Lot Essay
These banqueting hall chairs are designed in the robust early 19th Century Grecian fashion promoted by architects such as Sir Robert Smirke (d. 1867) author of Specimens of Continental Architecture, 1806. Their heraldically-charged backs bear the Taylor family crest sculpted in bas-relief within reed-banded and pelta-scrolled escutcheons that are shell-crested and palm-flowered. They were commmissioned by George Watson Taylor, one of the greatest connoisseur-collectors of the early 19th Century. Born into a West Indian plantation family, his fortunes were augmented by his wife's vastly larger plantation fortune. The chairs were probably supplied around 1816, the time that he purchased his house in Cavendish Square. This and his country house at Erlestoke Park in Wiltshire were decorated in the most splendid French style fashionable at that period. Sadly, a decline in his fortunes saw the gradual dispersal of his collections, culminating in a 3,572 lot sale of the contents of Erlestoke in 1832. Another pair from this set sold Christie's, New York, 7 April 2009, lot 16.