Sideboard

Sideboard

Edward William GodwinWW-1871-115753
1871·Ebonized mahogany with glass and silvered brass·181.6 × 255.3 × 50.2 cm (71 1/2 × 100 1/2 × 19 3/4 in.) (with leaves e×tended)

<p>Celebrated as the “poet of architects and architect of all the arts,” Edward William Godwin was a man of many accomplishments. In a career that spanned more than thirty-five years, he was an architect of civic, domestic, and ecclesiastical buildings; an innovative interior decorator and designer of furniture, textiles, and theater sets; and an articulate critic of art and architecture. Godwin first designed his ebonized sideboard, of which this is a variant model, for his own dining room in 1867, and he subsequently reconsidered the form over the next two decades. In its appearance, the sideboard represents a turning away from the weight of contemporary Gothic Revival aesthetics and a move toward a reductionist sensibility expressed through the balance of solids and voids. This spare style gained Godwin some notable contemporary clients, among them James McNeill Whistler and Oscar Wilde. In his 1904 study <em>The English House</em>, the influential German critic Hermann Muthesius wrote that Godwin’s furniture, including this sideboard, foreshadowed the more modern look that emerged at the turn of the twentieth century. While calling Godwin’s creations “wildly picturesque,” Muthesius concluded that the overall effect was “one of elegance.”</p>

Catalogue

Year
1871
Dimensions
181.6 × 255.3 × 50.2 cm (71 1/2 × 100 1/2 × 19 3/4 in.) (with leaves e×tended)

Artist

Edward William Godwin
Edward William Godwin

Textile

Edward William Godwin was a British architect, designer, and theorist whose work bridged Victorian Gothic Revival aesthetics with Japanese design principles. Active in London from the 1860s onward, he designed furniture, interiors, and theatrical sets that rejected ornamental excess in favor of spare, rectilinear forms and refined proportions. His advocacy for Japanese art and design directly influenced the Aesthetic Movement, and his geometric furniture became a template for Arts and Crafts practitioners. Godwin's integration of functional elegance with historical reference established a modernist sensibility decades before its formal codification.

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WW-1867-M102877
Large Syringa

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1864 · Silk, satin weave, self-patterned by reversing of faces; edged with cotton and silk, plain weave with supplementary pile warps forming cut solid velvet; and silk and cotton, braid of plain weave with extended weft loops

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1871
Dimensions
181.6 × 255.3 × 50.2 cm (71 1/2 × 100 1/2 × 19 3/4 in.) (with leaves e×tended)
Watts ID
WW-1871-115753

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Edward William Godwin

Edward William Godwin

Textile

View artist profile →