1379

Ashville, NC, Spectacular "Art Nouveau" Style Hall Bureau with Large Mirror, c 1900 [196567]

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Furniture, Appliances & Fans Start Price:1,750.00 USD Estimated At:3,500.00 - 6,000.00 USD
Ashville, NC, Spectacular   Art Nouveau  Style Hall Bureau with Large Mirror, c 1900 [196567]
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Exceptional, stunning hall mirror and bureau of complex geometric design, referred by some as "Art Nouveau". This specific design style will be recognizable to the North Carolina furniture expert. Five drawer bureau, marble slab top perfectly fit to the full top. The bureau section is 20" x 47.5" x 30" tall. The swivel encased mirror top unit is 47" x 57" tall, with a 29" diameter mirror. The top portion attaches to the back of the bureau with two 1 x 1.5" posts extending about 8" from the bottom, screwed to the bureau. It is currently "unassembled" for ease in maneuvering. Pick your shipper. About 200-250 pounds overall.
This magnificent piece has a story that starts with the original hand-made markings on the back from Ashville, North Carolina. Furniture manufacture in Ashville and surrounds had its beginning about 1880. Factories were built adjacent to the railroad for ease in shipping. Manufacturing plants in North Carolina were built in the late 1880s, so that commercial furniture production was just getting rolling by 1890, with a total of $159,000 in gross sales. Within ten years, 1900, North Carolina furniture production grew to 44 factories grossing over $1.5 million. During the 1890s, the North Carolina furniture manufacturers successfully marketed to midwestern entities, greatly expanding their businesses. Two years later in 1892 the total rose to 106 factories. Ashville was one of four major furniture manufacture locales. (See Ianda Chason Thesis "An Historical Study of the Development of the Furniture Industry in North Carolina, Its Current Status, and its Future, 1988, Pembroke State University)
This spectacular piece was directly shipped by railroad to Holbrook, Arizona, probably in the c1895-1905 period. From Holbrook, the piece was hauled by wagon to Snow Flake Arizona, a small Mormon farming community of about 400 at the time. It remained there until it sold at auction a number of years ago.
Today, North Carolina remains a major player in American furniture. Thomasville furniture leads the way, with a long NC furniture manufacturing history.
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