Armchair
The original purpose of this graceful armchair is not entirely clear.
The boldly incurving supports with padded armrests could indicate that this chair was intended for use as a fauteuil de bureau or desk chair making it possible to pull the chair close to the writing surface. Many desk chairs of this period, however, had seats which could be rotated but the seat of this particular armchair is fixed.
The back of the chair is slightly lower than customary possibly to facilitate its use at the dressing table as a fauteuil de toilette for hair dressing or wig powdering purposes. Just like desk chairs, dressing table chairs were often caned or covered in leather for practical reasons and they were sometimes fitted with a mechanism that allowed the seat to swivel.
Whatever the case might be, it is clear who was responsible for cutting and joining the frame of this chair which once may have had a caned back as well as a caned seat (now hidden beneath a pillow): Georges Jacob, one of the most important menuisiers or chair-makers during the second half of the eighteenth-century France, whose name is stamped underneath the front seat rail.
The carved decorative motifs of over-lapping coins, spiraling ribbon, scrolls, and spiral-twisted legs are all indicative of the neo-classic style of the 1780s.
The boldly incurving supports with padded armrests could indicate that this chair was intended for use as a fauteuil de bureau or desk chair making it possible to pull the chair close to the writing surface. Many desk chairs of this period, however, had seats which could be rotated but the seat of this particular armchair is fixed.
The back of the chair is slightly lower than customary possibly to facilitate its use at the dressing table as a fauteuil de toilette for hair dressing or wig powdering purposes. Just like desk chairs, dressing table chairs were often caned or covered in leather for practical reasons and they were sometimes fitted with a mechanism that allowed the seat to swivel.
Whatever the case might be, it is clear who was responsible for cutting and joining the frame of this chair which once may have had a caned back as well as a caned seat (now hidden beneath a pillow): Georges Jacob, one of the most important menuisiers or chair-makers during the second half of the eighteenth-century France, whose name is stamped underneath the front seat rail.
The carved decorative motifs of over-lapping coins, spiraling ribbon, scrolls, and spiral-twisted legs are all indicative of the neo-classic style of the 1780s.
Artwork Details
- Title: Armchair
- Maker: Georges Jacob (French, Cheny 1739–1814 Paris)
- Date: ca. 1785
- Culture: French
- Medium: Carved and gilded beech; caning; modern silk velvet
- Dimensions: H. 33-5/8 x W. 23-1/2 x D. 20 in. (85.4 x 59.7 x 50.8 cm)
- Classification: Woodwork-Furniture
- Credit Line: Gift of Commander and Mrs. Harold L. Crossman, 1982
- Object Number: 1982.449
- Curatorial Department: European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
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