President Andrew Johnson's Pottier & Stymus
Bolstering a National Identity: President Andrew Johnson’s Pottier & Stymus Furniture in the United States Treasury Department, 1865 Elizabeth Chantale Varner Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Masters of Arts in the History of Decorative Arts Masters Program in the History of Decorative Arts The Smithsonian Associates and Corcoran College of Art + Design 2008 © 2008 Elizabeth Chantale Varner All Rights Reserved Table of Contents Lists of Illustrations ii Chapter 1: The Treasury Suite Furniture in the Cultural Context of Establishing a National Identity 1 Chapter 2: The Pottier & Stymus Commission 11 Chapter 3: Pottier & Stymus and the Renaissance Revival Style Furniture 25 Chapter 4: Shields on the Treasury Furniture Suite 43 Chapter 5: Influence of the Treasury Furniture Suite on Other Government Furniture 53 Bibliography 65 Illustrations 74 i LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Figure 1 “The First Cabinet Meeting under the Administration of Andrew Johnson,” Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper. 74 Figure 2 “The First Reception of Ambassadors by Andrew Johnson, at His Rooms in the Treasury Building Reception,” Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper. 75 Figure 3 Gilbert Stuart, George Washington, 1796. 76 Figure 4 Ralph Earl, Andrew Jackson, 1830-1832. 77 Figure 5 Joseph Goldsborough Bruff, Cornelius and Baker Eagle Bracket in the Treasury Building, 1859. 78 Figure 6 The Maison Carrée, a Temple in Nîmes, France, c. 20 B.C. 79 Figure 7 United States Treasury Department Building, Washington, D.C., 1836-1869. 80 Figure 8 Pottier & Stymus, Sofa, United States Treasury Department, 1864. 81 Figure 9 Unknown, Sofa, ca. 1860-1870. 82 Figure 10 Unknown, Sofa, Virginia Museum of Art, ca.
[Show full text]