A PAIR OF GEORGE II MAHOGANY SIDE CHAIRS
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A PAIR OF GEORGE II MAHOGANY SIDE CHAIRS

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE II MAHOGANY SIDE CHAIRS
Each with waved toprail centred by a shell issuing from scrolling acanthus above a pierced shaped splat centred by an acanthus spray within an entwined scroll flanked by acanthus sprays, between stop-fluted stiles, above a padded drop-in seat covered in associated 18th Century floral petit point needlework, above a seatrail centred by a shell issuing acanthus, on cabochon-headed cabriole legs and hairy paw feet, the seat-rails with incised numerals 'II' and 'VIIII', the seat-frames with incised numerals as follows: no. II incised 'XXIIII', no. VIIII incised 'XXIII', some resupporting to the blocks, one later block (2)
Provenance
Possibly supplied to Sir George Savile, 7th Bt. (d. 1743), Rufford Abbey, Nottinghamshire as a set of twenty-four and by descent at Rufford until some point in the 19th Century when the set of chairs was split
This pair was in the collection of
Sir Edward J. Dean Paul, Bt., sold in these Rooms, 10 March 1896, lot 810 [a set of six].
Leopold Hirsch, Esq., sold in these Rooms, 7 May 1934, lot 42 [a set of six].
Bought by the present owner's aunt from Mallett & Sons (Antiques) Ltd., May 1954 [a pair].

The remaining two pairs were also bought from Malletts.
One pair was bought by Noel Terry, Esq. and is now at Fairfax House, York.
One pair was bought by J. W. Taudevin, Esq. and was sold with the set of eight below.

A set of eight remained at Rufford until sold by George, 3rd Baron Savile (b. 1919), Christie's and Knight, Frank and Rutley house sale, 11 October 1938, lot 106 and later sold by
J. W. Taudevin, Esq., in these Rooms, 8 July 1993, lot 87 [as a set of ten] (£232,500 inc. premium).
Literature
LITERATURE FOR THE SET
'Rufford Abbey', Country Life, vol. XIV, 7 November 1903, pp. 650-654, where one chair from the set is visible in the Long Gallery
P. Brown, The Noel Terry Collection of Furniture and Clocks, 1987, no. 53
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

The elegantly serpentined parlour chairs, inspired by Ovid's Metamorphoses and celebrating the triumph of Venus and Bacchus, are enriched with Roman foliage in the George II 'picturesque' manner. Their stiles, comprised of antique-fluted and reed-enriched Corinthian pilasters, are conjoined with fretted ribbon splats by arched C-scrolls bearing foliate Venus-shell badges, that are echoed by shell cartouches displayed on the scrolled seat-rails. The festive 'vase' splats are flowered with acanthus quatrefoils within ribbon-twist guilloches that are framed by acanthus-enriched trusses; while the cabriole legs display antique and foliated pearl-cabochons and terminate in bacchic lion-paws.

The Roman pilasters reflect the influence of publications such as Isaac Ware's 1738 translation of Andrea Palladio's Four Books of Architecture; while the form and fretted ribbons reflect the French manner promoted by the publication of William de la Cour's First Book of Ornament, 1741. In particular this 'Modern' fashion was promoted by the 'Parlour Chair' patterns issued around 1751 in Matthias Darly's 'Second Book of Chairs' (E. White, Pictorial Dictionary of British 18th Century Furniture Design, Woodbridge 1990, pp. 60-61). Indeed most of the elements of these chairs feature in these patterns, which are likely to have been published in the same year as his 'New Book of Chinese, Gothic and Modern Chairs' 1751. Darly, a designer, engraver and publisher had premises in Northumberland Court, and he shared these with Thomas Chippendale (d. 1779), when Chippendale first moved to London from Yorkshire in the late 1740s. Darly also engraved many of the plates for Chippendales's Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director, 1754, and these chairs can be seen as a prototype for Chippendale's popular 'ribband' back chairs.

The chairs' quality relates to that of the celebrated St. Giles's dining-chairs, which were supplied for a room designed by the architect Henry Flitcroft (d. 1767) and have been attributed to William Hallett (d. 1781) (Sale Catalogue, Important English Furniture, Christie's London, 8 July 1999, lot 40). The form of the armchair also relates to that of an armchair dating from the 1740s, and likely to have been supplied for Gunton Park, Norfolk by Giles Grendey (C. Gilbert, The Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture 1700-1840, Leeds, 1996, p. 243, fig. 437).

The incision on the seat rails indicates that the set numbered as many as twenty-four chairs. Of the remaining set, six have needlework-covered seat frames. One pair was sold [as part of a set of ten] by J. W. Taudevin, Esq., in these Rooms, 8 July 1993, lot 87 (£232,500 inc. premium). Another pair is in the Noel Terry Collection, Fairfax House, York (P. Brown, The Noel Terry Collection of Furniture and Clocks, 1987, no. 53). All six needlework-covered chairs from the set were purchased from Mallets.

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