● On view now — Gallery 11
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
The sixty-eight fascinating Thorne Miniature Rooms feature highlights from the history of interior design and decorative arts from the thirteenth century to 1940. These enchanting miniature stage sets were conceived by Mrs. James Ward Thorne of Chicago and constructed between 1934 and 1940 by master craftsmen according to her exacting specifications, on a scale of one inch to one foot. The harmonious elegance seen here is based on two dining rooms designed by Robert Adam, the successful eighteenth-century London architect whose precise and delicate interpretation of the antique (stimulated by then-recent excavations at Herculaneum and Pompeii) dictated English taste for a quarter of a century. To insure perfect conformity, Adam undertook the entire design of a house and every detail of its interior, hiring cabinetmakers to execute furniture that blended Neoclassical elements with current English forms. Instead of using wood and wallpaper, Adam carved low-relief ornament in plaster against painted panels in the style of Roman stuccos, as seen in this dining room. His furniture was often gilded in the Continental fashion, as is the side table in this room. The landscape over the tabl
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E-21: French Boudoir of the Louis XV Period, 1740-60
E-26: French Anteroom of the Empire Period, c. 1810
E-23: French Dining Room of the Periods of Louis XV and Loui
E-28: German Sitting Room of the Biedermeier Period, 1815-50
E-25: French Bathroom and Boudoir of the Revolutionary Perio
A30: Georgia Double Parlor, c. 1850
E-19: French Dining Room of the Louis XIV Period, 1660-1700
E-18: French Salon of the Louis XIV Period, 1660-1700