A GEORGE III CARVED MAHOGANY OPEN ARMCHAIR
A GEORGE III CARVED MAHOGANY OPEN ARMCHAIR
A GEORGE III CARVED MAHOGANY OPEN ARMCHAIR
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION, CHESTER SQUARE, LONDON (LOTS 584 - 613)
A GEORGE III CARVED MAHOGANY OPEN ARMCHAIR

CIRCA 1760

Details
A GEORGE III CARVED MAHOGANY OPEN ARMCHAIR
CIRCA 1760
The rectangular padded back, arms and serpentine seat upholstered in floral gros-point needlework, the acanthus and shell-carved frame on foliate-cabriole legs terminating in scrolled feet
39 in. (99 cm.) high; 26 ¼ in. (66.5 cm.) wide; 29 ½ in. (75 cm.) deep
Provenance
With Partridge, London, 1982.
Private collection.
Anonymous sale, Christie's, London, 29 November 2001, lot 75.
Acquired from Mallett, London.
Literature
Mallett 2002, yearbook, p. 38.

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Carys Bingham
Carys Bingham

Lot Essay

This richly carved chair has its serpentined frame embellished with Roman acanthus foliage and scalloped C-scrolls in the French rocaille fashion. First popularised as the 'Modern' style in Thomas Chippendale's The Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director, 1754, its form derives from the Louis XV `fauteuil' of the 1730s as featured in the engraved Oeuvres of Juste-Aurele Meissonnier (M. Jarry, Le Siège Français, Fribourg, 1973, D.27). Sculpted with cartouches of shells recalling the triumph of the Roman goddess Venus, the chair corresponds to Chippendale's 'French chairs', and in particular to plate XXII in the third edition of his Director (1763), the accompanying text stating `both the Backs and the Seats must be covered with Tapestry, or other sort of needlework'.
A related chair of this model, with similar carved details, is in the Victoria and Albert Museum, (W.67-1926) from the collection of G.B. Croft Lyons. An almost identical chair was sold Christie’s, London, 5 July 1990, lot 45 (£17,000 including premium), and another sold Christie’s, London, 3 July 1997, lot 88 (£38,000 including premium).




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