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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Interior Design And Home Furnishings, Biographies > Duncan Phyfe
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Duncan Phyfe, Interior Design And Home Furnishings, Biographies

Related Category: Interior Design And Home Furnishings, Biographies

Duncan Phyfe[fIf] Pronunciation Key, c.1768–1854, American cabinetmaker, b. Scotland. He emigrated to America c.1783, settling at Albany, N.Y., where he was apprenticed to a cabinetmaker. In the early 1790s he established a shop in New York City for the production of furniture; after several moves he finally settled in Partition St. (later changed to Fulton St.). He first spelled his name Fife but c.1793 adopted the form Phyfe. He made chairs, sofas or settees, tables, and sideboards, using in great part solid mahogany but also some mahogany veneer, satinwood and maple, and, in later years, rosewood. During his most productive period (until 1820) he was influenced by, and adapted the forms of, the Adam brothers, Hepplewhite, and Sheraton and characteristics of the French Directoire and Consulate styles. Later, his designs followed the Empire style, becoming in his final period heavy, overornamented, and to a great degree characterless. Phyfe employed in general the highest standards, applied under supervision to carefully selected woods. His first designs are characterized by excellent proportions, graceful curves often accentuated by parallel rows of reeding, simple ornaments well placed and carved with precision, and decorative motifs such as the lyre, the acanthus or oak leaf, and the drapery swag. Although much furniture termed Phyfe may not have been produced in his workshop, his designs were the nucleus of the Duncan Phyfe style.



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

American art
furniture

Related Categories:

Literature and the Arts > Fashion, Design, and Crafts
Literature and the Arts > Biographies
People > Literature and the Arts
Sports and Everyday Life > Crafts and Household Items
Sports and Everyday Life > Biographies
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