1732~, United Kingdom

1732~, United Kingdom

Identifier
W.49-2002
Acquisition
Accepted by HM Government in lieu of Inheritance Tax and allocated to the Victoria and Albert Museum for display at Houghton Hall
Collection
Depiction
Dimension
55.2 cm (depth)
74.5 cm (depth)
90.2 cm (height)
67.2 cm (width)
74.5 cm (width)
57.5 cm (width)
69 cm (width)
Production time
Production place
Type of object

Description

Armchair, carved and gilded walnut, with green velvet cover trimmed with metal-thread braid, Britain, ca. 1732 Armchair, the back rectangular with rounded top corners, and arms, part upholstered, with ends carved with masks on carved supports; cabriole legs terminating in paw feet, the tops of the legs carved with lion masks, the deep seat rails curved in profile and carved in the centre front with a satyr mask and in the centre of the sides with shells, all flanked by scrolling foliage. Covered in green velvet. This armchair has a fixed cover of lime-green velvet with metal-thread braid This chair belongs to the large set commissioned by Sir Robert Walpole, England's first prime minister, for the State Apartment at Houghton Hall, Norfolk. The house was built between 1722 and 1735, and the State Apartment was furnished by about 1732. The seat furniture is carved naturalistically with lion's masks and legs, and gilded on a ground made gritty with sand. The covers are of green velvet, to match the State Bed designed by William Kent. Although this set of chairs is very different in style from the suite in the Second State Apartment at Houghton (V&A Museum nos W.1-22-2002), it may be by the same maker, possibly Thomas Roberts junior, who is known to have worked for Walpole. The same rather distinctive striped ticking is used for the upholstery foundation. On loan to Houghton Hall.