Mallett Spring Catalogue 2013

Page 136

Mallett catalogue 2013_DEF_Q9_new Mallett catalogue design 23/04/13 17:53 Pagina 134

134

M A L L E T T LO N D O N

N E W YO R K

A RARE GEORGE II CEREMONIAL CHAIR An extremely unusual and oversize walnut armchair with concave vase-shaped splat and broad sloping shoulders ornamented with carved and gilt acanthus and volute terminals. The central splat inlaid with floral marquetry and motto, ‘FOR OUR COUNTRY’, the side rails further inlaid with husk pendants. The arms terminate in finely carved lions’ masks, above compass seat supported by cabriole legs ending in pad feet. Possibly by Francis Brodie of Edinburgh, c. 1745-60. England, circa 1750 Height: 69in/175cm Width: 33in/84cm Depth: 30in/76cm F3D0010

PROVENANCE

American Private Collection LITERATURE

C. Gilbert, Furniture at Temple Newsam House and Lotherton Hall, Vol. I (1978), p. 76, no. 58; Vol. III (1998), p. 720 (ill.) S. Pryke, ‘The extraordinary billhead of Francis Brodie’, Regional Furniture, Vol. 4 (1990), pp. 81-99 (pp. 87-98 and fig. 16)

This remarkable armchair is likely to have been made for use in a dining club of members of the Anti-Gallican Society, whose motto, ‘FOR OUR COUNTRY’, is inlaid at the top of the splat. It formerly had a Victorian cresting incorporating the figure of Britannia, who also features in the Society’s arms – presumably a copy of the original cresting. The Victorian version was replaced by the present cresting (lacking Britannia) in the twentieth century. The Anti-Gallican Society was founded in the resonant year of 1745, to promote British arts and manufactures as against those of France. The chair was sold in 1974 in Edinburgh, apparently with a Scottish history of ownership, which has given rise to the suggestion that it was produced in the workshop of the Edinburgh wright Francis Brodie. His billhead features an armchair of somewhat similar profile (though more domestic proportions). A closely related ceremonial armchair, retaining its original carved cresting, was formerly in the collection of Percival Griffiths and is now at Temple Newsam House, Leeds. The Temple Newsam chair is cut from slightly different templates (notably in the outline of the splat) and has different marquetry in the back, so it was not necessarily a companion chair to the present one. However, it was undoubtedly made in the same workshop; and it conceivably also has Anti-Gallican symbolism, in the large eagle that surmounts the cresting, for one of the Society’s armorial supporters was an eagle – though a double-headed one. The Temple Newsam chair is also made partly of elm, which would be consistent with a Scottish origin. How far the Anti-Gallican Society was active in Scotland in its early years is uncertain, but a likely promoter would have been Lord Blakeney, who vigorously defended Stirling Castle, of which he was Governor, under siege during the ‘45 Rebellion. Another Scottish connection is attested by a silvergilt badge of the Society in the Victoria and Albert Museum, which is engraved on the back with the MacKay arms; its rococo style suggests a mid-eighteenth century date.

A closely related Master’s chair at Temple Newsam House


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