Tall Case Clock,” Shenandoah County, Virginia, 1801, Paint on y…
Johannes Spitler
1801
2005.8.27
Artist unidentified, “Flag Gate,” Jefferson County, New York, c. 1876, Paint on wood with iron …
Artist unidentified
c. 1876
1962.1.1
Artist unidentified; possibly Ransom Cook, (1794–1881), “"R.A.C." Box,” Probably Saratoga Sprin…
Artist unidentified
c. 1830–1840
88.19
Artist unidentified
c. 1825–1835
74.7
Artist unidentified
c. 1825–1835
78.9.15
Artist unidentified, “Bellows”, Eastern United States, Early 19th Century, Paint on wood, 23 3/…
Artist unidentified
Early 19th Century
72.12
Artist unidentified, “Bellows”, Eastern United States, Early 19th century, Paint on wood with l…
Artist unidentified
Early 19th century
86.8.21
Artist unidentified, “Bellows”, Eastern United States, Early 19th century, Paint on wood with l…
Artist unidentified
Early 19th century
84.1.11
Eluid Levi Martinez, (b. 1944), “Temptation,” Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1986, Paint on wood, brass,…
Eluid Levi Martinez
1986
1987.3.1