Moor Park Candlestand thumbnail 1
Moor Park Candlestand thumbnail 2
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images
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 118; The Wolfson Gallery

Moor Park Candlestand

Pedestal
1765 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
Elaborately carved pedestals were usually used as ornamental supports for candelabra. They were placed against a wall, often on either side of a mirror to reflect the light and so illuminate the room more effectively. When lighting was not required, an ornamental urn or vase of flowers might have been placed on the pedestal.

People
The pedestal may have been supplied by Thomas Chippendale, one of the most fashionable cabinet-makers of the day, or by Samuel Norman, a leading carver and gilder who is known to have worked between 1747 and 1767. Sir Lawrence Dundas, for whom it was designed, made a fortune of £600,000 as the main supplier to the British army during the Seven Years War of 1757-1763.

Design
In making his pedestals appear somewhat massive, Robert Adam was influenced by William Kent, the leading designer of the Palladian style that had been fashionable in the early 18th century. From the late 1760s he adopted more slender designs, which posterity has since regarded as the 'Adam' style.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleMoor Park Candlestand (popular title)
Materials and techniques
Painted and gilded pinewood
Brief description
Painted and gilt carved pine pedestal with Neo-classical decoration. British (probably London), 1764. Designed by Robert Adam and possibly made by Samuel Norman.
Physical description
Rectangular pedestal, with tapering shaft and gilt carving on an off white ground. Working downwards, the uppermost moulding of the projecting cornice is a floral ogival frieze, surmounting a plain fascia and acanthus friezed torus, immiediately below it. Beneath the cornice is a vitruvian scroll frieze, which surmounts a foliate patera above a laurel swag on the front and sides, and forms the capital. Beneath is a shaft with sunken panels, on the front and sides, decorated with interlacing laurel leaves and berries, surmounted by an anthemion. These terminate in two mouldings, one an acanthus frieze and the other in the form of folliate zig-zag patterns. The base is a simple square block.
Dimensions
  • Height: 137cm
  • Width: 45cm
  • Depth: 45cm
Dimensions checked: Registered Description; 01/01/1999 by kn
Gallery label
  • PEDESTAL ENGLISH; about 1765. Probably made by Sir Thomas Chippendale to a design of Robert Adam, for Sir Lawrence Dundas, Moor Park, Hertfordshire.(1972)
  • PAIR OF PEDESTALS BRITISH; about 1765 Designed by Robert Adam (1728 - 92) for 19 Arlington Street, London, and probablty made by the form of Thomas Chippendale (1718-79) Carved and painted pine; from a set of six. Made for the saloon of the London House of sir Lawrence Dundas (1710-81). No drawings of these survive but in 1756 Adam submitted a bill for a ‘Design of Terms for Salon'. The giltwood chair in Gallery 125 (W1-1937) was also desighned by Adam and made by Chippendale for the same room.(1996)
  • British Galleries: These pedestals are from a set of six made for the saloon of 19 Arlington Street, the London house of Sir Lawrence Dundas (1710-1781), a wealthy army contractor, for whom Robert Adam designed alterations, decorations and furniture. Their solid and monumental form recalls the neo-Palladian designs of William Kent of the 1740s.(27/03/2003)
Credit line
Presented by Art Fund
Object history
The pedestals or "terms" were designed for the Saloon of Sir Lawrence Dundas's London residence of 19 Arlington Street. (His country seat was Moor Park, Hertfordshire, to where they were subsequently removed, hence the popular name). Adam's bill for the design was dated 18th July 1765 and amounted to £3 - 3 - 0, but it is not included among the volumes of his drawings, housed at the Sir John Soane Museum. However, the design is closely related to designs made for Sir John Astley of Patshull, Staffs (Soane, vol. 17, No. 58: dated 1765) Sir John Griffin of Audley End, Essex (Soane, Vol. 17, No. 59). It is not known who made them. Thomas Chippendale and more recently Samuel Norman have been suggested as possible candidates.The pedestals formed lot 798 of the Sale of the Marquess of Zetland's effects at Christie's, 26th April, 1934, and were given to the V & A, by the National Art Collections Fund, that year.

Designed by Robert Adam (born in Kirkcaldy, Fife, 1728, died in London, 1792); possibly made in London by Thomas Chippendale (born in Otley, West Yorkshire, 1718, died in London, 1779)

Historical significance: This set of pedestals is part of a very important commission for Adam from Sir Lawrence Dundas. As an army contractor, Dundas amassed a large fortune, and owned and furnished a large string of properties in England and Scotland. He was known as "The Nabob of the North", and someone whose Scottish links were to work to Adam's advantage. The furnishing of Arlington Street included a set of chairs and sofas, made by Thomas Chippendale, and the only recorded incident, when the cabinetmaker made furntiure to Adam's designs. The terms have a massive quality to them, more readily associated with William Kent, than his later, more slender designs.
Production
One of set of six.
Subjects depicted
Summary
Object Type
Elaborately carved pedestals were usually used as ornamental supports for candelabra. They were placed against a wall, often on either side of a mirror to reflect the light and so illuminate the room more effectively. When lighting was not required, an ornamental urn or vase of flowers might have been placed on the pedestal.

People
The pedestal may have been supplied by Thomas Chippendale, one of the most fashionable cabinet-makers of the day, or by Samuel Norman, a leading carver and gilder who is known to have worked between 1747 and 1767. Sir Lawrence Dundas, for whom it was designed, made a fortune of £600,000 as the main supplier to the British army during the Seven Years War of 1757-1763.

Design
In making his pedestals appear somewhat massive, Robert Adam was influenced by William Kent, the leading designer of the Palladian style that had been fashionable in the early 18th century. From the late 1760s he adopted more slender designs, which posterity has since regarded as the 'Adam' style.
Associated objects
Bibliographic references
  • Edwards, Ralph. Dictionary of English Furniture, London: Country Life, 1954, Vol III, p. 160, fig. 6.
  • Harris, Eileen. The Furniture of Robert Adam, London, Alec Tiranti, 1963, pp. 99 - 100.
  • Gonzalez-Palacios, Alvar. Il Mobile nei Secoli: Inghilterra, Milan, Fabri, 1969, Vol. I, p. 85.
  • Tomlin, Maurice. Catalogue of Adam Period Furniture, London, 1982 reprint, pp. 4 - 5.
Collection
Accession number
W.25A-1934

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Record createdApril 9, 2003
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