Cooper Hewitt opens "Tablescapes: Designs for Dining"

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, April 23, 2024


Cooper Hewitt opens "Tablescapes: Designs for Dining"
Clock, 1807–10
. Made by Antoine-Andre Ravrio (French, 1759–1814). Fire-gilt bronze, blackened bronze, enameled metal (dial), blued steel (hands), glass
. Gift of the Estate of Carl M. Loeb, 1955-82-1. Photo: © Smithsonian Institution .



NEW YORK, NY.- Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum presents “Tablescapes: Designs for Dining,” an exhibition that offers a creative timeline of dining experiences through three distinct installations. At the center of the exhibition is Cooper Hewitt’s surtout de table, a magnificent, newly conserved treasure from the museum’s expansive collection of over 210,000 design objects that once ornamented the tables of French nobility at the turn of the 19th century. The exhibition also spotlights the work of the underrecognized but influential textile designer Marguerita Mergentime, active in the 1920s and ’30s, whose work has not received a dedicated museum presentation in 75 years. Pivoting to address 21st-century concerns, the exhibition debuts experimental and collaborative products commissioned from National Design Award-winning designers Joe Doucet and Mary Ping. “Tablescapes” is on view Oct. 5 through April 14, 2019.

“‘Tablescapes’ shows how taste and social values are expressed through style, materials and motifs,” said Caroline Baumann, director of the museum. “From awe-inspiring grandeur to vernacular wit to an emphasis on sustainability, the exhibition provokes a spirited conversation around design’s role in the evolution of a universal ritual.”

SURTOUT DE TABLE
On view for the first time in 30 years, Cooper Hewitt’s surtout de table was created in Paris around 1805 by Pierre-Philippe Thomire, a French sculptor renowned for creating gilt-bronze objects for the politically and socially powerful. It is believed that Napoleon gave this example as a wedding present to his stepson, Eugène de Beauharnais, whom he often designated to host diplomatic dinners in Paris and Italy.

When placed at the center of a long table, the mirrored plateau and gilt-bronze surfaces of the surtout de table would have reflected the flames of expensive candles. As part of the exhibition’s digital experience, visitors may manipulate an image of the object to view the surtout de table under various lighting conditions. This technology, known as “Reflection Transformation Imaging,” facilitated the extensive conservation treatment of the surtout de table. As documented in an accompanying gallery video, Cooper Hewitt’s conservationists worked in collaboration with external specialists to restore the surface of the surtout de table, dulled by corrosion, to its original golden lustre. Additionally, the conservationists treated the deteriorating silver-leaf backing of the mirrored plateau, making the surtout de table reflective once again.

To contextualize the surtout de table, it is presented with related objects, including a late 18th century Italian drawing for a surtout de table design inspired by the ruins of Pompeii and a fire-gilt and blackened bronze clock made by Antoine-Andre Ravrio (French, 1759–1814) with ornaments in the form of a woman playing piano, said to represent Empress Josephine, the mother of Eugène de Beauharnais, at her fashionable residence Malmaison.

MARGUERITA MERGENTIME
Marguerita Mergentime (American, 1894-1941) began her design career in New York City in the 1920s, where she made dress fabrics and bath and beach accessories. She belonged to a circle of modernist designers that included Donald Deskey, Gilbert Rohde, Frederick Kiesler and Ilonka Karasz.

In 1934, Mergentime debuted her first designs for home linens at the Industrial Arts Exposition at Rockerfeller Center. She quickly gained recognition for her bright, modernist textile designs, which retailed at desirable department stores and were highlighted in popular magazines as essential accessories for the hostess seeking to vivify informal dining. Each of the eight napkins in the set Wish Fulfillment (1939) stimulated cocktail hour conversation with a depiction of a mystical or pseudoscientific conduit to the future—for instance, dream books or graphology—accompanied by predictions of wealth, success and happiness. Stylish and imbued with typographical interest, the tablecloth Food Quiz (1939) brought humorous, lighthearted debate to the table with conversation sparkers such as, “Do you dish the dirt before you dish the soup?”

Further illuminating Mergentime’s sensibility, the adjacent Spoon Family Gallery is dedicated to archival materials and the hanging Americana (1939), which entertained visitors at the Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco by uniting the names of 360 iconic American phrases, organizations, foods, points of interest and people.

JOE DOUCET AND MARY PING
For this exhibition, Cooper Hewitt commissioned Joe Doucet (American, born 1970), recipient of the 2017 National Design Award for Product Design, and Mary Ping (American, born 1978), recipient of the 2017 National Design Award for Fashion Design and founder of the studio Slow and Steady Wins the Race, to envision the future of dining. The designers address a near future in which users approach dining with greater speed and efficiency, and live in cities that are more densely populated than ever.

The Concentric and Decentric Tables and Seating, designed by Ping and the New York-based architectural firm Bureau V, can fold to seat a small group or expand to accomodate a gathering of up to nine people. Appropriately for a future of increasing material scarcity, its terrazzo-patterned surface is made not from stone, but from recyled food packaging.

Presented on the amoeba-shaped eating surfaces of Ping’s table, Doucet designed multifunctional servingware that can be used to cook, serve and store food and a set of cutlery designed for users who dine on a variety of international cuisines. Doucet fabricated the designs using 3D printing to allow for greater customization.

“Tablescapes: Designs for Dining” is made possible by Anonymous. Conservation of the surtout de table is made possible by the Smithsonian Women’s Committee. In-kind support is provided by Shapeways and The Abadi Group.

Pure+Applied designed the exhibition.










Today's News

October 6, 2018

Exhibition at Museum of Modern Art explores the prolific career of Charles White

New auction record set for a living female artist

Robin Williams memorabilia fetches $6.1 million in New York

Neue Galerie opens first exhibition in the U.S. on the art of Franz Marc and August Macke

Sotheby's to offer a restituted masterpiece by Egon Schiele this November in New York

Mary McCartney gifts major photographic series to the V&A for display in new Photography Centre

New scholarship on Egon Schiele's 1910 male nudes announced by Jane Kallir

Aleksandr Rodchenko's 'Girl with a Leica' leads Sotheby's $4 million Photographs Auctions in New York

New exhibition at Hever Castle tells the story of the Tudors and reveals the risks of royal marriages

Love me fender: Elvis' last Cadillac up for sale in Austria

First U.S. museum survey of New York-based sculptor B. Wurtz on view at The Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles

Freeman's announces sale of British & European Furniture and Decorative Arts including Silver and Russian Works of Art

Major Harald Sohlberg exhibition opens at the National Museum of Norway

First large-scale museum survey of Metahaven opens in Amsterdam

"Embroidery: The Thread of History" at Winterthur explores needlework as a document of record

The New-York Historical Society opens "Harry Potter: A History of Magic"

China Guardian Hong Kong 2018 auctions bring US$ 141.8 million

Baltimore Museum of Art opens major retrospective of visual art by John Waters

France bids farewell to singer Aznavour, its little 'giant'

"Common Threads: Weaving Stories Across Time" opens at Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston

The Ukrainian Institute of America opens an exhibition of contemporary decorative and wearable fabric art

Antonia Jannone Gallery in Milan opens exhibition of works by Sergei Tchoban

Russian bronze sculpture leads Heritage Auctions' Fine & Decorative Arts auction beyond $1.7 million

Cooper Hewitt opens "Tablescapes: Designs for Dining"




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful