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SIDEBOARD , a high oblong table $tted with drawers, cup-boards or pedestals, and used for the exposition or storage of articles required in the dining-See also: room
.
Originally it was what its name implies—a See also: side-table, to which the See also: modern See also: dinner-See also: wagon very closely approximates
.
Then two- or three-tiered sideboards were in use in the Tudor See also: period, and were perhaps the ancestors, or collaterals, of the See also: court-See also: cupboard, which in See also: skeleton they much resembled
.
Early in the 18th century they began to be replaced by side-tables properly so called
.
They were one of the many revolutions in furniture produced by the introduction of See also: mahogany, and those who could not afford the new and costly See also: wood used a cheap substitute stained to resemble it In the beginning these tables were entirely of wood and comparatively slight, but before long it became the fashion to use a marble slab instead of a wooden top, which necessitated a somewhat more robust construction; here again there was a See also: field for imitation, and marble was sometimes replaced by scagliola
.
Many of the sideboard tables of this period were exceedingly handsome, with cabriole legs, claw or claw and
See also: bill feet, friezes of acanthus, much gadrooning and mask pendants
.
Many such tables came from See also: Chippendale's workshops, but although that See also: great See also: genius beautified the type he found, he had no influence upon the See also: evolution of the sideboard
.
That evolution was brought about by the growth of domestic needs
.
Save upon its See also: surface, the sideboard-table offered no accommodation; it usually lacked even a drawer
.
Even, however, in the period of Chippendale's See also: zenith See also: separate " bottle cisterns " and " lavatories " for the convenience of the See also: butler in washing the
See also: silver as the meals proceeded were, sparsely no doubt, in use
.
By degrees it became customary to place a pedestal, which was really a cellarette or a See also: plate-warmer, at each end of the sideboard-table
.
One of them would contain ice and accommodation for bottles, the other would be a cistern
.
Sometimes a single pedestal would be surmounted by a wooden See also: vase lined with See also: metal and filled with See also: water, and fitted with a tap
.
To whom is due the brilliant inspiration of attaching the
pedestals to the table and creating a single piece of furniture out of three components there is nothing to show with certainty
.
It is most probable that the See also: credit is due to See also: Shearer, who unquestionably did much for the improvement of the sideboard; See also: Hepplewhite and the See also: brothers See also: Adam distinguished themselves in the same field
.
The pedestals, when incorporated as an integral See also: part of the piece, became cupboards and the vases knife-boxes, and, with the drawers, which had been occasionally used much earlier, the sideboard, in what appears to be its final See also: form, was completed
.
Pieces exist in which the ends have been cut away to receive the pedestals
.
If Shearer and Hepplewhite laid its See also: foundations, it was brought to its full fioraison by See also: Sheraton
.
By the use of See also: fine exotic woods, the deft employment of satin wood and other inlays, and by the addition of gracefully ornamented See also: brass-See also: work at the back; sometimes surmounted by candles to See also: light up the silver, Sheraton produced effects of great elegance
.
But for sheer See also: artistic excellence in the components of what presently became the sideboard, the See also: Adams stand unrivalled, some of their inlay and brass mounts being almost equal to the first work of the great French school
.
By replacing the straight outline with a bombe front, Hepplewhite added still further to the
See also: grace of the See also: late 18th-century sideboard
.
No See also: art remains long at its apogee, and in less than a quarter of a century the sideboard lost its grace, and, influenced by the heavy feeling of the See also: Empire manner, See also: grew massive and dull
.
Since the end of the 18th century there has indeed been no advance, artistically speaking, in this piece of furniture
.
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