Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
In 1880, polymath designer William Morris declared: “If you want a golden rule that will fit everybody, this is it: Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.” His words encapsulated the Aesthetic Movement, which prized beauty above all and blurred the lines between fine art and the decorative arts, particularly through lavishly crafted furniture pieces.
The Aesthetic Movement, whose major proponents included author Oscar Wilde, flourished from the 1860s to the 1880s and was mostly popular in England and the United States. Design expositions like the 1876 Centennial International Exhibition in Philadelphia, as well as the publishing of how-to books for interior design, helped disseminate Aesthetic Movement bedroom furniture, serveware, coffee tables and other items, especially to the middle class.
The establishment of new art museums, art clubs and a rising passion for collecting at the time contributed to a growing appreciation for art. Morris’s founding of Morris & Co. in 1862 and the commercializing of this “cult of beauty” by the Liberty store in London, starting in the late 19th century, further disseminated the idea of a domestic space that was thoughtfully and floridly designed.
Leading Aesthetic Movement furniture designers included E.W. Godwin, who drew on Japanese influences and whose work reflected a wider enthusiasm for imported East Asian art. British designer Christopher Dresser created textiles, ceramics and more that were also inspired by Japanese decorative art but were representative of additional diverse design sources that ranged from Egypt to Mexico.
The Aesthetic Movement’s eclecticism resulted in dazzling interiors. Japanese fans were positioned on Renaissance-inspired cabinets with brass hardware, while mantels made of rich walnut or finely carved ebonized wood and adorned with painted Minton tiles mingled with cast-iron chairs against a backdrop of floral wallpaper. In 1881, in New York City, stenciled checkerboard motifs and painted floral murals could be found under an opalescent glass chandelier in a luxurious dressing room designed by German émigré cabinetmaker-decorator George Alfred Schastey. Amid the rise of the industrial age, the style’s promotion of art in everyday life would inform the Arts and Crafts Movement and Art Nouveau.
Find a collection of antique Aesthetic Movement seating, tables, decorative objects and other furniture and antiques on 1stDibs.
Late 19th Century French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Earthenware
Mid-19th Century Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Oak
1890s Dutch Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Ceramic
Late 19th Century French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Earthenware
Late 19th Century French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Earthenware
1920s American Vintage Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Bronze
19th Century Chinese Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Rosewood
Mid-20th Century Italian Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Terracotta
Late 19th Century French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Faience, Majolica, Pottery
Early 1900s French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Ceramic, Faience
Late 19th Century French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Bronze
19th Century Austrian Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Terracotta
Late 19th Century French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Bronze
1950s Swedish Vintage Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Bronze
Mid-19th Century French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Wood, Paint
Early 1900s French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Ceramic
19th Century Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Wood
1990s British Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Resin, Fiberglass
Early 20th Century French Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Ceramic
1880s American Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Earthenware
1880s American Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Earthenware
20th Century American Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Bone
Late 19th Century Czech Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Earthenware
Late 19th Century American Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Iron
Late 19th Century European Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Metal, Brass
Late 19th Century English Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Earthenware
20th Century American Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Bone
1890s German Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Bronze
1890s American Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Ceramic
1870s French Antique Aesthetic Movement Wall-mounted Sculptures
Ceramic