There is one other image of this object. This image is in the public domain (free of copyright restrictions), and as such we offer a high-resolution image of it. See our image rights statement.

 

See more objects with the color darkolivegreen grey darkkhaki darkolivegreen silver or see all the colors for this object.

Object Timeline

2011

2012

2013

2025

  • You found it!

Drawing, Design for a Moorish Smoking Room [Tabagie]

This is a Drawing. It was created by Léon Feuchère. It is dated ca. 1844 and we acquired it in 2012. Its medium is brush and watercolor, gouache, graphite on wove paper. It is a part of the Drawings, Prints, and Graphic Design department.

Design for a Smoking Room

In honor of the opening of Romantic Interiors, 19th Century Watercolor Interiors from the Thaw Collection at the Beijing World Art Museum on December 12, 2013 in China, Cooper-Hewitt is featuring one of the most recent gifts from Eugene and Clare Thaw to the Museum. Design for a Smoking Room by French architect and set designer Léon Feuchère (1804-1857), a recent addition to the Thaw Collection, is a relatively early example from nineteenth-century European vogue for themed domestic interiors. The scene shows an octagonal space whose walls and domed ceiling display pseudo or tromp l’oeil Moorish filigree plasterwork with arched openings presumably on four sides. The central arch leads to a receding colonnade while lateral arched niches display two large urns of Western neoclassical form with exotic painted decoration. Beneath the side niches are Turkish-style settees covered with French mid-nineteenth century fabric. A large neo-gothic pipe stand occupies the center of the kiosk and an octagonal table sits to the right. Barely noticeable amidst the room's richly patterned surfaces and furnishings is a man reclining on a central ottoman smoking a hooka, attended by a male servant to his left.

Feuchère must have thought highly of his design as he incorporated an engraving after it in his publication, L'art industriel. Recueil de dispositions et de décorations intérieurs, comprenant des modèles pour toutes les industries d'ameublement et de luxe.. Plate 68, Tabagie. Intending this book to be a source for decorators as well as artisans, the designer organized the illustrations around a fictitious country house of H-shaped plan with rooms and furnishings decorated in different styles, including all the Louis, Byzantine, Islamic, and Chinese. The Moorish Smoking Room is proposed as one of the ground floor pavilions; the Petit Salon, a composite of Henri IV/Louis XIII and Louis XIV, is in the opposite pavilion; the Grand Escalier is in the Louis XIV style; while the Salon de Spectacle was to be in Louis XV. One wonders if publications such as this, with examples of themed interiors, might have sparked the concept of individually themed interiors within the same house, a fashion that only came to fruition in the last decades of the nineteenth century.

This object was featured in our Object of the Week series in a post titled Design for a Smoking Room.

It is credited Thaw Collection.

  • Square (Egypt)
  • warp: s-spun linen; wefts: s-spun linen, s-spun wool.
  • Gift of John Pierpont Morgan.
  • 1902-1-116

Our curators have highlighted 6 objects that are related to this one. Here are three of them, selected at random:

  • Textile (Spain)
  • silk, metallic (gilded parchment wound around linen core).
  • Gift of John Pierpont Morgan.
  • 1902-1-251

Its dimensions are

32.3 × 23.1 cm (12 11/16 × 9 1/8 in.) (Mat): 45.7 × 35.6 cm (18 × 14 in.)

It is signed

Signed in pen and brown ink, lower margin, right: L. Feuchère

Cite this object as

Drawing, Design for a Moorish Smoking Room [Tabagie]; Léon Feuchère (French, 1804 - 1857); France; brush and watercolor, gouache, graphite on wove paper; 32.3 × 23.1 cm (12 11/16 × 9 1/8 in.) (Mat): 45.7 × 35.6 cm (18 × 14 in.); Thaw Collection; 2012-5-2

This image is in the public domain (free of copyright restrictions). You can copy, modify, and distribute this work without contacting the Smithsonian. For more information, visit the Smithsonian’s Terms of Use page.

If you would like to cite this object in a Wikipedia article please use the following template:

<ref name=CH>{{cite web |url=https://www-4.collection.cooperhewitt.org/objects/18794671/ |title=Drawing, Design for a Moorish Smoking Room [Tabagie] |author=Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum |accessdate=5 February 2025 |publisher=Smithsonian Institution}}</ref>