A PAIR OF REGENCY WHITE-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT SOFAS
A PAIR OF REGENCY WHITE-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT SOFAS

Details
A PAIR OF REGENCY WHITE-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT SOFAS
Each with scrolled padded back, squab cushion, two bolster cushions and four square cushions covered in red and gold silk damask, with channelled and caned arms above a panelled seat-rail, on ring-turned and tapering fluted legs with brass caps and later castors, redecorated, the underside with batton-carrying holes, the crossbearers replaced, restorations to the seat-rails, one with later back middle legs, the other incised 'II'
35 in. (89 cm.) high; 94 in. (239.5 cm.) wide; 31 in. (79 cm.) deep (2)
Provenance
Almost certainly supplied to William, 4th Earl Fitzwilliam (d.1833) for Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire.
Literature
H. Avray Tipping, 'Wentworth Woodhouse -I', Country Life, 1924, p. 410, fig. 12.
Sale room notice
These sofas are 36 in. (92 cm.) deep.

Lot Essay

These settees formed part of a suite of seat-furniture that is likely to have been comissioned around 1800 for Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire, by William, 4th Earl Fitzwilliam (d.1833), who inherited the estate in 1782.
A settee and a chair en suite are illustrated in situ in Country Life, loc. cit.. The form of the chair, with scrolled back and forward scrolling front legs enriched with reeds and antique flutes relates to patterns for drawing room chairs published in Thomas Sheraton's Cabinet Dictionary, 1803. A caned chair, of a similar form and with tablet-enriched rails, forming part of a suite formerly at Brabourne Manor, Kent, bears the stamp of the cabinet-maker B. Harmer, who was working in London around 1800 (C. Gilbert and G. Beard, eds., The Dictionary of English Furniture Makers, Leeds, 1986, p. 33 and fig. 478)

More from Important English Furniture inc.The Mermaid House Collection

View All
View All