Lot Essay
The commemorative chair from Rydal Mount, Kendal is labelled as having been introduced by the poet William Wordsworth (d.1850) following his acquisition of the house in 1813. It evolved from the George II writing chair, and with its bowed back, pillar-supported arms and antique-fluted splats its form relates to that of a chair described in the 1780s as a Smoking Chair (see L. Boynton, Gillow Furniture Designs 1760-1800; Royston, 1995, fig. 244). The interest in such commemorative poet's chairs was fostered by Luke Fildes' drawing of Charles Dickens' 'Empty Chair' published in The Graphic, 1870, and by George Godwin's collection of Suggestive Chairs illustrated in The Builder in 1878 (see C. Graham, Ceremonial and Commemorative Chairs, 1994, pp.89 and 91).