Went with sister to the M Inst. of Art (Mia) yesterday, inspired by Mia's book-themed art tours, to look for a chifforobe as mentioned in To Kill a Mockingbird (TKM).
There were none, as such!
Lots of floor chests and some standing wardrobes with shelves--makes me think people folded clothes more than hung them? Also of course didn't own as many clothes as we do.
The closest to a chifforobe was a pair of early-1700s (Ming dynasty) Chinese wardrobes with hat boxes on top. A sign noted clothes were folded and laid flat in it.
Here I am, fuzzy, in front of them--wearing a mask because I'm still coughing.
(I called the nurse line this morning--probably need antibiotics--have a doctor's appt on Monday morning--soonest available.)
I was feeling perky though, so sister and I wandered through the paintings as well as furniture. She was looking for 2D representations of possible chifferobes; I was scanning for anything that reminded me of TKM, which I'd finished the night before.
BELOW: This one jumped out at me from across the room: "It's Dill!"
Dill, center in cap, in Florence, 1961, having blown the popcorn stand of small town Alabama. He was nine in 1935 at the end of the book--so here, painted in a cap by Mimi Gross, he'd be 35. (more info from Mia)
BELOW: Meanwhile Scout has moved to NYC (as she does in Go Set a Watchman--and Harper Lee did in real life)--painted here, looking tense, by Alice Neel, 1958.
BELOW: From the same time period as the two above, here, I imagine, is the youngest of Tom Robinson's three children, grown—“Frankie", painted by Joe Solman. [more info from Mia]
BELOW: "I pick for Link Deas", Tom Robinson says on the witness stand--meaning his job during harvestime is picking cotton.
As painted by Clementine Hunter in 1950s Louisiana, "Picking Cotton" still looks like slave days. [more from MIA]
Cotton is mechanically harvested today.
BELOW: Detail from Atticus's Office.
This office set up at Mia is from 1954, so 19 years after TKM, but has the right feel, I think.
This, above, is actually part of a wonderful fiction--a made-up "period room" (with real vintage objects though), with a whole backstory about a mysterious curator who disappeared in 1954 and his supposed office was sealed over...
Very Meow Wolf.
More here--Mark Dion's "Curators Office"
BELOW: Scout's brother Jem has a box where he keeps the toys they find in a hollow tree outside Boo Radley's house.
This toy box of Noah's animals, though it's Victorian, a box of treasures feels perennial.
The detail here is in the corner of Millais's large painting "Peace Concluded" (1856). {more at mia}
The little girl holds a dove (not visible here), and there's another painted on the lid of the ark.
Is that a mockingbird remaining in the box?

BELOW: The final act of TKM happens on Halloween night, 1935--Scout is trapped in the ham costume she wore for an pageant of local products.
Here I am with sister in front of "Halloween", painted by Clara Gardner Mairs, c. 1920. At Mia: collections.artsmia.org/art/17128/halloween-clara-gardner-mairs)