A GEORGE I WALNUT AND NEEDLEWORK STOOL
A GEORGE I WALNUT AND NEEDLEWORK STOOL

CIRCA 1715

Details
A GEORGE I WALNUT AND NEEDLEWORK STOOL
CIRCA 1715
The rectangular seat covered with petit-point needlework woven in polychrome wool depicting a ribbon-tied pink carnation surrounded by foliage, on cabriole legs and square pad feet, two ears replaced
16 in. (41 cm.) high; 20½ in. (52 cm.) wide; 15½ in. (39.5 cm.) deep
Provenance
The Moller Collection, sold Sotheby's London, 28 May 1982, lot 82.

Brought to you by

Amelia Elborne
Amelia Elborne

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Lot Essay

RALPH MOLLER

This delicate stool - in wonderfully pure condition - formed part of the collection of Ralph Moller. Born in Shanghai to a Scandinavian ship-owning family that had settled in the Far East in the 19th century, Ralph Moller moved to England following the Japanese invasion of Hong Kong in 1941. Like his brother Eric, Ralph Moller formed his superb collection of furniture at White Lodge, near Newmarket, under the almost mythical guidance of R.W. Symonds. Both of the Moller brothers' collections formed the basis of Symonds' Furniture Making in 17th and 18th Century England, London, 1955 - which constituted an invaluable document in the history of collecting. He is therefore to be seen alongside the other pioneering figures of English furniture collecting who were advised by Symonds, such as Percival Griffiths, J.S. Sykes, Jim Joel and Samuel Messer.

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