A SET OF ELEVEN GEORGE III MAHOGANY DINING-CHAIRS
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A SET OF ELEVEN GEORGE III MAHOGANY DINING-CHAIRS

CIRCA 1790, ALMOST CERTAINLY DESIGNED BY HENRY HOLLAND AND EXECUTED BY FRANCOIS HERVE

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A SET OF ELEVEN GEORGE III MAHOGANY DINING-CHAIRS
CIRCA 1790, ALMOST CERTAINLY DESIGNED BY HENRY HOLLAND AND EXECUTED BY FRANCOIS HERVE
Each with padded back and seat covered in green-painted red close-nailed morocco leather, the channelled slightly breakfront toprail above a tapering back, the seat above a channelled rail with central rosette, on rosette-headed turned tapering fluted legs with full height stop-flutes and on pinched spade feet, previously caned, stamped with the '1861' inventory, with batten carrying-holes, inscribed in chalk 'H.RR', with ash blocks, several seats distressed, one with broken back and still with red morocco leather covering, another also still with red morocco cover and lacking one front leg (11)
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No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis

Lot Essay

These elegant chairs, with their Grecian-stepped crestings and hermed and reeded legs capped by 'Apollo' sunflowered patterae, are conceived in the late 1780s French 'cabriolet' manner; while their caned and originally squab-cushioned frames were intended for easy movement for card-playing etc.
With their block rosette-headed leg and stepped down seat-rail at the junction of the legs, these chairs firmly relate to the documented oeuvre of the Parisian-trained menuisier François Hervé of John Street, London. A partner of John Meschat, 'Cabinet and Chair maker', Hervé enjoyed the patronage of George, Prince of Wales and was employed at Carlton House between 1783-94 under Henry Holland's direction. In December 1791, the 5th Duke of Bedford paid Hervé (45 7s 7d for unspecified work by order of Henry Holland, and this almost certainly relates to this suite of seat-furniture and those of the same model, but white-painted (lot 149). The Holland/Hervé link is further underlined at Althorp, Northamptonshire, where Lady Spencer received an invoice on January 1791 from Hervé 'by order of Messrs Holland and Daguire'.
Holland's frustrations are revealed by a letter to the Duke on 12 January 1796:- 'On the articles of furniture, was anyone to examine the endless number of drawings I have made, and witness the trouble I have had, they would not envy me my charge on that account'.

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