SAPFM Museum Furniture Collection

Armchair (2 of 4)

Royal Savonnerie Manufactory, Chaillot Workshops (French, est. 1627)

Armchair (2 of 4), Royal Savonnerie Manufactory, Chaillot Workshops (French, est. 1627), before 1717, carved wood, Savonneri…
Maker
Royal Savonnerie Manufactory, Chaillot Workshops (French, est. 1627)
Date
before 1717
Medium
carved wood, Savonnerie knotted-pile (symmertrical rug knot) upholstery; wool, hemp
Dimensions
Overall: 121.9 x 70.5 x 55.3 cm (48 x 27 3/4 x 21 3/4 in.)
Form
Chair
Origin
France
Culture
France, 18th century
Museum
Cleveland Museum of Art
Accession
1947.183.3
Credit line
John L. Severance Fund
These chairs belong to a suite that includes a settee (also in the CMA's collection) and a tapestry made for a count and countess to mark their wedding in 1717. Furniture of this scale was usually placed against the wall in grand reception halls, more as a display of wealth than for use. Upholstered in Savonnerie tapestries, this suite was among the most treasured and expensive example anyone could own and typically reserved for royalty. To add decorative and intellectual interest to the textiles, weavers incorporated symbols depicting various stories from the Fables of Jean de La Fontaine, published from 1668 to 1694 and largely adapted from Aesop and other early storytellers.
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