Lectern thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 125, Edwin and Susan Davies Gallery

Lectern

1903-1904 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The lectern rests on two lateral supports each formed by two vertical members set diagonally to the front and back planes of the piece. These vertical members which curve gradually inwards towards the top are connected at the bottom stage by unframed panels of wood, narrow and straight at the sides, wide and straight at the back, and wide and curved at the front. To the faces of these panels is affixed, at the bottom, a based moulding, formed as a narrow cavetto surmounted by a deep shallow curved base. Towards the top the panels are decorated with squares of inlaid mahogany. Four squares at the front and the back, two at each side. Above these are broad but shallow oak dentils, three at the front and back and two on each side. These support a narrow cornice with a cavetto below a straight edge, and a top which slopes gently upwards. On this cornice rests the flat roof of the base. The two side vertical members are connected above this base by narrow flat unframed panels set back from the place of lower side panels. The top of the lectern is separated from this central stage by a shallow moulded cornice above which the front vertical members rise higher than those of the back. The shallow curve on the outside edge of all four members returns sharply below the top and above this return the edge rises vertically. The side panels, square at the bottom and sloping towards the back at the top are set in a plain forward of the side panels in the central stage. The front panel in an equivalent plane is rectangular with inlaid decoration of nine mahogany squares of five across the top, two below on each side. Above the panels on the front and sides is a convex cornice similar to that above the bottom stage. The back is open to provide storage for books. The book rest itself is a square panel of oak projecting at the sides, the front and back, it is covered with brass affixed by screws along the outer edges. The front edge projects below the front of the panel and terminates in a simple scroll. The back edge has a projecting brass book rest.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Oak inlaid with walnut, copper top with brass screws
Brief description
Oak lecturn inlaid with walnut with a copper book rest, designed by Charles Harrison Townsend for the Union Free Church, Woodford Green, Essex, British 1903-1904
Physical description
The lectern rests on two lateral supports each formed by two vertical members set diagonally to the front and back planes of the piece. These vertical members which curve gradually inwards towards the top are connected at the bottom stage by unframed panels of wood, narrow and straight at the sides, wide and straight at the back, and wide and curved at the front. To the faces of these panels is affixed, at the bottom, a based moulding, formed as a narrow cavetto surmounted by a deep shallow curved base. Towards the top the panels are decorated with squares of inlaid mahogany. Four squares at the front and the back, two at each side. Above these are broad but shallow oak dentils, three at the front and back and two on each side. These support a narrow cornice with a cavetto below a straight edge, and a top which slopes gently upwards. On this cornice rests the flat roof of the base. The two side vertical members are connected above this base by narrow flat unframed panels set back from the place of lower side panels. The top of the lectern is separated from this central stage by a shallow moulded cornice above which the front vertical members rise higher than those of the back. The shallow curve on the outside edge of all four members returns sharply below the top and above this return the edge rises vertically. The side panels, square at the bottom and sloping towards the back at the top are set in a plain forward of the side panels in the central stage. The front panel in an equivalent plane is rectangular with inlaid decoration of nine mahogany squares of five across the top, two below on each side. Above the panels on the front and sides is a convex cornice similar to that above the bottom stage. The back is open to provide storage for books. The book rest itself is a square panel of oak projecting at the sides, the front and back, it is covered with brass affixed by screws along the outer edges. The front edge projects below the front of the panel and terminates in a simple scroll. The back edge has a projecting brass book rest.
Gallery label
  • LECTERN Designed by Charles Harrison Townsend (1851-1928) Oak inlaid with walnut: the top of copper with brass screws. From the Woodford Union Church, Essex (now Woodford Green United Free Church) built in 1903 to Harrison Townsend's design and opened in 1904. The leading spirit behind the new church was its minister from 1901 to 1910, Rev. Joseph Hocking, a prolific novelist whose works included The Woman of Babylon (1906) and The Trampled Cross (1907). The church is in red brick with stone dressings in a modified and idiosyncratic Byzantine style. The designer was one of the leading architects of the Arts & Crafts Movement, and the one superficially closest to the Continental Art Nouveau style. His best known works are the Whitechapel Art Gallery (1897-8) and the Horniman Museum (1902). He was a member of the Art Workers' Guild from 1888 and first exhibited at the Arts & Crafts Exhibition in 1890. Since its acquisition by the Museum, the lectern has been restored, repaired, and cleaned by the Conservation Department. The work in included mending damage to the central shelf, the replacement of mouldings round the base, and the restoration of the upper shelf to its original position.(pre October 2000)
  • LECTERN ENGLISH; early twentieth century Oak inlaid with walnut; the top of copper with brass screws. Designed by Charles Harrison Townsend (1851-1928), one of the leading architects of the Arts and Crafts movement. This lectern comes from Woodford Union Church, Essex, which was built in 1903 to Townsend's design.(pre October 2000)
  • LECTERN Designed by C. Harrison Townsend (British, 1851-1928) Oak inlaid with walnut, copper top with brass screws 1903-4 Made for Townsend's Woodford Union Chapel, Essex (now Woodford Green United Free Church). W.45-1979(1989-2006)
  • 21 LECTERN 1903-1904 The architect, Charles Harrison Townsend, also designed furniture for his church commissions. This lectern comes from one of the churches he built in Essex. It shows his interest in Art Nouveau curved forms, which he combined with Arts and Crafts principles of structural honesty. Oak, inlaid with walnut, with copper book rest Designed by Charles Harrison Townsend (born in Birkenhead, 1851, died in Norwood, 1928) for the new Union Free Church, Woodford, Essex Museum no. W.45-1979(01/10/2008)
Object history
This lectern was acquired from the United Free Church, formerly the Union Free Church, Woodford Green, Essex. The new Union Free Church was designed by the architect, Charles Harrison Townsend and opened in 1904, when it was described in The Builder, Vol. LXXXVI, no. I, May 21st 1904, page 556. The leading spirit behind the new church was its minister from 1901 to 1910, Rev. Joseph Hocking, a prolific novelist whose works included The Woman of Babylon (1906) and The Trampled Cross (1907). Townsend, who designed seat furniture for his other ecclesiastical commission in Essex, the Church of St. Mary The Virgin at Great Warley, probably also designed this lectern. Reorganisation of the interior of the church made the lectern redundant and it was offered to the Museum by the United Free Church in 1978.
Association
Collection
Accession number
W.45-1979

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Record createdApril 2, 2001
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