A GEORGE II MAHOGANY LIBRARY ARMCHAIR
A GEORGE II MAHOGANY LIBRARY ARMCHAIR

BY GILES GRENDEY, STAMPED TWICE WH, CIRCA 1747-50

Details
A GEORGE II MAHOGANY LIBRARY ARMCHAIR
By Giles Grendey, stamped twice WH, circa 1747-50
The rectangular padded back and gently-flared seat covered with a foliate coral silk damask, flanked by downcurved acanthus-sheathed armrest supports each headed by a flowerhead, on hipped cabriole legs headed by acanthus-wrapped flowerheads and pendant husks and with hairy paw feet and casters, the top of each rear leg stamped WH
Literature
F.L. Hinckley, Metropolitan Furniture of the Georgian Years, New York, 1988, p. 69, fig. 79 (an identical chair, possibly the same).

Lot Essay

This armchair can be firmly attributed to the workshop of cabinet-maker Giles Grendey (1693-1780), of St. Johns Square, Clerkenwell, London, based on virtually identical chairs that bear his workshop's label. This includes a suite with the same characteristic hipped cabriole legs, carved knees and but scrolled feet from Gunton Park, Norfolk (a side chair and armchair are illustrated in P. Macquoid, A History of English Furniture: The Age of Mahogany, London, 1906, vol.II, pp.122-123, figs. 104, 105 and in C. Gilbert, Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture 1700-1840, London, 1996, p. 243, fig.437).
Other chairs of virtually this exact model and featuring the same hairy paw feet includes: a library chair from the collection of Percival D. Griffiths, Esq. illustrated in H. Cescinsky, English Furniture of the Eighteenth Century, vol.II, New York, n..d., p.86, fig.32 (with apparently uncarved back legs), another in the collection of the Hon. SIr John H. Ward, K.C.V.O., illustrated in H. Cescinsky, 'The Collection of the Hon. Sir John H. Ward., K.C.V.O.', The Connoisseur, March 1921, p.142, no.V; and a pair sold anonymously, Sotheby's London, 15 November 1985, lots 43 and 44 (each £20,900).

The stamp 'WH' is probably for William House, employed by Grendey from April 14, 1747 (G. Beard and C. Gilbert, eds., Dictionary of English Furntiure Makers 1660-1840, 1986, pp. 371-372). A number of chairs from Grendey's workshop bear the stamp of his journeymen. The resemblance of such pieces to provenanced examples of Grendey's work has been convincingly used to attribute furniture to the master. A pair of side chairs of a known Grendey model also stamped 'WH' was sold in these Rooms, 9 October 1993, lot 354.

A settee with identically carved legs but scrolled toes is being sold as lot 18 in this sale.

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