A PAIR OF GEORGE II WALNUT SIDE CHAIRS

CIRCA 1735, POSSIBLY IRISH

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE II WALNUT SIDE CHAIRS
circa 1735, possibly irish
Each shaped back centering a scalloped shell cresting above a pierced foliate and reeded husk splat over a padded seat covered in floral cotton, the serpentine seatrail carved with foliate scrolls, on cabriole legs headed by foliage suspending an acorn, with hairy paw feet, one bearing a printed paper label 'DEPT OF WOODWORK/ON LOAN FROM C.D.ROTCH/NO.80/1917' and incised on the back rail 03657, minor variations in carving, re-supported, one with back foot tipped, the other with replaced shoe (2)
Provenance
C.D.Rotch, Esq., The Elms, Middlesex (one chair)
The Estate of Pauline S. Woolworth, sold Sotheby's New York, 21-22 April 1995, lot 128
Exhibited
London, Victoria and Albert Museum, 1917

Lot Essay

This pair forms part of a group which differs only in the details of the carving. Others from the group include: a set of seven chairs, one of which is illustrated in M.Harris & Son, A Catalogue and Index of Old Furniture and Works of Decorative Art, part II, n.d., p.159; a single example from the Fogg Art Museum and Busch-Reisinger Museum, Harvard University, sold Sotheby's New York, 16-17 October 1987, lot 186; and another pair sold Sotheby's New York, 25 April 1992, lot 489. A further example, also from the C.D.Rotch collection, is illustrated in H.Cescinsky, The Old-World House, 1924, p.72. Cescinsky illustrates another chair in his English Furniture of the Eighteenth Century, 1909, vol.I, p.85, fig.112 which may be the same chair that was advertised by Messrs Hampton and Sons of Pall Mall in The Connoisseur, February 1907, where they were seeking matching examples.

Mr. C.D.Rotch at the Elms, Teddington was a collector in the early part of this century who, like Percival D. Griffiths and William Randolph Hearst, was influenced by the furniture connoisseur and dealer R.W.Symonds. Following the prevailing tast of the time, the collection focused on early to mid-Georgian carved mahogany examples and was later gifted to the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (see R.W.Symonds, 'Mr. C.D.Rotch's Collection of Furniture', Country Life, 7 June 1924, pp.937-39).