A PAIR OF GEORGE II MAHOGANY ARMCHAIRS
THE PROPERTY OF A NEW YORK COLLECTOR
A PAIR OF GEORGE II MAHOGANY ARMCHAIRS

CIRCA 1755

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE II MAHOGANY ARMCHAIRS
Circa 1755
Each rectangular back and seat covered in gros and petit point floral needlework, the back panel centered by a cartouche depicting a blue-coated tradesman and an oriental gentleman, one with legend 'des....res/pour ecrire', flanked by downswept arms with rounded handholds and carved with acanthus and husks, on cabriole front and back legs headed by ruffled and foliate cartouches and with acanthus-carved claw-and-ball feet (2)
Provenance
The Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nipon, Gladwyne, Pennsylvania, sold Sotheby's New York, 21-22 April 1995, lot 127.

Lot Essay

These chairs are part of a larger suite of which further armchairs and stools have been identified. Another pair of armchairs (with companion needlework covering) formerly in the collection of President and Mrs. Ferdinand Marcos, was later sold from a Private Collection, Sotheby's New York, 18 October 1997, lot 379 ($261,000). A pair of matching stools of this pattern once formed part of the celebrated collection of Sir John Ramsden at Bulstrode Park, Buckinghamshire. The stools were included in the sale of his effects, sold Christie's London, 23 May 1932, lot 77 and were reoffered in these Rooms, 25-26 January 2000, lot 633. It is uncertain whether Sir John inherited Bulstrode, a Portland family home, however it is interesting that Chippendale is recorded working for the 3rd Duke of Portland at Burlington House in London in 1766. As such, it is tempting to introduce the possibility that the suite may have been an original commission for the family and produced in Chippendale's workshop.

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