Not currently on display at the V&A

Torchère

ca. 1795 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Torchere of carved wood, painted in imitation of bronze and porphyry. The top is circular with a gadrooned edge. The fluted shaft rests on a triangular base supported by three winged sphinxes. These are supported on a triangular base, the sides of which are decorated with wreaths of laurel and crossed spears. The whole rests on three lion paws.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Pine, painted in imitation of bronze and porphyry.
Brief description
Torchère of carved wood, painted to resemble bronze and porphyry, decorated with classical motifs including sphinxes, laurel wreaths and crossed spears. English, ca. 1795. Possibly designed by Thomas Chippendale the Younger and made by his firm for Harewood House, Yorkshire.
Physical description
Torchere of carved wood, painted in imitation of bronze and porphyry. The top is circular with a gadrooned edge. The fluted shaft rests on a triangular base supported by three winged sphinxes. These are supported on a triangular base, the sides of which are decorated with wreaths of laurel and crossed spears. The whole rests on three lion paws.
Dimensions
  • Approximate height: 55in
  • Approximate width: 17in
Dimensions from Registered Description (should be checked).
Gallery label
  • Chippendale the Younger supplied furniture to Harewood, one of his father's largest commissions, in the 1790s and these torchères with their restrained use of sphinxes and other classical motifs may be an example of his work. (W.27-1951 and W.27A-1951)(unknown)
  • This pair of torchères, acquired from Harewood House, Yorkshire, is from a set of which another pair also exist. Chippendale the Younger supplied furniture for Harewood, one of his father's largest commissions, in the 1790s and these torchères with their restrained use of sphinxes and other classiacl motifs may be an example of his work. (W.27-1951 and W.27A-1951)(1996)
  • W.27 & A-1951 PAIR OF STANDS ENGLISH; about 1795 Pinewood painted in imitation of bronze and porphyry From Harewood House, Yorkshire.(pre October 2000)
  • W.27 & A-1951 PAIR OF TORCHERES ENGLISH; about 1795 Pinewood painted in imitation of bronze and porphyry From Harewood House, Yorkshire.(pre October 2000)
Object history
From Harewood House, Yorkshire. Accounts from 1796-7, intermittently up to 1804, show that Thomas Chippendale the Younger was employed by Lord Harewood at both Harewood House and Hanover Square.
A matching pair of torcheres sold from Harewood in Christie's 'attic' sale, 3 October 1988, was with Carlton Hobbs, New York, in 2010 (their ref. no. 8044). Those each stand on an additional plinth base, triangular with chamfered corners, which is porphyrized like the pedestal above the feet. Locating holes in the underside of the paws correspond to marks on the plinth where it may have been plugged and the paint then restored. Dimensions of the Carlton Hobbs torcheres (supplied by Carlton Hobbs in inches): H. with plinth c. 61½ in. (c. 156 cm); H. without plinth c.55½ in. (c. 114 cm). Width across carved feet ('end of toe to end of toe') c. 18¾ in. (c. 47.5 cm)
Production
One of a pair with W.27A-1951.
Subjects depicted
Associated object
W.27A-1951 (Object)
Collection
Accession number
W.27-1951

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Record createdAugust 14, 1998
Record URL
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