A GEORGE III MAHOGANY ARMCHAIR
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY ARMCHAIR

ATTRIBUTED TO WRIGHT AND ELWICK, CIRCA 1770

Details
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY ARMCHAIR
Attributed to Wright and Elwick, circa 1770
The foliate-carved serpentine crest above a pierced shaped vasi-form splat, with foliate-carved outswept arms on reeded supports, above an overupholstered seat covered in cinnamon-and-lavender-striped silk, on straight molded legs, yellow chalk inscription 1602
Provenance
Anonymous sale, Sotheby's New York, 23 January 1988, lot 77 ($3,960).

Lot Essay

The distinctive design of the back is closely related to a set at Nostell Priory, Yorkshire attributed to the Wakefield firm of Wright and Elwick, who received commissions from many of the large Yorkshire houses including Nostell, Burton Constable and Wentworth Woodhouse. Another closely related set of twelve chairs were made for the hall at Kippax Park, Yorkshire and are illustrated in M. Harris, The English Chair, London, 1946, p.123, pl.LI. A further set with identical design to the back is illustrated in F.L. Hinckley, Masterpieces of Queen Anne and Georgian Furniture, New York, 1991, p.71, fig.102.

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