Times Colonist

Show celebrates dining-table designs

Exhibition runs the range from early 19th-century Napoleon Bonaparte to a 2017 award-winning creation

- KATHERINE ROTH

NEW YORK — From the age of Napoleon to Depression-era America and beyond, often-unsung designers have brought life to the dining-room table.

“I thought all tablecloth­s a bore — particular­ly white,” wrote Marguerita Mergentime, who gained renown for her tablecloth designs during the Depression. “What people needed, I decided, was bold dashing colour on the table, a new kind of design that you couldn’t resist.”

She was hardly alone in her quest to create “tablescape­s” with a bit of pizazz, according to a new exhibit at the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonia­n Design Museum that explores the impact of design on the rituals and customs of dining. “Tablescape­s: Designs for Dining” opened Oct. 5 and will remain on view through April 14, 2019.

The highlight of the show is an elaborate “surtout de table” centrepiec­e designed for Napoleon Bonaparte, who is believed to have commission­ed it as a wedding gift for his stepson. On view for the first time in 30 years and newly conserved, it exemplifie­s how dining at the highest levels of wealth and power in 19th-century France was a theatrical performanc­e, bringing architectu­re to the tabletop in elaborate vessels for food.

At the opposite end of the design spectrum are Mergentime’s casual, Depression-era table linens, featuring bold colours and a fascinatio­n with typography and American history.

Then there’s a futuristic work commission­ed by 2017 National Design Award winners Joe Doucet and Mary Ping that envisions a tabletop in a world where population growth has put a premium on space in kitchens and dining areas, and sustainabi­lity is crucial.

“From awe-inspiring grandeur to vernacular wit to an emphasis on sustainabi­lity, the exhibition provokes a spirited conversati­on around design’s role in the evolution of a universal ritual,” says Caroline Baumann, director of the museum.

Matilda McQuaid, deputy curatorial director, adds, “We wanted to show how much has changed over time, but also how some aspects have stayed the same.”

The show, divided into three galleries, begins with Doucet and Ping’s work, “The Concentric and Decentric Tables and Seating.”

The movable structure features two Lazy Susans and built-in stools that can be folded in to seat a small group, or expanded out to accommodat­e eight people. The terrazzo-patterned surface, reminiscen­t of stone, is made from recycled food packaging. A close look reveals tiny bits of the Starbucks logo among the tight swirls of grey and green. On the amoeba-shaped dining surfaces, Doucet designed sleek, multi-functional dishes meant to go directly from stovetop to tabletop to fridge, along with a sleek set of cutlery (including matching chopsticks). All his pieces are 3-Dprinted for greater customizat­ion.

“The future doesn’t have to be dystopian,” says Ping.

In the next gallery is the French centrepiec­e, created in 1805 by Pierre-Philippe Thomire, a Parisian sculptor known for creating gilt-bronze objects. Made in sections to accommodat­e a variety of table sizes, the centrepiec­e is raised slightly above the dining surface and covered in gold with a mirrored base. It resembles a sort of Versailles garden for the table, complete with elegant statuettes and fountain-like towers meant to hold beautifull­y arranged treats.

The mirrored plateau and gilt-bronze surfaces would have reflected candleligh­t, and an actual audience seated alongside the table watched as diners ate. The centrepiec­e is put in context by other works in the gallery, including a drawing of a late 18th century centrepiec­e inspired by the ruins of Pompeii, and an ornate, blackened bronze clock of the era.

The exhibit then shifts toward equally exuberant but decidedly more humble table decor with Mergentime’s work.

The American designer is best known for her bright modernist tablecloth­s and napkins from 1934 until her death in 1941. They were highlighte­d in popular magazines of the time and sold in upscale department stores.

“They are really about the communal side of dining, and many of them are designed to be conversati­on starters,” says McQuaid.

Stylish and witty, many of Mergentime’s pieces feature quizzes or other conversati­on starters. The 1939 tablecloth “Food Quiz,” for example, includes the printed phrase: “Do you dish the dirt before you dish the soup?”

 ?? MATT FLYNN, COOPER HEWITT, SMITHSONIA­N DESIGN MUSEUM VIA AP ?? Here is a sample of creations on display in the Tablescape­s: Designs for Dining exhibition at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonia­n Design Museum in New York. The show runs through April 14, 2019.
MATT FLYNN, COOPER HEWITT, SMITHSONIA­N DESIGN MUSEUM VIA AP Here is a sample of creations on display in the Tablescape­s: Designs for Dining exhibition at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonia­n Design Museum in New York. The show runs through April 14, 2019.

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