A PAIR OF QUEEN ANNE CHERRYWOOD SIDE CHAIRS
A PAIR OF QUEEN ANNE CHERRYWOOD SIDE CHAIRS
A PAIR OF QUEEN ANNE CHERRYWOOD SIDE CHAIRS
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A PAIR OF QUEEN ANNE CHERRYWOOD SIDE CHAIRS
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MIDWESTERN VIRTUE: PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF SAM AND PATTY MCCULLOUGH
A PAIR OF QUEEN ANNE CHERRYWOOD SIDE CHAIRS

NORWICH OR HARTFORD AREA, CONNECTICUT, 1740-1760

Details
A PAIR OF QUEEN ANNE CHERRYWOOD SIDE CHAIRS
NORWICH OR HARTFORD AREA, CONNECTICUT, 1740-1760
the chair frames numbered IV and V; both with their original yellow pine slip-seat frames similarly marked
40 ¼ in. high
Provenance
Israel Sack, Inc., New York, 2000

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Julia Jones
Julia Jones Associate Specialist

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Lot Essay

As argued by Nancy Goyne Evans, the design of these chairs is deceptively simple with curvilinear passages that echo and repeat throughout the entire form. The distinctive spurs on the splats, along with the chamfered rear legs and three-stretcher bases, link these chairs to several others traditionally ascribed to Norwich, Connecticut. More recent research suggests that another possibility is the Hartford area, where an armchair of this pattern was purportedly owned by Governor John Pitkin (1694-1769) and the similar side chair in the following lot was owned by the Lyman family. For a similar example at Winterthur and a discussion of related examples, see Nancy Goyne Evans, catalogue entry, New England Furniture at Winterthur: The Queen Anne and Chippendale Periods (Winterthur, 1997), pp. 39-40, no. 21.

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