SAPFM Museum Furniture Collection

Side Chair

Artist unknown (American, 18th century)

Side Chair, Artist unknown (American, 18th century), 1760–85, Mahogany with oak, maple, and upholstery
Maker
Artist unknown (American, 18th century)
Date
1760–85
Medium
Mahogany with oak, maple, and upholstery
Dimensions
93.3 × 54.6 × 44.8 cm (36 3/4 × 21 1/2 × 17 5/8 in.)
Form
Chair
Origin
Boston
Museum
Art Institute of Chicago
Accession
1991.266
Credit line
Helen Bowen Blair Fund
Designs for American furniture of the colonial period were usually based on European precedents, whether from an exact prototype, from designs in pattern books, or from the memory of an immigrant craftsman. In the case of this chair, the craftsman based the design on both an English chair that was imported into Boston sometime around 1750 and on a design plate from Thomas Chippendale's pattern book, The Gentleman and the Cabinetmaker's Director, published in 1762. With its delicate proportions and crisp carvings, this chair is one of the boldest expressions of the Boston Rococo style.
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