● On view now — Gallery 273
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Imported into the United States as early as the 1860s, East Asian bamboo furniture inspired the manufacture of Western goods such as this faux-bamboo chair and desk (2003.10). Such wares reached the height of their popularity after the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition, where Japan’s display of bamboo furniture garnered much public attention. As the demand for Asian-inspired decorative arts and interiors intensified, American companies began using local materials such as this maple to produce faux-bamboo furniture in an attempt to compete with foreign imports. Firms such as R. J. Horner and Company advertised suites such as this one as most appropriate for the dining rooms and bedrooms of country houses.
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Peter Bonnett Wight — Dining Room chair
Artist unknown — Armchair
Shaker — Side Chair
East or West Indies, possibly Dutch-colonized Indonesia — Ch
Artist unknown — Side Chair
Artist unknown — Side Chair
Artist unknown — Side chair
Jacob Keller — Side Chair
Artist unknown — High Chair
Artist unknown — Side Chair
Attributed to John Gee
English, 1765-1824
London, England —
Attributed to John Gee
English, 1765-1824
London, England —