A PAIR OF EARLY GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND NEEDLEWORK SIDE CHAIRS
A PAIR OF EARLY GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND NEEDLEWORK SIDE CHAIRS
A PAIR OF EARLY GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND NEEDLEWORK SIDE CHAIRS
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A PAIR OF EARLY GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND NEEDLEWORK SIDE CHAIRS
5 More
THE BRAMSHILL PARK CHAPEL ROOM SIDE CHAIRS: LOTS 152-153
A PAIR OF EARLY GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND NEEDLEWORK SIDE CHAIRS

CIRCA 1760

Details
A PAIR OF EARLY GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND NEEDLEWORK SIDE CHAIRS
CIRCA 1760
Each with rectangular padded back and seat covered in close-nailed floral needlework above a frieze paneled and carved with quatrefoils, on pierced cluster-column legs divided by imbricated blocks, each chair with JM(?) inscribed in stencil to inner back seat rail, and with printed and inscribed Ann and Gordon Getty Collection inventory label, en suite with the previous lot
40 in. (101.6 cm.) high, 23 in. (58.4 cm.) wide, 24 in. (70 cm.) deep
Provenance
Probably supplied to Sir Monoux Cope, 7th Baronet (1696-1763), for the Chapel Room, Bramshill, Hampshire.
The Collection of Mrs. Alan Palmer; Sotheby's, London, 26 February 1954, lot 74 (set of six).
Anonymous sale; Christie's London, 19 November 1981, lot 117 (set of four).
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 9 July 1992, lot 129.
Acquired by Ann and Gordon Getty from the above.
Literature
‘Bramshill Park, Hampshire: The Seat of Sir Anthony Cope, Bt.’, Country Life, 11 July 1903, pp. 54 and 56, ‘The State Drawing Room’; and 23 June 1923, p. 886, figs. 1, 2.
H.A. Tipping, In English Homes, Period III, Volume II, London, 1927, p. 299, figs. 377-378.

Brought to you by

Nathalie Ferneau
Nathalie Ferneau Head of Sale, Junior Specialist

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Lot Essay


Originally part of a large suite of seat furniture, these chairs were probably supplied to Sir Monoux Cope (1696-1763), 7th Baronet, for the Chapel Room at Bramshill Park, Hampshire, where they were photographed circa 1927. Bramshill was built in 1612, and acquired by Sir John Cope in 1699. It remained in the Cope family until it was sold to Lord Brocket in 1937. For a further pair of chairs from Bramshill Park which were also in the Getty Collection at Wheatland, please see lot 59.

The front legs of these side chairs, with paired columnar supports conjoined by rustic blocks, and with the imbricated ‘dolphin-scale’ attributes, relate to designs for garden seat furniture with drip-work blocks by Daniel Marot. The bamboo-like legs and lower seat-rail linked by arched brackets and the raking columnar back legs relate to Sir William Chambers’ Chinese furniture, illustrated in his 1757 publication, Designs of Chinese Buildings, Furniture, etc. Furthermore, the gothic blind-fret reserve panels in the seat-rails relate to Chinese table patterns such as those by Messrs. Edwards and Darly, illustrated in their New Book of Chinese Designs from 1754. A suite of furniture with related ‘Chinese’ frames was supplied to the 2nd Earl of Bessborough (d. 1793) for Ingress Abbey, Kent, which had been improved under Sir William Chambers’ (d. 1796) supervision. The settee from the Ingress Abbey suite is now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (acc. no. W.7:1-1946), and notably, its design also relates to a pair of George III black and gilt-japanned armchairs from the Getty Collection at Wheatland, lot 58 in this sale.

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