A PAIR OF ITALIAN GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS
A PAIR OF ITALIAN GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS
A PAIR OF ITALIAN GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS
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Please note lots marked with a square will be move… Read more
A PAIR OF ITALIAN GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS

BY FRATELLI LUCCHESI, LUCCA, SECOND QUARTER 19TH CENTURY

Details
A PAIR OF ITALIAN GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS
BY FRATELLI LUCCHESI, LUCCA, SECOND QUARTER 19TH CENTURY
Each with laurel-carved seat and rails, the arms carved as wings, the back and cushion covered in a leopard print upholstery, the reserve with paper label FABBRICA DI MOBILI/Dei Fratelli Lucchesi/[...]/IN LUCCA
Provenance
The Property of a Lady; Sotheby’s, London, 1 June 1973, lot 118.
Special notice
Please note lots marked with a square will be moved to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services (CFASS in Red Hook, Brooklyn) on the last day of the sale. Lots are not available for collection at Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services until after the third business day following the sale. All lots will be stored free of charge for 30 days from the auction date at Christie’s Rockefeller Center or Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services (CFASS in Red Hook, Brooklyn). Operation hours for collection from either location are from 9.30 am to 5.00 pm, Monday-Friday. After 30 days from the auction date property may be moved at Christie’s discretion. Please contact Post-Sale Services to confirm the location of your property prior to collection. Lots may not be collected during the day of their move to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services (CFASS in Red Hook, Brooklyn). Please consult the Lot Collection Notice for collection information.

Lot Essay

This pair of early 19th century Italian neo-classical armchairs is probably from the same set as an identical chair at the Pitti Palace, Florence, illustrated in ed. H. Hayward, World Furniture, London, 1965, p. 268. Bearing a label for Fratelli Lucchese, they were made by this celebrated firm of chair-makers from Lucca in Tuscany. As the firm’s name suggests, it comprised three brothers, Antonio, Pietro Ricci and Lorenzo Lucchesi. Little is known today of their activities but between 1817 and 1820 they were engaged to supply giltwood seat-furniture as part of the magnificent refurbishment of the Palazzo Ducale in Lucca at the instigation of Maria Luisa di Borbone, former Queen of Etruria. On the death of the duchess in 1824, the Palazzo di Lucca was considered one of the richest interiors in Italy (E. Colle, ‘Furnishings and Interior Decoration in Lucca’, The Villas of Lucca, Mulgrave, 2014, p. 48). The inclusion of carved outspread wings on the arms is possibly derived from designs in Percier & Fontaine’s Recueil et Décorations Intérieures (pl. 6 & 39).

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