,
Poland (chamber painting) of a
Biedermeier interior in Berlin: fitted carpets, unified window, and pier-mirror draperies, and framed engravings in a restrained classicising style, around 1825, by Leopold Zielcke (1791–1861)
Biedermeier furniture is admired for quality craftsmanship and comfort. Original early 19th century
Biedermeier furniture was manufactured to be publicly displayed, with less concern for convenience and private enjoyment.
Biedermeier upholstery makes extensive use of coil-springs.
Biedermeier furniture design was purchased or commissioned by the prosperous
middle class to celebrate comfort and leisure. Middle to late-
Biedermeier furniture design represented a heralding towards historicism and revival eras long sought for. Social forces originating in France would change the artisan-patron system that achieved this period of design, first in the German states, and then into Scandinavia. The middle class growth originated in the
Industrial Revolution in Britain and many
Biedermeier designs owe their simplicity to Georgian lines of the 19th century, as the proliferation of design publications reached the German states and the
Austrian Empire. The
Biedermeier style was a simplified interpretation of the influential French
Empire style of
Napoleon, which introduced the romance of ancient
Roman Empire styles, adapting these to modern early 19th century households.
Biedermeier furniture used locally available materials such as cherry, ash, and oak woods rather than the expensive timbers such as fully imported mahogany. Unique designs were created in
Vienna. Furniture from the earlier period (1815–1830) was the most severe and neoclassical in inspiration. It also supplied the most fantastic forms which the second half of the period (1830–1848) lacked, being influenced by the many style publications from Britain.
Biedermeier furniture was the first style in the world that emanated from the growing middle class. It preceded Victoriana and influenced mainly German-speaking countries. In Sweden,
Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte, who was adopted by King
Charles XIII (who was childless), became Sweden's new king in 1818 as Karl XIV Johan. The Swedish Karl Johan style, similar to
Biedermeier, retained its elegant and blatantly Napoleonic style throughout the 19th century.
Biedermeier furniture and lifestyle was a focus on exhibitions at the Vienna applied arts museum in 1896. The many visitors to this exhibition were so influenced by this fantasy style and its elegance that a new resurgence or revival period became popular amongst European cabinetmakers. This revival period lasted up until the Art Deco style was taken up.
Biedermeier also influenced the various
Bauhaus styles through their truth in material philosophy. The original
Biedermeier period changed with the political unrests of 1845–1848 (its end date). With the revolutions in European
historicism, furniture of the later years of the period took on a distinct
Wilhelminian or
Victorian style. The term
Biedermeier is also used to refer to a style of clocks made in Vienna in the early 19th century. The clean and simple lines included a light and airy aesthetic, especially in Viennese regulators of the
Laterndluhr and
Dachluhr styles. Biedermeier globe-shaped work table, Vienna, c. 1815-1820, maple veneer, bird's eye maple, fruitwoods, gilded and ebonized wood, mirror, brass - Montreal Museum of Fine Arts - Montreal, Canada - DSC09359.jpg|Globe-shaped work table; 1815–1820; maple veneer, bird's eye maple, fruitwoods, gilded and ebonized wood, mirror, brass; from
Vienna;
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (
Montreal, Canada) Nieznany - Podnóżek (SZMb 2231).jpg|Footstool; 1820–1840; carpentry embroidery upolstery; height: 29 cm, width: 46.3 cm;
National Museum of Warsaw (
Warsaw,
Poland) Nieznany - Konsola (SZMb 25).jpg|Console; 1825–1830; carpentry wood carving veneering; height: 86.6 cm, width: 104.2 cm; National Museum of Warsaw Nieznany - Stolik do gry w szachy (SZMb 2087).jpg|Chess table; 1825–1835; carpentry veneering inlay; height: 77 cm; National Museum of Warsaw == Architecture==