A. D. Copier
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
(b Leerdam, 11 Jan 1901; d Wassenaar, 19 Dec 1991).
Dutch glass designer. He worked at the royal glass factory in Leerdam (see Leerdam glass), where his father was head ...
à la Façon de Venise
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
Glass is said to be à la façon de Venise when it imitates the style of Venetian glass. Such glass was made from the late 16th century in the Netherlands, the Rhineland and by Giacomo Verzelini in...
Abbotsford period
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
Late 19th-century term for the heavy mock-Gothic furniture of the 1820s and 1830s, so-called from the name of Sir Walter Scott’s house; the style is now called ‘Scottish Baronial’, a term otherwise...
Abraham Buzaglo
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
(b 1716; d 1788). Moroccan iron-founder who settled in England in 1762. He invented an innovative three-tier cast-iron stove decorated with extravagant reliefs. His name was so strongly associated...
Abraham Darby
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts — British history.
(1677–1717).
The founder of the great Shropshire iron industry, using local supplies of coal and iron. He was born in Worcestershire of a quaker family, apprenticed in Birmingham, and set up as a...
Abraham Dubois
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
(b 1751; d 1811). American silversmith whose workshop in Philadelphia specialized in domestic silver in the Federal style.
Abraham Helmhack
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
(b 1654; d 1724). German Hausmaler, stained-glass artist, glass-enameller and glass-engraver. He painted religious scenes on Nuremberg faience, which before the establishment of the Nuremberg Faience...
Abraham Jansz van Diepenbeeck
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
(b ’s Hertogenbosch, bapt 9 May 1596; d Antwerp, 31 Dec 1675).
Flemish glass-painter, draughtsman, painter and tapestry designer. Van Diepenbeeck trained in the ’s Hertogenbosch workshop of his father...
Abraham Leihamer
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
(bc. 1745; d 1774).
German faience painter. He worked at Rörstrand Ceramics Factory andMarieberg Factory, and then with his father-in-law Johann Buchwald at Eckernfľørde Pottery (1764–8), Kiel Pottery...
Abraham-Louis Breguet
Overview page. Subjects: decorative arts.
(b 1747; d 1823). Swiss watch-maker. In 1762 Breguet left his native Neuchâtel for Paris, where he remained for the rest of his life except for a period in the early 1790s when he fled the Revolution...