Renowned in his lifetime for his elegant designs and
superior craftsmanship, Duncan Phyfe (1770–1854) remains to this day
America’s most famous cabinetmaker. Opening December 20 at The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the exhibition Duncan Phyfe:
Master Cabinetmaker in New York—the first retrospective
on Phyfe in 90 years—will serve to re-introduce this artistic and
influential master craftsman to a contemporary audience. On view will
be furniture produced in Phyfe’s Fulton Street workshops that once
stood on the site of the former World Trade Center. The full
chronological sweep of his long and distinguished career will be
featured, including examples of his best-known furniture from the
period 1805-20, which was influenced heavily by early English Regency
design; his more opulent, monumental, and archaeologically correct
Grecian style of the late 1810s and 1820s, sometimes referred to as
American Empire; and his sleek, minimalist late work of the 1830s and
1840s known as the Grecian Plain style, based largely on French
Restauration furniture design.
The exhibition is made possible by Karen H. Bechtel.
Additional support is provided by The Henry Luce
Foundation, Dr. and Mrs. Paul Cushman, the Americana Foundation, Mr.
Robert L. Froelich, and Mr. Philip Holzer.
It was organized by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
York and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
The exhibition brings together nearly 100 works from
private and public collections throughout the United States.
Highlights of the exhibition include some never-before-seen documented
masterpieces and furniture that has descended directly in the Phyfe
family, as well as the master cabinetmaker’s own chest of woodworking
tools.
Exhibition Overview
Organized chronologically, the exhibition will present the
life and work of the noted early 19th-century New York City
cabinetmaker Duncan Phyfe through furniture, drawings, documents,
personal possessions, and furniture. Portraits of his clients and
contemporary depictions of New York City street scenes and domestic
interiors will provide a glimpse into Phyfe’s milieu.
A poor immigrant when he arrived in America in the
early 1780s from his native Scotland, Phyfe acquired wealth and fame
through hard work and exceptional talent both as a craftsman and a
businessman. Throughout the first half of the 19th century he made
neoclassical furniture for the social and mercantile elite of New
York, Philadelphia, and the American South. His personal style,
characterized by superior proportions, balance, symmetry, and
restraint, became the local style for at least two generations in New
York. Many apprentices and journeymen exposed to this distinctive
style by serving a stint in the Phyfe shop or by copying the master
cabinetmaker’s designs helped to create and sustain this local school
of cabinetmaking. Demand for Phyfe’s work reached its peak around
1815–1820, when he was in such demand that he was referred the “United
States rage.” He remained the dominant figure in his trade into the
1840s and his eventual retirement in 1847 at the age of 77. The fires
of Phyfe’s fame were briefly extinguished after his passing in 1854,
but rekindled in the early 1900s by a passionate amateur historian,
who was himself once a New York cabinetmaker, and a coterie of
scholars, collectors, and connoisseurs who lionized Phyfe once again.
This renewed fame culminated in the first-ever monographic exhibition
held in an art museum on the work of a single cabinetmaker,
Furniture from the Workshop of Duncan Phyfe, which opened at the
Metropolitan in November of 1922.
Because Phyfe’s furniture was seldom signed, yet was
widely imitated, it is sometimes difficult to determine with accuracy
which works he actually made. The exhibition breaks new ground by
matching rare bills of sale and similar documents with furniture whose
history of ownership is known, thereby codifying his style over time.
A video featuring some of the techniques used in the
Phyfe workshop to create his furniture masterpieces, including relief
carving and turning will be shown within the exhibition.
Publication and Related Programs
An illustrated catalogue by Peter M. Kenney, Michael K.
Brown, Frances F. Bretter, and Matthew A. Thurlow will accompany the
exhibition. Published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and
distributed by Yale University Press, the book will be sold in the
Museum’s book shops.
The exhibition catalogue is made possible by The
William Cullen Bryant Fellows of the American Wing.
A variety of education programs will be offered,
including a Sunday at the Met on January 22 that examines Phyfe in the
context of contemporary furniture artists and craftsmen; exhibition
tours; a special Friday afternoon gallery workshop focused on
craftsmanship, featuring short discussions with three Metropolitan
Museum furniture conservators; and an interactive teacher workshop on
March 10. Unless otherwise noted, programs are free with Museum
admission.
A special feature about the exhibition will appear on
the website of the Metropolitan Museum. Please follow this link
for further information....
Exhibition notes
The exhibition is organized by Peter M. Kenny, Ruth Bigelow
Wriston Curator of American Decorative Arts and Administrator of the
American Wing, and Michael Brown, Curator of American Decorative Arts
at Bayou Bend, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Exhibition design at
the Metropolitan is by Michael Langley, Exhibition Design Manager;
lighting is by Clint Ross Coller and Richard Lichte, Lighting Design
Managers; and graphics are by Sue Koch, Graphic Design Manager, all of
the Museum’s Design Department.
Exhibition Location:
The Erving and Joyce Wolf
Gallery and The Israel Sack Galleries, The American Wing
Please note: Following its presentation at the
Metropolitan Museum, the exhibition will be shown at the Museum of
Fine Arts, Houston.
