Exhibit at N.Y.’s Met explores Shaker furniture and textiles
The Shakers, an industrious and pious New England sect that rose to prominence in the 19th century but whose membership has now dwindled from thousands to three, have long had an outsized influence on design and designers.
A new installation at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Simple Gifts: Shaker at the Met, explores Shaker furniture and textiles and their impact. The installation, which opened this summer, is on view through June 25, 2017.
The Shakers arrived from England in 1774 and saw industriousness as a way of praising God. They embraced communal property, communal living, and racial and gender equality, all radical concepts at the time.
Their furniture, while streamlined and functional, also conveys a modern sensibility.
“They worked very hard to design their furniture according to the golden mean of proportion, and features like graduated drawers were designed using complex calculations,” said Michael Graham, director of the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village Museum in Gloucester, Maine, site of the only remaining Shaker community. “It had clean lines, but was not at all simple.”
Unlike some religious sects, the Shakers were far from insular. They were brilliant at marketing, selling their goods through catalogues and in resort communities along the East Coast, said Alyce Perry Englund, assistant curator of American Decorative Arts at the Met, who curated the installation.
Their pragmatism and quest for efficiency led them to use lathes to produce turned chair spindles, and in some cases they made clothing using ready-made fabrics, she said. They borrowed ideas they found useful, such as a revolving chair from 1851 that was a precursor to modern ergonomic office chairs.
The Shakers added tilting discs to chairs’ back legs to make them easier to lean back in; put wheels on beds to facilitate cleaning under them; and commonly used a series of pegs set in rails high on a wall to hang chairs and keep them out of the way when they weren’t in use.
Their cupboards, while void of inlays and other popular adornments of their time, were not rustic so much as intentionally organized, with an eye to geometric lines over fussy distractions, Englund said. The focus was on expert joinery and high-quality streamlined pieces.
Shaker furniture continues to be widely popular, and today’s tiny Shaker community welcomes dozens of people to their services, and has recently begun to contract locally to make pieces according to their specifications.
Maine-based Chilton Furniture, owned by Jennifer and Jared Levin, produces a chair made to exact 1830 Shaker specifications called the Alfred Chair, with design and production approved by the Shakers.
“The Shakers were so very modern in their approach,” Jennifer Levin said. “And there’s definitely a resurgence of interest in Shaker and Shaker-inspired pieces.
“There’s something timeless about it.”