posted on 2014-06-18, 13:17authored byClive Edwards
In the 1980s, the application of the laser to cut veneers for marquetry was arguably the first major successful development for improving the process since the nineteenth century. Despite attempts to advance what had been an essentially hand-crafted technique, successful economic applications remained elusive. This article analyzes attempts made since the mid nineteenth-century to apply technologies to “improve” the marquetry process in Britain and America. Inventors intended to increase opportunities for manufacturers to supply decorative furniture for a growing market. Speed of production and the possibility of supplying furniture with greater decoration reflected a desire to address both the economic and consumption agendas. I describe how inventors proposed attempts to mechanize or imitate marquetry often through patented processes, and then consider their success. I argue that applying technologies as knowledge, practice, and material resource to craft works raises a number of issues particularly when there is an element of “art” involved.
History
School
The Arts, English and Drama
Department
Arts
Published in
Technology and Culture
Volume
53
Pages
401 - 434
Citation
EDWARDS, C., 2012. “Improving” the decoration of furniture: imitation and mechanization in the marquetry process in Britain and America, 1850–1900. Technology and Culture, 53 (2), pp. 401 - 434