A DUTCH COLONIAL TEAK 'BURGOMASTER' CHAIR*
This lot is exempt from Sales Tax. COLONIAL AND EXPORT FURNITURE (LOTS 44-55) PROPERTY FROM THE LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART, SOLD TO BENEFIT THE ACQUISITIONS FUND (Lots 42-44) * These lots may be exempt from sales tax as set forth in the sales tax notice in the back of the catalogue.
A DUTCH COLONIAL TEAK 'BURGOMASTER' CHAIR*

CEYLONESE OR INDONESIAN, SECOND HALF 18TH CENTURY

Details
A DUTCH COLONIAL TEAK 'BURGOMASTER' CHAIR*
CEYLONESE OR INDONESIAN, SECOND HALF 18TH CENTURY
The U-form crestrail and arms on baluster-turned supports with figural head finials, the scrolling and floral vine pierced medallion splat above a circular caned seat with molded edge and plain apron, on six acanthus-headed cabriole legs joined by shaped gadrooned rails and ball-turned stretchers, on paw feet, with black-painted accession number A.5832.50-117 and with typed paper label with same accession number, also with a further accession label 50.4.2 and a third label inscribed Dawson
Special notice
This lot is exempt from Sales Tax.

Lot Essay

'Burgomaster' or 'roundabout' chairs appear first to have been made in the former Dutch colonies of Indonesia, Sri Lanka and India in the late-seventeenth century and are distinguishable by their semi-circular back, round caned seat and six legs joined by radiating stretchers. These chairs were exported chiefly to Holland and then sold in England and other European countries where, probably because of their Dutch origins, they became known from the mid-nineteenth century onwards as 'burgomaster' chairs. Made of native woods, Indonesian examples were typically constructed of teak and were commonly decorated in scarlet lacquer while Sri Lankan models were often made of satinwood (see chairs of virtually identical form in J.Veenendaal, Furniture from Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and India during the Dutch Period, Delft, 1985, pl.128 and 129). As early as the eighteenth century, Dutch cabinetmakers produced copies of this popular form in oak and walnut.

Burgomeister chairs appear in the collections of many of England's great country houses including Grimsthorpe, Lincolnshire (an example is shown in the Entrance Hall in C. Latham, In English Homes, vol.I, London, 1909, p.59), Kingston Lacy, Dorset (illustrated op.cit, p.341), and Lyme Park, Cheshire (P.Macquoid and R. Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture, vol.I, London, 1924, p.229, fig.75). Other examples of this form are illustrated in P. Macquoid, The Age of Mahogany, London, 1906, p.61, figs.49 and 50.

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