Europe and United States The
vanity furniture set with matching
dressing chair and table became an ostentatious display of wealth in made by for, likely,
Marie-Caroline, Duchess of Berry. This light-reflecting set is made almost entirely of the
cut crystal and bronze, with
candelabras depicting
Zephyrus and
Flora supporting a rotating mirror (the ballet '''' had just become popular). The evolution of the dressing table naturally followed the furniture styles. For example, in the 19th century in United States, the desks could be found in the English
Chippendale style, as well as in a variety of
revivalist stylizations, from
Elizabethan to
Colonial.
Charles-Honoré Lannuier, after moving to the US in 1803, established a popular "New York" style, mostly based on the
Napoleonic one. A brief reign of
Art Nouveau freed the dressing table shape from the confines of tradition, yielding striking pieces by
Hector Guimard,
Louis Majorelle, and
Antoni Gaudi. After an interruption of the
First World War,
Art Deco took over, with a showcase example of the dressing table produced by one of the leaders of the movement,
Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann. His Colonette dressing table plays on the meaning of the
toile with a cloth-imitating
marquetry, made of
ivory and
ebony, placed at the center. The
Bauhaus modernists of the early 20th century with their clean, occasionally amazingly simple, designs, inspired American designers, like
Paul T. Frankl with his
skyscraper-themed tables with oversized (semi-)circular mirrors. In the aftermath of the
Second World War, a
Good Design movement in the US and Scandinavia called for stylish yet functional and inexpensive products, making the dressing table to become a reality for a middle-class home. For example, a combination writing desk and dressing table by
Børge Mogensen (1950) reused the cover of the top drawer as a base of the pop-up mirror and the surface for writing, returning to the concept of the bureau dressing table. In
Ettore Sottsass' console and mirror (1965) the shaving surface for men no longer stands on the floor and is hanging on the wall instead. After experiments with new materials in the 1960s and 1970s, the
postmodernists like Sottsass and
Michael Graves turned to revivalism, now combined with whimsical irony (cf. Graves' Plaza dressing table and stool set). Table de toilette de la duchesse de Berry.jpg|The dressing table of Marie-Caroline (ca. 1819) in the
Louvre Gaudi-tocador-2618sh.jpg|Dressing table by Gaudi (1889) Dressing table, designed by Carlo Bugatti for his own use, Paris, c. 1904 - Royal Ontario Museum - DSC09510.JPG|Men's dressing table (
Carlo Bugatti, ca. 1904) Dressing table and bench - after Léon Jallot (38691620495).jpg|Dressing table in the
cubist style (unknown designer imitating , 1929) Luigi Massoni designed cylinder dressing table half closed.jpg|Cylinder dressing table by
Luigi Massoni (half-closed, ca. 1970) File:Dressing table and stool “Plaza”, by Michael Graves, 1981, painted wood, natural rosehips, mirrors and bulbs, Inv. FNAC 2633.A, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris (01).jpg|"Plaza" vanity set by Graves (1981)
Japan In Japan, women did not use dressing tables, they were instead kneeling in front of the low "cosmetic stands". File:松竹桜家紋蒔絵櫛台-Cosmetic Stand with Pine, Bamboo, and Cherry Blossom from a Wedding Set MET DP215935.jpg|Cosmetic stand from a wedding
trousseau, early 19th century == See also ==