Hall Chair thumbnail 1
Not on display

Hall Chair

ca. 1867 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This hall chair is in the Renaissance Revival style and is an example of the collaboration between firms in different countries, which became more common in the 19th century. L.& S. Lövinson, a German firm specialising in carved furniture, and Julius Yacoby or Jacoby, who had a furniture business in London, exhibited furniture together at the International Exhibition held in Paris in 1867. On their stand was an example of this chair with additional carving around the arched top. The Art Journal described their furniture at the Exhibition as showing 'proofs of the grace and elegance they introduce into the more ordinary furniture of domestic life'. It is likely that Lövinson made this chair, which was retailed in London by Yacoby.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Mahogany, carved and turned
Brief description
Hall chair of carved and turned mahogany; with the stamp of Julius Yacoby, Regent St., London
Physical description
Hall chair, square seat with rounded corners, back with carved panel of curving leaves below pointed arch, on x-frame legs, square section on rectangular feet, joined by turned stretcher
Dimensions
  • Height: 109cm
  • Across front of seat width: 49cm
  • Depth: 53cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'JULIUS YACOBY 52 REGENT ST. LONDON' (stamped on moulding on outside back seat rail)
Gallery label
(05/08/2015)
Europe and America 1800-1900, room 101

HALL CHAIR
About 1867

This chair in the Renaissance Revival style is very similar to one that was shown at the Paris 1867 exhibition. The exhibitors were the Berlin manufacturer L.&S. Lövinson and a London cabinetmaker Julius Yacoby, perhaps working in partnership. This collaboration between two international firms to exhibit their wares in a third country shows just how international markets had become.

Germany, Berlin; probably designed and manufactured by L.&S. Lövinson; retailed in London by Julius Yacoby (Jacoby)
Mahogany, carved and turned
Stamped 'JULIUS YACOBY 52 REGENT STREET LONDON'

(2006)
Europe and America 1800-1900, room 101

HALL CHAIR
About 1867

Germany, Berlin; probably designed and manufactured by L. & S. Lövinson; retailed in London by Julius Yacoby (Jacoby)

Mahogany, carved and turned

Stamped 'JULIUS YACOBY 52 REGENT STREET LONDON'

Museum no. W.52-2005

This chair in the Renaissance Revival style is very similar to one that was shown at the Paris 1867 exhibition. The exhibitors were the Berlin manufacturer L. & S. Lövinson and a London cabinetmaker Julius Yacoby, perhaps working in partnership. This collaboration between two international firms to exhibit their wares in a third country shows how international markets had become.
Object history
Lövinson and Yacoby (or Jacoby) had workshops in Berlin and outlets in London and St Petersburg as well as Berlin. The firm also showed at the international exhibitons, including the London International Exhibition of 1862 and the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1867.

A table by the firm was illustrated in the 2006 catalogue of H. Blairman & Sons, London (no. 8). The entry records a pair of chairs of a design shown at the 1867 exhibition in the collections of the National Portrait Gallery; the V&A chair; a teapoy offered at Gorringe's saleroom Lewes 9-11 September 2003, lot 1326; a chiar offered at Greenslade Hunt, Taunton, on 30 January 1997, lot 1232; and a desk like one exhibited in London in 1862, sold at Woolley & Wallis, Salisbury 3 October 2000, lot 130.

This chair was one of a pair; the other chair remains in a private collection. Another pair of chairs of this model, made in oak, was being offered for sale by H. Blairman & Sons, London, in June 2018.
Summary
This hall chair is in the Renaissance Revival style and is an example of the collaboration between firms in different countries, which became more common in the 19th century. L.& S. Lövinson, a German firm specialising in carved furniture, and Julius Yacoby or Jacoby, who had a furniture business in London, exhibited furniture together at the International Exhibition held in Paris in 1867. On their stand was an example of this chair with additional carving around the arched top. The Art Journal described their furniture at the Exhibition as showing 'proofs of the grace and elegance they introduce into the more ordinary furniture of domestic life'. It is likely that Lövinson made this chair, which was retailed in London by Yacoby.
Collection
Accession number
W.52-2005

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Record createdOctober 18, 2005
Record URL
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