Not currently on display at the V&A

Chair

1896 (designed), ca. 1908 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The Scottish architect George Walton first designed this chair around 1896, the year when he began designing the interiors of fashionable tea rooms for John Rowntree in Scarborough and Miss Kate Cranston in Glasgow, which included chairs like these. From 1898 Walton was designing showrooms for the Eastman Photographic Materials Company, soon to be renamed Kodak, in London, Brussels and elsewhere. He used this chair design so frequently that it became almost a trade mark of the showrooms. George Davison joined the Eastman Company in 1897 and prospered as Kodak profited from the growing popularity of amateur photography. By 1908 Davison was able to commission George Walton to design him a house, the White House on the banks of the Thames at Shiplake, Oxfordshire, and the chair design re-appeared in the dining room. This is one of the chairs from that house.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Ebonised birch, caning
Brief description
Ebonised birch chair with caned seat and back, designed by George Walton, about 1896, made for The White House, Shiplake, ca. 1908
Physical description
Chair, one of a pair, made of ebonised birch with slender, tapering legs and caned seat, and a narrow, caned panel in the centre of the back with turned bobbin decoration
Dimensions
  • Height: 1065mm
  • Width: 610mm
  • Depth: 445mm
Extrapolated from imperial dimensions on the register
Gallery label
CHAIR Designed by George Walton (British, 1867-1933) Ebonised birch with cane seat 1903 Made as part of the furnishings designed by Walton for the White House, Shiplake, Oxfordshire, the home of Mr George Davison. Circ.120-1959(1989-2006)
Object history
The design is dated to 1896 because this was the earliest date Walton was designing tea rooms for John Rowntree in Scarborough and Catherine Cranston in Glasgow, commissions where he first used this design (see Karen Moon, George Walton, 1993, p54). The chair design was later used for many Kodak showroom interiors and for the dining room at the White House, Shiplake, which was built in 1908 and for where this example was supplied.

Object sampling carried out by Jo Darrah, V&A Science; drawer/slide reference 6/8.
Production
The registered description dates the chair to 1903. See object history note for why this date is not used here.
Summary
The Scottish architect George Walton first designed this chair around 1896, the year when he began designing the interiors of fashionable tea rooms for John Rowntree in Scarborough and Miss Kate Cranston in Glasgow, which included chairs like these. From 1898 Walton was designing showrooms for the Eastman Photographic Materials Company, soon to be renamed Kodak, in London, Brussels and elsewhere. He used this chair design so frequently that it became almost a trade mark of the showrooms. George Davison joined the Eastman Company in 1897 and prospered as Kodak profited from the growing popularity of amateur photography. By 1908 Davison was able to commission George Walton to design him a house, the White House on the banks of the Thames at Shiplake, Oxfordshire, and the chair design re-appeared in the dining room. This is one of the chairs from that house.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Moon, Karen. George Walton, designer and architect. 1993
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.120-1959

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Record createdFebruary 28, 2007
Record URL
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