This extravagant style included layered, formal, highly decorated interiors that included such elements as bronze sculptures; intricate tapestries; sculpted wood mirrors, moldings, and paneling; elaborately painted ceilings; crystal chandeliers; and gilded everything.
History of Baroque-Style Design
The Baroque movement started in Italy around 1600. It then spread to France, throughout Europe, and around the globe. Baroque was the first visual style to have a significant worldwide impact. Baroque-style interior design is part of the larger Baroque visual arts movement that spanned architecture, art, furniture design, objects, and more, with interior design, architecture, and art working together to create a cohesive visual statement. Baroque style was an aesthetic exercise and a sensory demonstration of power—such as the highly decorative churches and cathedrals that the Catholic Church in Italy constructed to increase its dominance. In France, Louis XIV used a variation of Baroque style mixed with French Classicism as a kind of power branding for the monarchy. His interior designer Charles Le Brun took cues from the Sun King’s taste for all things gilded and desire to showcase his enormous power, resulting in the Château de Versailles, a monument to Baroque style that still shines today. While Baroque style first emerged in Italy, it culminated in Rococo, (otherwise known as Late Baroque, or rocaille style) that developed in 18th-century Paris. Rococo’s ornate, over-the-top style was as a rebuke to the strict confines of French Baroque architecture and King Louis XIV’s strict ideas about what constituted art. Baroque fell out of fashion in the mid 18th century, but appreciation for the style was revived in the 19th century. In the 20th century, acclaimed interior designer Dorothy Draper invented a popular style known as Modern Baroque, which was a bold take on the classics that used elements of bling, bright colors, and an updated take on Rococo detailing that became popularly known as Hollywood Regency. In the 21st century, contemporary Baroque mini revivals with nicknames such as Modern Romantic continue to come and go, even if today only the most eccentric contemporary interiors would feature full-on Baroque style.
Key Characteristics of Baroque-Style Design
Baroque style is lavish, sumptuous, highly ornamental, and theatrical, with a flair for the dramatic and an undeniable sense of grandeurThis aesthetic style was designed to appeal to the senses in order to provoke a heightened emotional responseThe overall style is characterized by its unapologetic use of bling, from sparkling crystal chandeliers to elaborately carved mirrors, to monumental furniture and decor pieces, to gilded finishes on everything from furniture to objects to wallsFrench Baroque style may look like a riot of details and decorative elements, but it distinguishes itself with an underlying focus on symmetry and elegance informed by French Classicism
Use of refined materials and techniques such as porcelain, lacquer, and wood marquetryBaroque interiors often feature spectacular painted ceilings that are often meant to create a trompe l’oeil effect of being open to the skyUse of carved moldings and ornamental details such as stylized natural motifs such as leaves, flowers, cherubs, human, and animal figuresShapes and forms are often curved and spiraled to create a sense of movement, such as scrolls of foliage
Modern Baroque Decorating Tips
Baroque style may seem out of step with modern decor, but it remains an influence for contemporary interior designers and home decorators alike, who often embrace a Baroque minimalist approach to incorporating the interior design style. When incorporating Baroque-style elements into a modern decor scheme, a little bit goes a long way. A gilded Baroque-style Italian or French mirror or bed frame can provide a focal point in an otherwise modern room with neutral finishes and decor, or work as part of a more eclectic design scheme. To inject some Baroque style into a modern room, incorporate contemporary pieces that are a playful riff on Baroque style. The best-selling Bourgie lamp designed for Kartell by Italian designer Ferruccio Laviani in 1994 is made from transparent polycarbonate, modeled after an antique lamp that the designer had on his desk. This ultra-contemporary reimagining of Baroque style traverses time and space and is surprisingly versatile. For a more traditional take, choose Rococo-style furniture such as curvy velvet upholstered armchairs, slipper chairs, and skirted sofas.