What does it mean to “furnish”? Today, the word tends to conjure up a more utilitarian meaning than decorate or ornament, while still implying a level of comfort or aesthetics above bare subsistence. This middle ground is rooted in the etymology of the word, which beginning in the sixteenth century meant to provide what is “necessary, useful, or desirable.” The multivalent meaning of furnish—or furnishing—applies well to textiles, which depending on their specific uses, also may be classed as necessities, comforts, or luxuries. In particular, as a category of textiles, furnishing fabrics embody the range of “necessary, useful, or desirable” in both their material and aesthetic attributes. On the one hand, the material properties of furnishing fabrics can demarcate space, provide warmth, reflect or shade from light, and generally protect the human body; on the other hand, their design characteristics convey personal status, cultural mores, trade relationships, and contemporary ideals of taste and beauty. Although furnishing fabrics are destined to be used in conjunction with other forms of the decorative arts—for example, as the outermost covering of upholstered furniture that mediates between the frame and the human body or the draping on walls and windows that harmonizes with ornamental plaster or woodwork—they are also artifacts in their own right.

Histories of furnishing fabrics—their production, categorization, and use—are often folded into other topics (history of upholstery, history of interior decorating, history of printed textiles, etc) but are not often studied in their own right. As a result of the ongoing exploration of a significant corpus of furnishing fabrics in the Helen Louise Allen Textile Collection, part of the Center for Design and Material Culture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, we seek to bring together scholarship that defines and analyzes this category of textiles.

The outcome of this project will include at least one publication, and some form of active conversation (whether an in-person symposium, an online workshop, or some hybrid format) among participants; the themes of the collective scholarship will also inform a future exhibition.