A GEORGE I WALNUT WING ARMCHAIR
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A GEORGE I WALNUT WING ARMCHAIR

EARLY 18TH CENTURY

Details
A GEORGE I WALNUT WING ARMCHAIR
EARLY 18TH CENTURY
With padded back, wings, seat-cushion and cushion covered in associated gros and petit point needlework of blue and white vases, ewers, tea and coffee pots, on a red ground divided by foliage, the arms, front of seat and toprail border with later conforming needlework, on square cabriole legs joined by later turned stretchers, restorations and one front leg replaced
Provenance
Mrs Nancy Lancaster, Haseley Court, Oxfordshire, sold Christie's, London, 21 November 1974, lot 43.
Literature
C. Hussey, 'Haseley Court, Oxfordshire-II;, Country Life, 18 February 1960, p. 329, fig. 4 (shown in situ in the Entrance Hall). C. Jones, Colefax and Fowler, London, 1989, p. 28 (shown in situ in the Entrance Hall at Hasely) & p. 30.
R. Becker, Nancy Lancaster, Her Life, Her World, Her Art, New York, 1996, pp. 340, 343, 360.
Special notice
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 This lot is subject to Collection and Storage charges

Lot Essay

This chair is covered in 18th century needlework of blue and white porcelain. Delft vases, teapots, coffeepots and ewers are depicted within foliage frames, evoking Indian designs on the marble encrusted walls of Mogul palaces. Flasks and cups can be seen arranged in niches on the exterior red sandstone walls of the Kanch Mahal, Sikandra dating from the first quarter of the 17th century.
Similar needlework of blue and white pots on a red ground and within dividing compartments can be seen on a pair of George III chairs illustrated in L. Synge, Art of Embroidery, Woodbridge, 2001, p. 237, fig. 230. A pair of George II mahogany side chairs, also with similar needlework, was sold by Viscount Jocelyn, Christie's, London, 25 June 1987, lot 32.
THE PROVENANCE
This wing armchair formerly belonged to Nancy Lancaster (1897-1994). Born in Virginia, she had a huge influence on interior decoration in the 20th century, including the late John Fowler, and the style of decoration and furniture arranging that they developed together remains a strong force in English decorating. Kelmarsh Hall in Northamptonshire was her first major house in England, taken with her husband Ronald Tree for the hunting, while her last house was Haseley Court in Oxfordshire. This chair stood beside the chimneypiece in the Entrance Hall at Haseley and Nancy Lancaster covered it with needlework bought in London, the remainder of the needlework being used to cover a set of four side chairs used for playing Bridge.

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