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Design

Artist/Maker
Place of origin

John Gregory Crace worked extensively for the 6th Duke of Devonshire at Devonshire House, London, and Chatsworth, designing a wide range of decorative schemes and furniture. He is also well known for his collaboration with A.W.N. Pugin, with whom he worked on the decoration of the new Palace of Westminster, and the medieval court at the Crystal Palace.

The Crace family were the most important firm of interior decorators working in the 19th century. They worked for every British monarch from George III to Queen Victoria and on a range of buildings that includes royal palaces, Leeds Town Hall and the Great Exhibition building of 1862.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Watercolour
Brief description
Copy of a pattern showing a talbot sejant and the motto MOY from Buges Cathedral; by J.G. Crace.
Physical description
Copy of a pattern showing a talbot sejant and the motto MOY from Buges Cathedral
Dimensions
  • Height: 560mm
  • Width: 340mm
Marks and inscriptions
In the Cathedral Bruges
Object history
Presented by Mrs Eileen Crace
Subject depicted
Place depicted
Summary
John Gregory Crace worked extensively for the 6th Duke of Devonshire at Devonshire House, London, and Chatsworth, designing a wide range of decorative schemes and furniture. He is also well known for his collaboration with A.W.N. Pugin, with whom he worked on the decoration of the new Palace of Westminster, and the medieval court at the Crystal Palace.

The Crace family were the most important firm of interior decorators working in the 19th century. They worked for every British monarch from George III to Queen Victoria and on a range of buildings that includes royal palaces, Leeds Town Hall and the Great Exhibition building of 1862.
Bibliographic reference
Megan Aldrich, The Craces: royal decorators 1768-1899, London, Murray, 1990.
Collection
Accession number
E.838-1981

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Record createdJuly 1, 2009
Record URL
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