A PAIR OF GEORGE III GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS
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A PAIR OF GEORGE III GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS

IN THE MANNER OF HENRY HOLLAND, POSSIBLY BY JAMES NEWTON, CIRCA 1790

细节
A PAIR OF GEORGE III GILTWOOD ARMCHAIRS
IN THE MANNER OF HENRY HOLLAND, POSSIBLY BY JAMES NEWTON, CIRCA 1790
Each with rectangular scrolled padded back and seat covered in vert-de-mer silk-velvet, with fluted arms and supports on fluted sabre legs, regilt, with double batten carrying-holes
34¼ in. (87 cm.) high; 25 in. (63.5 cm.) wide; 24¾ in. (63 cm.) deep (2)
来源
Mrs. Frances Kelley Wood; Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, 15 November 1975, lot 146.
Mr & Mrs Franklin N. Groves; Christie's, New York, 22 October 1988, lot 102.
Vernay & Jussel; Sotheby's New York, 21 January 1994, lot 374.
Bought from Mallett, London, 18 April 1997.
注意事项
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Isobel Bradley
Isobel Bradley

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拍品专文

The chairs' design reflects the style of furnishings promoted by the architect Henry Holland (1745-1806) and those in the immediate retinue of francophile advisors around George, Prince of Wales, later King George IV, whilst undertaking the enormous and complex task of the remodelling and furnishing of his official residence, Carlton House, from c.1784-1796. A suite of seat-furniture of almost identical design comprising a pair of sofas, a pair of stools, a pair of bergeres, four armchairs and an unknown quantity of side chairs was at Heveningham Hall, Suffolk and most of which is now at Heaton Hall, Manchester. The frames of the latter suite were embellished with trellis pattern. It was illustrated in The Grand Saloon at Heveningham in O. B. 'Heveningham Hall, Suffolk', Country Life, 25 April 1908, p. 601 and sixty years later the suite was illustrated in The Drawing Room in 'Heveningham Hall', The Antique Collector, August 1968, p. 156. Furnishings of a similar character were supplied to Brownlow, 9th Earl of Exeter (d. 1793) for Burghley House, Lincolnshire, by James Newton of Wardour Street in the mid-1780s. The seat-furniture is illustrated in situ in 1821 by Lady Sophia Cecil and published in G. Ellwood, 'James Newton', Furniture History, 1995, fig. 16.