A CHIPPENDALE CARVED MAHOGANY EASY CHAIR
Property from a Private New Jersey Collection
A CHIPPENDALE CARVED MAHOGANY EASY CHAIR

BOSTON, 1760-1780

細節
A CHIPPENDALE CARVED MAHOGANY EASY CHAIR
BOSTON, 1760-1780
Retains its original under-upholstery
45 in. high, 35 in. wide, 25 in. deep
來源
Marion Fenno Bell
Ruth Williams Breed
Thence by descent in the family
Christie's New York, June 23, 1993, lot 213
A Private Collection
Christie's New York, October 14, 1999, lot 207

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拍品專文

Retaining its original underpinnings, this easy chair is a rare survival of the upholsterer's craft and documents its evolution in eighteenth-century America. The chair has a layer of grass placed upon the sackcloth over which resilient curled hair is lain. Earlier practices used grass exclusively for upholstery stuffing and the use of both grass and curled hair was favored after the mid-century. The stuffing is secured to the sackcloth with twine, still present on this chair. The final layer before the upholstery fabric was another piece of linen, often, as in this case, finer than the sackcloth (Morrison H. Heckscher, "18th-Century American Upholstery Techniques: Easy Chairs, Sofas, and Settees," Upholstery in America and Europe, Edward S. Cooke, ed. (New York, 1987), pp. 97-111).

The chair's triple-swelled medial stretcher is a variant of the more typical arrow-head stretchers and indicates the chair's Boston origins (Nancy Richards and Nancy Goyne Evans, New England Furniture at Winterthur: Queen Anne and Chippendale Periods (Winterthur, 1997), cats. 90, 25; Leigh Keno, Joan Barzilay Freund and Alan Miller, "'The Very Pink of the Mode': Boston Georgian Chairs, Their Export, and Their Influence," American Furniture 1996, Luke Beckerdite, ed. (Milwaukee, 1996), figs. 29, 30; Warren et al., American Decorative Arts and Paintings in the Bayou Bend Collection (Houston, 1998), cats. F81, F97, F99).