Early History and Renaissance. Press-molded decoration
has been used with various soft plastic materials for centuries.
For example, it is known that medieval sculptors press-molded
organic mixtures to decorate painted sculptures. But because mixtures
based on organic binders such as glue, oil, resins, and waxes
are prone to various sorts of degradation, actual survivors are
rare.
The direct ancestors of the composition craft are most likely
found in the Italian Renaissance; however, composition mixtures
were not extensively used for architectural decoration during
this period, probably due to building traditions as well as relative
expense. It is worth nothing that this was an age of experimentation
with materials and rediscovery of Greek and Roman designs. Press
molded mixtures called pastiglias were used to decorate
wooden boxes and picture frames as early as the 14th century. Moldable
compositions were discussed by various Renaissance
writers. The recipes are extremely varied and include, among their
more common and understandable ingredients, gypsum, lead carbonate,
wood and marble dust, eggs, pigments, sheep's wool, and various
oils and resins.
The 18th Century. The first flowering of architectural
composition in America took place at the end of the 18th century
when ornaments were both imported from England and produced by
makers in every major eastern city. All of the conditions were
right: molding technologies were well established (architectural
papier mache, which, like composition, was produced in
molds, had gained widespread acceptance during the middle decades
of the century). The raw materials were produced or imported in
volume, so the cost of the composition ingredients came down as
the cost and availability of highly skilled labor went up. Economic
and social conditions favored centralized "manufactories"
in the production of various arts and crafts.
Design trends also fed into a favorable reception for composition.
A more faithful reinterpretation of Greek and Roman design eventually
termed "Neoclassical" had taken hold in Europe, championed
in England by the architect, Robert Adam, after his return from
study in Italy in 1758. Although Adam played no
direct role in the "invention" of composition ornament,
as has sometimes been said, he patronized English craftsmen who
were making it and was generally receptive to new and innovative
materials. One early maker, sometimes cited as the "inventor"
of composition by his contemporaries, was John Jaques. His name
appears in London advertising by 1785, but he was probably in
business before then.
As a result of Adam's influence, designers of applied ornament
in both Europe and America began to take advantage of a molding
process that was ideally suited to producing the detailed, but
repetitive, motifs of classical decoration--acanthus leaf, egg
and dart, festoons, swags, and paterae--as well as classical themes
depicting Greek and Roman gods and goddesses. And
as the Neoclassical style became more popular, composition ornament
makers increased in number.