1780~, Paris

1780~, Paris

Identifier
W.15-1941
Acquisition
Given by P.W. Mallet
Collection
Material
Technique
Depiction
Dimension
65 cm (depth)
33.2 cm (height)
41.2 cm (height)
105 cm (height)
161.5 cm (width)
Production time
Production place
Type of object

Description

This object is part of a set of four armchairs and a settee that were made in France between 1780 and 1800. The design of the frames was a very popular one and was made by a number of menuisiers, as the makers of carved furniture were called. Some made highly carved versions, but these are simply moulded. The tapestry covers were made some years earlier, for the kind of larger chairs that were fashionable in the 1750s and 1760s. They were only put on to these frames in the nineteenth century, when such tapestries became highly fashionable amongst antique collectors. The back panels are woven with Chinoiseries, figures in Chinese-style dress in fanciful settings, while the seats are woven with scenes of animals from La Fontaine's 'Fables'. On loan to Cliffe Castle Museum. Sette with frame of moulded and gilded beechwood, French, ca. 1780-1800, upholstered in Aubusson tapestry, ca. 1754-70, the back with a Chinese woman with three children, the seat with the fable of the Jay adorned with Peacock feathers