TWO CHINESE EXPORT BAMBOO BERGERES

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TWO CHINESE EXPORT BAMBOO BERGERES
LATE 18TH EARLY 19TH CENTURY

Each with arched curved back and sides filled Chinese pailing, with cane seat above a fret-filled apron and on turned legs joined by box stretchers, with blue material-covered squab cushion, one seat replaced, one reduced in height, variations (2)

Lot Essay

These chair frames, with arched supports, correspond to one illustrated by the architect William Chambers in Designs of Chinese Buildings, 1757, pl. XIII, as being suitable for Chinese garden buildings. However their bergere form and fan-pattern tablets relate to chair patterns published in the 1790s by A. Hepplewhite & Co. and Thomas Sheraton. The same pattern chairs, with more decorative seat-rails, appear to have formed part of the exotic furnishings introduced to the chinoiserie Royal Pavilion, Brighton, created by the architect Henry Holland (d. 1806) about 1801 for George, Prince of Wales, later King George IV. (See C. Musgrave, Regency Furniture, London, 1961, pl. 24a.)

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