Dressing Table Mirror
Edward F. Caldwell & Co. was one of America’s most prominent lighting and furnishing firms in the early twentieth century. They played a leading role in the transition from designing lights for gas, oil, or candle flames to electricity. For their clientele, which included many of the wealthiest individuals and institutions in America, they offered an extensive catalog of thousands of designs for chandeliers, wall sconces, and table and floor lamps, in styles ranging from medieval revival to the cutting edge of Art Deco modernism.
George Booth contracted with Caldwell & Co. in 1908 to supply the vast majority of the lighting fixtures and free-standing lamps for his new home, Cranbrook House. In 1908 and later, the Booths also purchased furniture and decorative art items from the firm’s extensive stock of historical revival furnishings. This baroque side table, purchased in 1918, is richly carved on the faces of each of its three legs with masks, floral festoons, and small figures. The Booths placed the table in their magnificent new library, added to the house in 1919.
Mariam Hale
2023-2025 Collections Fellow
Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
March 2024
Width: 39 3/4 in (101 cm)
Depth: 3 3/4 in (9.5 cm)
Credit LineCollection Cranbrook Art Museum
Medium / MaterialsCast and silver-plated brass with nickel silver back
GenreObject TypeDressing glasses; Mirrors