A PAIR OF GEORGE III GILTWOOD OPEN ARMCHAIRS

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE III GILTWOOD OPEN ARMCHAIRS
ATTRIBUTED TO JOHN LINNELL

Each with hollowed oval removable (à chassis) padded back, arm-rests and serpentine drop-in seat covered in celadon silk, the channelled frame carved with guilloche and surmounted by a laurel-bound cabochon cartouche, the out-scrolled arms terminating in acanthus spheres and issuing husk-trailed panels above Greek-key fret, the serpentine channelled seat-rail carved in the round with entrelac and centred by a further acanthus-bound foliate cartouche, on chamferred tapering herm legs inset with guilloche panels and on pinched feet, refreshments to gilding, the reverse of the oval padded back probably originally with an X-shaped support
24¼in. (61cm.) wide; 37½in. (95.5cm.) high; 24½in. (62cm.) deep (2)
Provenance
Anonymous sale in these Rooms, 7 July 1988, lot 141

Lot Essay

These 'cabriolet' chairs with acanthus-supported medallion backs, upholstered with loose frames à chassis were designed by John Linnell (d. 1796) in the French antique style of the early 1770s. With their imbricated-paterae embellishing the hermed front legs, Grecian-scrolled arms with acanthus-wrapped cabochons and laurel-wreathed cabochon toprails, their design is directly inspired by a prototype French chair-pattern executed by the menuisier Jean-Baptiste Boulard (maître in 1755) (illustrated in M. Jarry, La Siège Français, Fribourg 1973, p. 203, figs. 195-6). Linnell's watercolour chair-pattern (Victoria & Albert, no. E82-1929), is also accompanied by an enlarged detail of the acanthus-wrapped cabochon, which is tied to the seat-rail with its pearled ribbon-guilloche (P. Ward-Jackson, English Furniture Designs of the Eighteenth Century, London, 1958, fig. 241).

John Linnell, who helped furnish a number of houses under the direction of the architect Robert Adam (d. 1792), had studied French ornament at the St. Martin's Lane art-school before inheriting his father's cabinet-making and upholstery workshops in Berkeley Square. A nunmber of his chair-patterns demonstrate an interest in French furniture and particularly the influence of the Parisian architect Jean-Charles Delafosse's Recueil de Meubles, 1768 (H. Hayward, 'The Drawings of John Linnell' , Furniture History Society Journal, 1969, fig. 16).

Amongst the Linnell archive are two related settee patterns designed en suite with medallioned mirrors, which may have formed part of the furnishings of Robert Adam's interiors at Wimbledon House, Surrey, for which Linnell received payments amounting to #1,400 from Sir Robert Cunliffe (d. 1778) in the early 1770s (H. Hayward, 'William and John Linnell', London, 1980, figs. 30 and 28). A closely related suite of seat furniture, supplied around 1775 to John, 5th Duke of Argyll for Inverary Castle, Scotland and upholstered with floral Gobelins tapestry, was amongst the furniture that drove James Maxwell to write in 1777

'To describe the furniture, so grand, I must confess is far above me hand. The organs, instruments, and golden chairs, can never fully be describ'd...' (H. Hayward, op. cit., figs. 89, 256 and 257, p. 126). Amongst other armchairs of this pattern are six at Harewood House, Yorkshire (Hayward, op. cit., fig. 88) and a set of six armchairs sold anonymously at Sotheby's, 6 July 1962, lot 1290

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