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| Essential
Architecture- Search by style
Chinoiserie |
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| The Kew Gardens Pagoda at the Royal Botanic Gardens
at Kew, London |
Chinese House (Potsdam) |
The "Chinese Village" at Tsarskoe Selo commissioned by
Catharine the Great |
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| Small pagodas appeared on chimneypieces and
full-sized ones in gardens. Kew has a magnificent garden pagoda designed by
Sir William Chambers, a replica of which was built in Munich's Englischer
Garten. Though the rise of a more serious approach in Neoclassicism from the
1770s onward tended to squelch such Oriental folly, at the height of Regency
"Grecian" furnishings, the Prince Regent came down with a case of Brighton
Pavilion, and Chamberlain's Worcester china manufactory imitated gaudy "Imari"
wares. While classical styles reigned in the parade rooms, upscale houses,
from Badminton House (where the "Chinese Bedroom" was furnished by William
and John Linnell, ca 1754) and Nostell Priory to Casa Loma in Toronto,
sometimes feature an entire guest room decorated in the chinoiserie style,
complete with Chinese-styled bed, phoenix-themed wallpaper, and china. Later
exoticisms added imaginary Turkish themes, where a "diwan" became a sofa. |
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