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| Apr 23, 2014 |
Period rooms get a makeover at Brooklyn Museum
Boh staff
By Staff

The parlor and library of the Colonel Robert J. Milligan House of Saratoga Springs, which were installed at the Brooklyn Museum in 1953 as a part of a group of late 19th-century American period rooms, have been conserved and refurbished for the first time and are officially completed.

In addition to repainting the rooms and laying bold tartan carpeting on the library's previously bare wood floors, the museum has restored and installed the parlor's original chandelier and decorated the rooms with a select group of recently acquired objects and several furnishings original to the rooms that were not previously on view in Brooklyn.

Rennovated Robert J. Milligan House parlor

The house from which the rooms come was built by Milligan in 1854 and is still standing in Saratoga Springs. The rooms illustrate two of the diverse revival styles popular in interior decoration in mid-nineteenth century America—in the parlor, the Louis XV Revival style, first developed in mid-eighteenth-century France and emphasizing curvilinear silhouettes and the realistic depiction of nature; and, in the library, the Gothic Revival style.

Rennovated Robert J. Milligan House library

The walls of the parlor, painted gray since first installed, now sport a reproduced nineteenth-century French wallpaper and Rococo Revival lace curtains of a similar design. The previously bare walls of the library are now covered with an ashlar faux stone design that contrasts with the colorful Scottish tartan design of the carpet. Popular interest in tartan patterns was inspired by Queen Victoria's refurbishment of Balmoral Castle in Scotland in the 1850s.

The parlor was first installed with a modern re-creation of a Rococo Revival chandelier, but it has now been replaced with the original chandelier by Cornelius and Baker of Philadelphia, thanks to the discovery of an exact period duplicate of the chandelier's long-missing central female figural group. To reflect changing ideas about children during the late nineteenth century, a rare child's chair by John Henry Belter has also been added to the parlor. In the library, a pair of mismatched walnut Gothic side chairs and a rare marble top center table with cast iron bull's legs have been added.

Period rooms were first installed at the Brooklyn Museum in 1929 and have been augmented over the years. They consist of seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth-century rooms, all from homes in the Eastern United States, ranging from two Dutch farmhouses from Brooklyn to a lavish twentieth-century Art Deco library-study from a Manhattan apartment.

The two rooms have been on public view throughout their facelift, which was completed on March 28.

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