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Alpine Folk Art – Jewelry Box with Houses and Trees – mid 19th C.
“Bauernmalerei”, early 19th. century
Handpainted wooden jewelry box with lid
Unusual rectangular shape with a slide lid and several compartments inside. The lid and all sides show scenes with a variety of red half-timbered houses typical for Alsace or Eastern Switzerland as well as trees and bushes.
Pine wood, laquered, hand painted
24 × 14 × 8cm
Condition: antique with visible traces of use on all sides
About Bauernmalerei:
Peasant furniture painting can be found from around the second half of the 18th and especially the 19th century in rural areas of Southern Germany, northern Switzerland and Alsace.
Initially painted imitations of furniture richly decorated with carvings and exotic veneers as owned by aristocracy and clergy, its increasingly opulent canon of forms soon ranged from stylised flowers and fruit to ornaments, rocailles and by the 18th century to figures and scenic images. With industrialization and bourgeois salon culture finding its way around Europe, hand painted furniture quickly fell out of fashion for being peasant and has almost completely vanished at the end of the 19th century.
Typical items were so called bridal caskets or cupboards for brides to store their dowry, but also entire bed chambers and: smaller jewelry cases where the lady of the house kept her precious personal items such as jewelry, a bible or love letters.
“Bauernmalerei”, early 19th. century
Handpainted wooden jewelry box with lid
Unusual rectangular shape with a slide lid and several compartments inside. The lid and all sides show scenes with a variety of red half-timbered houses typical for Alsace or Eastern Switzerland as well as trees and bushes.
Pine wood, laquered, hand painted
24 × 14 × 8cm
Condition: antique with visible traces of use on all sides
About Bauernmalerei:
Peasant furniture painting can be found from around the second half of the 18th and especially the 19th century in rural areas of Southern Germany, northern Switzerland and Alsace.
Initially painted imitations of furniture richly decorated with carvings and exotic veneers as owned by aristocracy and clergy, its increasingly opulent canon of forms soon ranged from stylised flowers and fruit to ornaments, rocailles and by the 18th century to figures and scenic images. With industrialization and bourgeois salon culture finding its way around Europe, hand painted furniture quickly fell out of fashion for being peasant and has almost completely vanished at the end of the 19th century.
Typical items were so called bridal caskets or cupboards for brides to store their dowry, but also entire bed chambers and: smaller jewelry cases where the lady of the house kept her precious personal items such as jewelry, a bible or love letters.