Armchair, Carved Mahogany thumbnail 1
Armchair, Carved Mahogany thumbnail 2
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Armchair, Carved Mahogany

1860-1890 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The carving in the back of this chair is copied directly from a design by Thomas Chippendale, published in his pattern book, The Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director, in 1754. When the Museum acquired the chair, with three others and a matching armchair, it was believed to have been made in about 1760. However, it is now thought that the chairs were made at least a hundred years later, partly because they show very little sign of wear. They also replicate every detail of Chippendale's design, whereas an 18th-century maker would often copy a design more freely. The five chairs formerly belonged to the theatre designer and furniture historian Percy Macquoid, and were given to the Museum by his widow in 1925. Macquoid was the author of the first major history of English furniture (published 1904--08), but even he made occasional mistakes.

Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Drop-in Seat
  • Armchair
Materials and techniques
Mahogany carved. Needlework seat covering.
Brief description
Armchair, carved mahogany with cabriole legs on pad feet. English. Drop-in seat covered in gros point needlework.
Physical description
Armchair, carved mahogany. The back has carved uprights and top rail and pierced central splat carved with a symmetrical design of scrollwork. Curved arms, partly fluted; the front of the seat bowed. Cabriole front legs carved with scrollwork at the knees ending in bun feet. The back legs are slightly curved and plain.The seat is covered with needlework, principally gros point, in coloured silks and wools with a design of tulips and carnations.
Dimensions
  • Length: 24.25in (Note: From Departmental records)
  • Width: 26.5in (Note: From Departmental records)
  • Height: 37.75in (Note: From Departmental records)
Gallery label
Label 9175. JH
Armchair
English: about 1753
Mahogany
The design for the chair back was published by Thomas Chippendale and dated 1753
Credit line
Gift of Mrs Macquoid.
Object history
Bequeathed by Mrs P. Macquoid, of The Yellow House, 8 Palace Court, Bayswater. She was the widow of Percy Macquoid, the furniture historian and theatre designer. The armchair was gifted along with four identical chairs (W.47: 1 to C-1925).
Production
The chair-back is copied from a design in Thomas Chippendale's Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director, 1st edition (1754), plate XIII.
Summary
The carving in the back of this chair is copied directly from a design by Thomas Chippendale, published in his pattern book, The Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director, in 1754. When the Museum acquired the chair, with three others and a matching armchair, it was believed to have been made in about 1760. However, it is now thought that the chairs were made at least a hundred years later, partly because they show very little sign of wear. They also replicate every detail of Chippendale's design, whereas an 18th-century maker would often copy a design more freely. The five chairs formerly belonged to the theatre designer and furniture historian Percy Macquoid, and were given to the Museum by his widow in 1925. Macquoid was the author of the first major history of English furniture (published 1904--08), but even he made occasional mistakes.
Associated objects
Bibliographic references
  • The splat is very similar to the right hand design in plate XII of Chippendale, Thomas, The Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director, 1st Edition 1754 and 3rd Edition, 1763. Illustrated in English Chairs, V&A Museum with an introduction by Ralph Edwards, HMSO 1951, plate 70. The entry described the chair as 'Closely similar to a design dated 1753, Chippendale's Director, 1st Edition, 1754, plate XII and probably made by his firm'. There is no evidence for this. Illustrated The Dictionary of English Furniture by Percy Macquoid and Ralph Edwards, revised by Ralph Edwards, Volume One, Country Life 1953, Fig. 164.
  • Charles H. Hayward, Antique or Fake? The Making of Old Furniture. London: Evans Brothers, 1970, illustrated on p. 136.
Collection
Accession number
W.46:2-1925

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Record createdJune 6, 2003
Record URL
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