Eldorado
Wallpaper
ca. 1915 (printed)
ca. 1915 (printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The Eldorado series was first produced by Zuber in 1849, and was so popular that it was reissued in 100 copies every two years until about 1870. It continued in production at intervals and is still available today. It pictures a sequence of lush exotic un-peopled landscapes in which each of the four (then-) known continents - Europe, Asia, Africa and America - is represented by its native plants and characteristic architecture. El Dorado, a mythical region or city of great wealth and opportunity, often thought to be located in South America, had come to stand as a symbol for riches and abundance. To buy such a decoration, which was itself expensive, was an overt display of the owner's wealth. This wallpaper (and similar decorations from other French wallpaper manufacturers, such as Defosse) was a seductive illusory equivalent of the conservatories and winter gardens that were features of the grandest houses at the time.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Eldorado (manufacturer's title) |
Materials and techniques | Colour woodblock print, on paper |
Brief description | Panel from the 'Eldorado' panoramic wallpaper, showing a view with palms and exotic plants; Colour print from wood blocks, on paper; Produced by Zuber et Cie, Rixheim, French; ca.1915. |
Physical description | Panel of panoramic wallpaper showing a view with palms and exotic plants; Colour print from wood blocks, on paper. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | ELDORADO / J. ZUBER & CIE / RIXHEIM / 1797 / 1915 (Stamp below design.) |
Credit line | Given by Mr W. L. Wood |
Object history | Given by Mr W. L. Wood. The 'Eldorado series was first produced by Zuber circa 1848, from designs by George Zipelius (1808-90) and Ehrmann (worked 1830-post-1857), painters and wallpaper designers. |
Production | The 'Eldorado series was first produced by Zuber circa 1848, from designs by George Zipelius (1808-90) and Ehrmann (worked 1830-post-1857), painters and wallpaper designers. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | The Eldorado series was first produced by Zuber in 1849, and was so popular that it was reissued in 100 copies every two years until about 1870. It continued in production at intervals and is still available today. It pictures a sequence of lush exotic un-peopled landscapes in which each of the four (then-) known continents - Europe, Asia, Africa and America - is represented by its native plants and characteristic architecture. El Dorado, a mythical region or city of great wealth and opportunity, often thought to be located in South America, had come to stand as a symbol for riches and abundance. To buy such a decoration, which was itself expensive, was an overt display of the owner's wealth. This wallpaper (and similar decorations from other French wallpaper manufacturers, such as Defosse) was a seductive illusory equivalent of the conservatories and winter gardens that were features of the grandest houses at the time. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | E.2901-1938 |
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Record created | January 21, 2003 |
Record URL |
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