A FEDERAL INLAID MAHOGANY ARMCHAIR

PROBABLY RHODE ISLAND, CIRCA 1795

细节
A FEDERAL INLAID MAHOGANY ARMCHAIR
Probably Rhode Island, circa 1795
The modified shield back with raised inlaid panel above a pierced splat with swags inlaid with bellflowers and carved with Prince-of-Wales plumes issuing from a demi-rosette flanked by straight arms and downswept supports over a trapezoidal over-upholstered seat on square tapering flared legs
36½in. high, 21¼in. wide, 18in. deep

拍品专文

The modified shield-back of this chair is a characteristic found on a small number of Federal side chairs. Known examples have been attributed to cabinetmakers Thomas Howard Jr. of Providence and Elbert Anderson of New York. A chair with a similarly carved splat and nearly identical inlay, traditionally thought to have been made in the shop of Thomas Howard Jr., is in the John Brown House and illustrated in The John Brown House: Loan Exhibition of Rhode Island Furniture (Rhode Island, 1965) fig.19, pp.20. Another similar chair thought to have been made by Howard is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and is illustrated in Robert Bishop, Centuries and Styles of the American Chair (New York, 1972), fig.399. A chair with similarly carved and inlaid back attributed to Anderson is illustrated in Scherer, New York Furniture: The Federal Period 1788-1825 (Albany, 1988), p.11. A chair with similarly inlaid and carved splat was Sold in these Rooms, 23 June 1993, lot 164.