THE PROPERTY OF A LADY
TEN MAHOGANY DINING-CHAIRS,

COMPRISING A PAIR OF GEORGE III ARMCHAIRS, A SET OF SIX GEORGE III CHAIRS, AND A PAIR OF CHAIRS OF LATER DATE EN SUITE

Details
TEN MAHOGANY DINING-CHAIRS,
COMPRISING A PAIR OF GEORGE III ARMCHAIRS, A SET OF SIX GEORGE III CHAIRS, AND A PAIR OF CHAIRS OF LATER DATE EN SUITE
Each chair with a rectangular pierced back with a C-scroll and serpentine acanthus-wrapped toprail, above a central trellis splat, flanked by acanthus and C-scrolls, above a padded rectangular seat covered in close-nailed orange material, on square chamfered channelled legs, joined by an H-shaped stretcher, the armchairs each with a shaped C-scroll toprail above a pierced rectangular trellis-work back with trellis-work arms, above a conforming seat, on square chamfered legs headed by pierced angle-brackets, restorations, some angle-brackets replaced, three seat-rails replaced (10)
Provenance
The single chairs: Hazelbury Manor, Box, Wiltshire, probably G.J. Kidston Esq. who purchased and restored the house in 1919.
Literature
Country Life, 5 November 1959, p. 20 (Trade advertisement, Charles Hammond Ltd.).

Lot Essay

The railed chair-back with trellis-lozenged fret between acanthus-enriched pilasters relates to a pattern for 'Ladies Dressing Chairs' issued in Robert Manwaring's The Cabinet-Maker's Guide, London, 1766 (pl. 30). Their entwined ribbon-scrolls issuing from pagoda-scrolled acanthus features on a related chair from the collection of Lord Doverdale (d.1949) illustrated in P. Macquoid and R. Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture, London, rev. ed., 1954, vol. I, p. 284, fig. 184. The chair was one from a set of four sold by Mrs. Derek Fitzgerald, removed from Heathfield Park, Sussex, Sotheby's London, 5 July 1963, lot 135, and again anonymously, Sotheby's London, 4 June 1976, lot 70. A simplified version of the backs, features on a pair of chairs sold from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Warner, Christie's New York, 12 October 1990, lot 166.

The set of six chairs in this lot, was formerly at Hazelbury Manor, Wiltshire and may have been introduced to the house following its purchase and restoration by Mr. Kidston in 1919. The house is illustrated in H. Avray Tipping, English Homes, Periods I & II, Mediaeval & Early Tudor 1066-1558, vol. II, London, 1937, pp. 91-104.

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