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Adam style
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==The Adam style== [[Image:Home House 05.jpg|thumb|260px|Interior of [[Home House]], designed by [[Robert Adam]] in 1777]] The work of the Adam brothers set the style for domestic architecture and interiors for much of the latter half of the 18th century. Robert and James Adam travelled in Italy and Dalmatia in the 1750s, observing the ruins of the classical world. On their return to Britain, they set themselves up with their older brother, [[John Adam (architect)|John]], as architects. Robert and James published a book entitled ''The Works in Architecture'' in instalments between 1773 and 1779. This book of engraved designs made the ''Adam'' repertory available throughout Europe. The Adam brothers aimed to simplify the [[rococo]] and [[baroque]] styles which had been fashionable in the preceding decades, to bring what they felt to be a lighter and more elegant feel to Georgian houses. ''The Works in Architecture'' illustrated the main buildings the Adam brothers had worked on and crucially documented the interiors, furniture and fittings, designed by the Adams. A parallel development of this phase of neoclassical design is the French [[Louis XVI style]]. The Adam style moved away from the strict mathematical proportions previously found in Georgian rooms, and introduced curved walls and domes, decorated with elaborate plasterwork and striking mixed colour schemes using newly affordable paints in pea green, sky blue, lemon, lilac, bright pink, and red-brown terracotta. Artists such as [[Angelica Kauffman]] and [[Antonio Zucchi]] were employed to paint classical figurative scenes within cartouches set into the interior walls and ceilings. The Adam's main rivals were [[James Wyatt]], whose many designs for furniture were less known outside the wide circle of his patrons, because he never published a book of engravings; and Sir [[William Chambers (architect)|William Chambers]], who designed fewer furnishings for his interiors, preferring to work with such able cabinet-makers as [[John Linnell 18th C Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer|John Linnell]], [[Thomas Chippendale]], and [[Ince and Mayhew]]. So many able designers were working in this style in London from circa 1770 that the style is currently more usually termed ''Early Neoclassical''. [[Image:AdamOsterleyPark.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Robert Adam's design for the Etruscan Dressing Room, [[Osterley Park]], 1773β74; the painted ornaments on the walls and ceilings are the work of Pietro Maria Borgnis, working for Adam.]] It was typical of ''Adam style'' to combine decorative [[Gothic Revival|neo-Gothic]] details into the classical framework. So-called "Egyptian" and "Etruscan" design motifs were minor features. The ''Adam style'' is identified with: * Classical [[Roman architecture|Roman]] decorative motifs, such as framed medallions, vases, urns and tripods, [[Arabesque (European art)|arabesque]] vine scrolls, [[sphinx]]es, [[griffin]]s, and dancing nymphs * Flat grotesque panels * Pilasters * Painted ornaments, such as swags and ribbons * Complex pastel colour schemes The Adam style was superseded from around 1795 onwards by the simpler Regency style in Britain; and the French Empire style in France and Russia, which was a more imperial and self-consciously archeological style, connected with the [[First French Empire]].
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