Grand Tour Mirrors
For 18th-century young British noblemen, no education was complete without a year on the Grand Tour. Although it had no official route, the Grand Tour focused on places foundational to European art, literature and architecture, including sites in France, Germany, Switzerland and, most importantly, Italy. It was an opportunity not just to witness the roots of the classics they had studied but also to take some of it home. Grand Tour furniture was among the souvenirs.
Grand Tour furniture ranged from marble architectural models replicating ancient wonders to actual antiquities often taken illicitly, leaving a legacy of looting still being unraveled today. Other items reflected the artistic richness of the Renaissance cities and other destinations. In Italy, this included scagliola tables and pedestals mimicking marble as well as tabletops and wall panels embedded with pietra dura hard stone mosaics.
Furniture was also developed to display Grand Tour purchases in the owner’s home, presenting them as a cultivated and well-traveled person. Mahogany collector’s cabinets held objects like intaglio moldings of coins and seals while others had specialized drawers that framed pietra dura panels.
Many objects were specifically produced for Grand Tour collectors. Often accompanied by retinues on journeys lasting months or years, the elite travelers, the wealthiest of whom extended their trips to Egypt and the Holy Land, required artful personal mementos befitting the experience. For example, Grand Tour micromosaics — small artworks, most not more than two inches wide — arose from the entrepreneurial impulses of artisans who had trained in the Vatican’s workshops.
Grand Tour journeys would help inform a range of decorative styles such as neoclassical, Rococo and Adam style. (Architect and designer Robert Adam toured Italy and France for five years.) The Grand Tour flourished at a time of economic prosperity and political stability, but the French Revolution in 1789 brought it to an end. Yet as the tradition faded in popularity in England, the rising wealth of the United States led to an increase in tourism across the Atlantic and a similar passion for collecting to show one’s worldliness.
Find a collection of Grand Tour decorative objects, wall decorations, lighting and other furniture on 1stDibs.
Early 19th Century Italian Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Wood
20th Century Italian Grand Tour Mirrors
Wood, Mirror, Plaster
Mid-20th Century American Grand Tour Mirrors
Mirror, Wood
2010s English Grand Tour Mirrors
Wood, Gesso
Early 19th Century Italian Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Wood
Late 18th Century French Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Mercury Glass, Paint, Gesso, Wood, Giltwood
20th Century Grand Tour Mirrors
Mirror, Wood, Giltwood
Mid-19th Century French Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Gold Leaf
19th Century Italian Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Mirror
Early 19th Century Swedish Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Glass, Wood
Early 19th Century French Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Wood
Mid-20th Century American Grand Tour Mirrors
Brass
1870s French Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Wood
1960s American Vintage Grand Tour Mirrors
Nickel
20th Century French Grand Tour Mirrors
Wood
1920s Italian Vintage Grand Tour Mirrors
Gold
Mid-20th Century Grand Tour Mirrors
Giltwood
19th Century Italian Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Giltwood
19th Century Italian Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Giltwood
19th Century French Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Ormolu, Bronze
1850s Italian Antique Grand Tour Mirrors
Giltwood