New Book | Ornamental Blackness
Coming this spring from Yale UP, with a brilliant preview by Dr. Childs now available in the latest issue of The Magazine of the Decorative Arts Trust (Winter 2024–25) . . .
Adrienne L. Childs, Ornamental Blackness: The Black Figure in European Decorative Arts (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2025), 208 pages, ISBN: 978-0300246094, $65.
Exploring the role the decorative arts played in the representation of Black people in European visual and material culture
This revelatory look at European decorative arts addresses the long-ignored implications of the depiction of Black bodies on luxury objects from the Baroque period through the nineteenth century. Adrienne L. Childs traces the complex history of the vogue for representing the Black body as an ornamental motif throughout spaces of wealth and refinement. Objects such as furniture, porcelain, clocks, silver, light fixtures, and more conveyed the taste for exoticism and portrayed the laboring Black body in the guise of décor. These objects also express larger ideas about the concept of race, romantic notions of distant lands, the harsh realities of slave labor in the colonies, the presence of Black servants in wealthy European households, and the culture of luxury consumption.
Ornamental Blackness demonstrates how seemingly benign decorative objects can embody the complexities of race, slavery, and representation. Childs examines the tensions inherent in the system of codes in which the Black body can be enslaved, reviled, feared, subjugated, and assaulted on one hand and a symbol of opulence on the other. In this important volume she establishes a framework for understanding the racialized aesthetics of luxury.
Adrienne L. Childs is an art historian and curator and is the Senior Consulting Curator at The Phillips Collection.
The Magazine of the Decorative Arts Trust, Winter 2024–25
The Decorative Arts Trust has shared select articles from the winter issue of their member magazine as webpages for all to enjoy. The following articles are related to the 18th century.
The Magazine of the Decorative Arts Trust, Winter 2024–25
• “Written in Stone” by Catherine Carlisle Link»
• “The Rivers Collection of Charleston Furniture at the Gibbes Museum of Art” by Matthew A. Thurlow Link»
• “Carved from the Sea: The Art and History of Nantucket’s Pictorial Scrimshaw” by Keely Edgington Link»
• “Diplomatic Reception Rooms Anchor D.C. Gathering” by Matthew A. Thurlow Link»
• “Figuring the Black Body in European Decorative Arts” by Adrienne L. Childs Link»
• “Colonial Architecture, Decorative Arts, and Enslavement at the Colonel John Ashley House” by Livy Scott Link»
• “Convergence at the Market: Vernacular Artisans and Literati in Late Imperial China” by Danielle Zhang Link»
The printed Magazine of the Decorative Arts Trust is mailed to Trust members twice per year. Memberships start at $50, with $25 memberships for students.
Magazine cover: Detail of an early-17th-century table top from Villa La Pietraia, on display at the Opificio delle Pietre Dure in Florence, Italy.
Decorative Arts Trust Announces 2025 Failey Grants

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Strawbery Banke Museum in Portsmouth, New Hampshire is an outdoor history museum that preserves a neighborhood’s evolution of over 350 years, with most of the historic houses on their original sites. The Penhallow House—built in 1750 and moved to its present location in 1862—is Strawberry Banke’s only remaining ‘saltbox’. It was recently given a new foundation with a wet-proof basement to counteract rising sea and groundwater levels. In the 20th century, Penhallow House contained three apartments and the daily lives of an extended African-American family. Strawbery Banke intends to interpret the 20th-century Black experience in Penhallow House: the story of Kenneth ‘Bunny’ Richardson, a 20th-century story of Black Portsmouth and Civil Rights.
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From the December press release, with additional information available here:

Formal dress (robe à la Française), 1765–70, French or Dutch, brocaded silk with knotted silk fringe and linen lining (Historic Deerfield, HD F.355).
The Decorative Arts Trust is pleased to announce the seven 2025 Dean F. Failey Grant recipients: the Birmingham Museum of Art in Birmingham, AL, for the Silver & Ceremony from Southern Asia, 1850–1910 exhibition; Historic Deerfield in Deerfield, MA, for the Body by Design: Fashionable Silhouettes exhibition; Honolulu Museum of Art in Honolulu, HI, for quilt conservation; the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia, PA, for flag conservation; Strawbery Banke Museum in Portsmouth, NH, for Penhallow House wallpaper; Telfair Museums in Savannah, GA, for The Moss Mystique: Southern Women and Newcomb Pottery exhibition; and Wyck in Philadelphia, PA, for a Chinese desk conservation.
The Failey Grant program provides support for noteworthy exhibition and object-based conservation projects through the Dean F. Failey Fund, named in honor of the Trust’s late Governor. Failey Grant applications are due October 31 annually.



















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