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The Brooklyn Museum

Collections: Decorative Arts




The decorative arts collection reflects changes in domestic life and design from the seventeenth century to the present. Included are materials ranging from furniture, silver, glass, and ceramics to period rooms and textiles. Although the collections include some European material, their greatest strength is in American objects.

The earliest pieces of decorative art to enter the collection were silver spoons that came to the Museum in 1902; these were followed the next year by a number of pieces of European porcelain. With the arrival of Luke Vincent Lockwood, a noted collector and scholar, in 1914, the focus of the collections shifted from Europe to America. In 1915, the Museum acquired its first period room; although there are twenty-six period rooms installed in the Museum, due to ongoing construction only five that date from the mid-nineteenth through the early twentieth century are currently on view. During the 1930s, the Museum began actively exhibiting modern design, focusing on design's relationship to industry.

The collection of decorative arts is exhibited on the Museum's fourth floor in galleries and period rooms, and on the fifth floor in the Luce Center for American Art, including American Identities, a permanent display of American art, and the Visible Storage ▪ Study Center. The department is supported by the American Art Council.

BROWSE

Special Exhibition
Village to Vogue

Long-Term Installations
American IdentitiesDecorative ArtsVisible Storage

Collection Highlights: Decorative Arts
John Henry Belter: Bed Clara Driscoll: Gerrit Thomas Rietveld: Armchair Walter Dorwin Teague: Lurelle Guild: Vacuum Cleaner George Jacob Hunzinger: Armchair Center Table Armchair

Collection Highlights: Period Rooms
Robert J. Milligan Library and Parlor Worgelt Study

Provenance Project Catalogues

Online Resources
Behind the Scenes Brooklyn Bridge Search Database