Intarsia and marquetry

INTARSIA AND MARQUETRY
HANDBOOK FOR THE DESIGNER AND CRAFTSMAN
BY F. HAMILTON JACKSON
Examiner to the Board of Education in Principles of Ornament
LONDON, SANDS AND COMPANY, 1903
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Intarsia and marquetry
PREFACE
The subject treated off in this handbook has, until lately, received scant attention in England; and except for short notices of a general nature contained in such books as Waring's "Arts Connected with Architecture," technical descriptions, such as those in Holtzapffel's " Turning and Mechanical Manipulation," and a few fugitive papers, has not been treated in the English language. On the Continent it has, however, been the subject of considerable research, and in Italy, Germany, and France books have been published which either include it as part of the larger subject of furniture, or treat in considerable detail instances of specially important undertakings. From these various sources I have endeavoured to gather as much information as possible without too wearying an insistence upon unimportant details, and now present the results of my selection for the consideration of that part of the public which is interested in the handicrafts which merge into art, and especially for the designer and craftsman, whose business it is or may be to produce such works in harmonious co-operation in the present day, as they often did in days gone by, and, it may be hoped, with a success akin to that attained in those periods to which we look back as the golden age of art.
INTARSIA AND MARQUETRY
HISTORICAL NOTES - ANTIQUITY
The word “intarsia” is derived from the Latin “interserere,” to insert, according to the best Italian authorities, though Scherer says there was a similar word, " Tausia," which was applied to the inlaying of gold and silver in some other metal, an art practised in Damascus, and thence called damascening; and that at first the two words meant the same thing, but after a time one was applied to work in wood and the other to metal work. In the “Museo Borbonico,” xii., p. 4, xv., p. 6, the word “Tausia” is said to be of Arabic origin, and there is no doubt that the art is Oriental. It perhaps reached Europe either by way of Sicily or through the Spanish Moors.
“Marquetry,” on the other hand, is a word of much later origin, and comes from the French “marqueter,” to spot, to mark ; it seems, therefore, accurate to apply the former term to those inlays of wood in which a space is first sunk in the solid to be afterwards filled with a piece of wood (or sometimes some other material) cut to fit it, and to use the latter for the more modem practice of cutting several sheets of differently coloured thin wood placed together to the same design, so that by one cutting eight or ten copies of different colours may be produced which will fit into each other, and only require subsequent arranging and glueing, as well as for the more artistic effects of the marquetry of the 17th and 18th centuries, which were produced with similar veneers. The process of inlaying is of the most remote antiquity, and the student may see in the cases of the British Museum, at the Louvre, and in other museums, examples of both Assyrian and Egyptian inlaid patterns of metal and ivory, or ebony or vitreous pastes, upon both wood and ivory, dating from the 8th and 10th centuries before the Christian Era, or earlier. The Greeks and Romans also made use of it for costly furniture and ornamental sculpture; in Book 23 of the “Odyssey,” Ulysses, describing to Penelope the bride-bed which he had made, says “Beginning from this head-post, I wrought at” the bedstead till I had finished it, and made it fair with inlaid work of gold, and of silver, and of ivory”; the statue and throne of Jupiter at Olympia “had ivory, ebony, and many other materials used in its construction, and the chests in which clothes were kept, mentioned by Homer, were some of them ornamented with inlaid work in the precious metals and ivory. Pausanias describes the box of Kypselos, in the opisthodomos of the Temple of Hera, at Olympia, as elliptical in shape, made of cedar wood and adorned with mythological representations, partly carved in wood and partly inlaid with gold and ivory, in five strips which encircled the whole box, one above another.
“Marquetry,” on the other hand, is a word of much later origin, and comes from the French “marqueter,” to spot, to mark ; it seems, therefore, accurate to apply the former term to those inlays of wood in which a space is first sunk in the solid to be afterwards filled with a piece of wood (or sometimes some other material) cut to fit it, and to use the latter for the more modem practice of cutting several sheets of differently coloured thin wood placed together to the same design, so that by one cutting eight or ten copies of different colours may be produced which will fit into each other, and only require subsequent arranging and glueing, as well as for the more artistic effects of the marquetry of the 17th and 18th centuries, which were produced with similar veneers. The process of inlaying is of the most remote antiquity, and the student may see in the cases of the British Museum, at the Louvre, and in other museums, examples of both Assyrian and Egyptian inlaid patterns of metal and ivory, or ebony or vitreous pastes, upon both wood and ivory, dating from the 8th and 10th centuries before the Christian Era, or earlier. The Greeks and Romans also made use of it for costly furniture and ornamental sculpture; in Book 23 of the “Odyssey,” Ulysses, describing to Penelope the bride-bed which he had made, says “Beginning from this head-post, I wrought at” the bedstead till I had finished it, and made it fair with inlaid work of gold, and of silver, and of ivory”; the statue and throne of Jupiter at Olympia “had ivory, ebony, and many other materials used in its construction, and the chests in which clothes were kept, mentioned by Homer, were some of them ornamented with inlaid work in the precious metals and ivory. Pausanias describes the box of Kypselos, in the opisthodomos of the Temple of Hera, at Olympia, as elliptical in shape, made of cedar wood and adorned with mythological representations, partly carved in wood and partly inlaid with gold and ivory, in five strips which encircled the whole box, one above another.
CONTENTS
- Historical Notes - Antiquity,
- Italy in Mediaeval and Renaissance Times,
- The Cloistered Intarsiatori and their Pupils,
- In Germany and Holland, England and France,
- The Process of Manufacture,
- The Limitations and Capabilities of the Art,
- Workshop Receipts,
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