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Miniature Table

1899-1949

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Miniature Table

1899-1949

Physical Qualities Wood, 15 x 11 x 7 in. (38.1 x 27.9 x 17.8 cm.)
Credit Line Dorothy McIlvain Scott Collection
Object Number 2012.333
Carefully crafted in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, probably in the United States, these diminutive pieces of furniture were made chiefly for the amusement of adults. Old wives tales held that such miniatures served either as apprentice pieces (intended to demonstrate cabinetmaking skills) or as samples carried by traveling salesmen. However, those explanations have been gradually dismissed by scholars who continue to delve into the complexities of the international cabinet-making trade conducted over the past several centuries. The earliest doll houses were made for wealthy adults, but with the advent of the German toy industry in the early 19th century, furnished doll houses became popular playthings for children. The delight that tiny replicas of objects from everyday life can engender remains universal.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by bequest, 2012; Dorothy McIlvain Scott, Baltimore

Explore the Collection Further

DECORATIVE ARTS
Miniature Tea Table
1899–1948
Clara Peeters
A Still Life of Lilies, Roses, Iris, Pansies, Columbine, Love-in-a-Mist, Larkspur and Other Flowers in a Glass Vase on a Table Top, Flanked by a Rose and a Carnation
1604–1614
Unknown Artist and Alexis Lemaistre
Three Men at a Table with their Top Hats
2000
Table
1674–1694
Félix Bracquemond, Henri Jean Augustin Leys, and others
La Table
1867