Swedish Gustavian Glass Top
Vintage 1950s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
1990s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Pine
1990s Swedish Gustavian Cupboards
Pine
Early 20th Century Swedish Gustavian Tables
Glass, Wood
Vintage 1910s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Antique 1840s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Glass, Wood
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Glass, Wood
Antique Early 19th Century Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Pine
Antique Late 18th Century Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Pine, Glass
Vintage 1950s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Vintage 1930s Swedish Gustavian Cupboards
Wood
Vintage 1950s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Berlin Iron
Vintage 1970s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Antique 1860s Swedish Gustavian Corner Cupboards
Wood, Pine
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Maple
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cupboards
Pine
Vintage 1950s Swedish Gustavian Bookcases
Wood
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Bookcases
Pine
Vintage 1950s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Pine
Vintage 1930s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Pine
Vintage 1950s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Birch
Antique 1890s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Pine
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Antique Late 18th Century Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Glass, Wood
Vintage 1920s Swedish Gustavian Dressers
Wood
Vintage 1910s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Antique Early 19th Century Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Vintage 1950s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Vintage 1950s Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Wood
Vintage 1940s Swedish Gustavian Cabinets
Pine
Antique 1890s Swedish Country Bookcases
Pine
Swedish Gustavian Glass Top For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much is a Swedish Gustavian Glass Top?
A Close Look at Gustavian Furniture
With clean lines and muted colors, antique Gustavian furniture is understated and elegant. It represents a more restrained version of the transition from Rococo to neoclassicism that was happening in France under Louis XVI. The style developed under Swedish King Gustav III, who reigned from 1771 until his assassination in 1792, and his son Gustav IV, who ruled until 1809. Although Gustavian furniture is mostly used to refer to pale painted cabinets, commodes, armchairs and other items, it involved a range of influences.
Gustavian-style furniture was inspired by discoveries at Pompeii and Herculaneum as well as the grandeur of European palaces like Versailles, with local softwoods such as pine and birch. There was also an emphasis on natural light; crystal chandeliers and large mirrors played a role in radiating the fleeting daylight of winter, giving it a distinctive aesthetic.
Where earlier furniture was curvy and florid, this new era was more architectural, with tapered and fluted legs and rectangular and oval shapes. Luminous gilt contrasted with the palette of soft blues on upholstery and painted surfaces. Leading furniture builders included Gottlieb Iwersson, Louis Masreliez and Erik Öhrmark. The latter, a French-born Swedish decorator, designed the Sulla chair, a seat that was demonstrative of technical skill and precise craftsmanship and drew on Greek klismos chairs. Masreliez’s Sulla chair was made by Öhrmark and featured decorative ornamentation produced by Jean-Baptiste Masreliez, Louis’s younger brother.
While the wealthy had furniture carved with neoclassical details like scallops and rosettes, more affordable options were adorned with faux finishes that mimicked marble and stenciled patterns. The simple elegance of Gustavian furniture would have a long impact on Swedish design, informing the 20th-century appreciation for function and form. In the 1950s, IKEA mass-produced copies of a Gustavian commode designed by cabinetmaker Georg Haupt, who created pieces for the Royal Palace, making the furniture a fixture of everyday Swedish life.
Find a collection of antique Gustavian seating, tables, decorative objects and other furniture on 1stDibs.