An amazing dining room of noble people at Hillwood Museum
The dining room was designed with furnishings from a variety of times and places to achieve a grand appearance. The French early eighteenth-century oak paneling, featuring rococo motifs such as billowing scrolls and graceful long-tailed birds, sets a lively tone for the room. Four large Dutch paintings of hunting scenes on the walls add a stately touch, and a nineteenth-century Aubusson carpet, a gift from Napoleon III to Emperor Maximillian of Mexico, graces the floor. A pair of stunning Empire Style lapis lazuli and gilt bronze candelabra, an eightieth birthday gift to Post, frame the fireplace and add to the luxurious atmosphere.
The crown jewel of the room is the table. This magnificent piece, with a mosaic top containing eleven different stones, sat up to thirty guests. Commissioned in 1927 from the most celebrated hardstone workshop in Florence—the Opificio delle Pietre Dure—the table was originally designed for Mar-A-Lago, the lavish Palm Beach estate Post built with her second husband, E.F. Hutton in 1927. A provision in her will called for its move to Hillwood following her death.
Description credits to Hillwood Museum
