A SET OF NINE GEORGE II WALNUT DINING-CHAIRS
A SET OF NINE GEORGE II WALNUT DINING-CHAIRS
A SET OF NINE GEORGE II WALNUT DINING-CHAIRS
A SET OF NINE GEORGE II WALNUT DINING-CHAIRS
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THE PROPERTY OF A LADY REMOVED FROM SWINBROOK HOUSE (LOTS 95 - 106) THE GLENDON HALL DINING-CHAIRS
A SET OF NINE GEORGE II WALNUT DINING-CHAIRS

CIRCA 1745-50

Details
A SET OF NINE GEORGE II WALNUT DINING-CHAIRS
CIRCA 1745-50
Each with a paper-scroll acanthus carved toprail above a pierced splat divided by triple florets and a padded seat upholstered in braided Fortuny ivory cloth, the waved seat rail carved with a floral spray and foliage on foliate-headed cabriole legs with claw-and-ball feet; en suite with an additional chair of a later date
20¾ in. (101 cm.) high; 25½ in. (65 cm.) wide; 26 in. (66 cm.) deep (10)
Provenance
Probably supplied to Sir John Booth (d. 1782), Glendon House, Northamptonshire and thence by descent.
Christie's, 'Property of Mrs Vincent Gompertz, Glendon Hall, Northamptonshire', 23 April 1953, lot 84.
S.R. Newman Collection, New York.
Private Collection, New York.
Acquired from Hotspur, April 2009.
Literature
Country Life, 25 November 1922, pp. 680-681, illustrated in situ at Glendon House, Northamptonshire.

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Celia Harvey
Celia Harvey

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Lot Essay

This distinguished set of chairs with their bold backs and convex aprons came from Glendon Hall, Northamptonshire. Originally in the Lane family, Glendon came into the possession of Sir John Booth, a member of the Duke of Montagu's militia, sometime between 1720 and 1745. It is possible that his marriage to Phoebe Wilkinson, an heiress, enabled the acquisition of the property. The house remained in the Booth family through 1922, when it was featured in a Country Life article (J.A. Gotch, 'Glendon Hall, Northamptonshire, The Seat of Mrs. Richard Booth', 25 November 1922, pp. 676-681). Glendon contained a magnificent collection of fine art and works of art with many of the paintings including two Van Dycks, a Ter Borg and a Rembrandt coming from the Duke of Buckingham's collection ('Stowe House, Buckingham', Christie's, 15 August-30 September 1848). Two monumental garden statues representing Aene and Anchise and Abel and Cain came from Boughton House, Northamptonshire, seat of the Duke of Buccleuch. The present chairs are illustrated in the Gallery at Glendon. An additional photograph of a single chair is captioned 'Chippendale-type chair of remarkably fine workmanship'.

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