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English Victorian Terra Cotta Horse
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
English Victorian Terra Cotta Horse
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
Victorian
Period in English furniture during the reign of Queen Victoria 1837-1901. Consists of a resurrection of many previous periods and revival imitations including: Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, Rococo, and Neoclassic style. This period had a focus on dark woods, heavy fabrics, embellishment, engagement with newly developed imitation materials that were facilitated by the Industrial Revolution, and a tendency towards eclecticism.
Terra cotta
A type of clay-based fired earthenware with a porous body. Used in decorative arts and as a building material, usually of a red-brown clay, but may be colored with paint or baked glaze. Notably used for bricks, pottery, decorative reliefs, and statuary.
Victorian
Period in English furniture during the reign of Queen Victoria 1837-1901. Consists of a resurrection of many previous periods and revival imitations including: Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, Rococo, and Neoclassic style. This period had a focus on dark woods, heavy fabrics, embellishment, engagement with newly developed imitation materials that were facilitated by the Industrial Revolution, and a tendency towards eclecticism.
Terra cotta
A type of clay-based fired earthenware with a porous body. Used in decorative arts and as a building material, usually of a red-brown clay, but may be colored with paint or baked glaze. Notably used for bricks, pottery, decorative reliefs, and statuary.
Victorian
Period in English furniture during the reign of Queen Victoria 1837-1901. Consists of a resurrection of many previous periods and revival imitations including: Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, Rococo, and Neoclassic style. This period had a focus on dark woods, heavy fabrics, embellishment, engagement with newly developed imitation materials that were facilitated by the Industrial Revolution, and a tendency towards eclecticism.
Terra cotta
A type of clay-based fired earthenware with a porous body. Used in decorative arts and as a building material, usually of a red-brown clay, but may be colored with paint or baked glaze. Notably used for bricks, pottery, decorative reliefs, and statuary.