Very Rare Queen Anne Brown-Painted Maple Slat-Back Armchairpossibly by Solomon Fussell (c. 1704-1762) or William Savery (1721-1787)probably Philadelphia, PennsylvaniaCirca 1760 Retains a dark historic surface. Repairs to feet where rockers were later installed.Height 46 1/4 in. by Width 26 in. by Depth 20 in.; Seat Height 17 1/4 in.ProvenanceJoe Kindig, Jr. and Son, York, Pennsylvania; Christie’s, New York, Important American Furniture, Silver, Folk Art and Decorative Arts, June 23, 1993, sale 7710, lot 131; H.L. Chalfant, West Chester, Pennsylvania.LiteratureJoe Kindig, Jr. and Son advertisement, Magazine Antiques, vol. 53, no. 2, February 1948, inside front cover; Frances Gruber Safford, American Furniture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vol. 1, Early Colonial Period: The Seventeenth-Century and William and Mary styles, (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2007), n. 2, p. 50.Catalogue noteSolomon Fussell and/or William Savery are likely responsible for making this chair. Fussell, born in Yorkshire, immigrated to Philadelphia by 1725. He was likely trained by a German chairmaker due to the Germanic features present in his chairs. William Savery apprenticed with Fussell and continued to produce chairs in a similar style. For additional information on Solomon Fussell and William Savery see Benno Forman, “Delaware Valley 'Crookt Foot' and Slat-Back Chairs,” Winterthur Portfolio 15, Spring 1980, pp. 41-64, Frances Gruber Safford, American Furniture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vol. 1, Early Colonial Period: The Seventeenth-Century and William and Mary styles, (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2007), p. 48-50, no. 17, and Alexandra Alevizatos Kirtley, American Furniture 1650-1840: Highlights from the Philadelphia Museum of Art, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2020), p. 63, no. 25.
Very Rare Queen Anne Brown-Painted Maple Slat-Back Armchairpossibly by Solomon Fussell (c. 1704-1762) or William Savery (1721-1787)probably Philadelphia, PennsylvaniaCirca 1760 Retains a dark historic surface. Repairs to feet where rockers were later installed.Height 46 1/4 in. by Width 26 in. by Depth 20 in.; Seat Height 17 1/4 in.ProvenanceJoe Kindig, Jr. and Son, York, Pennsylvania; Christie’s, New York, Important American Furniture, Silver, Folk Art and Decorative Arts, June 23, 1993, sale 7710, lot 131; H.L. Chalfant, West Chester, Pennsylvania.LiteratureJoe Kindig, Jr. and Son advertisement, Magazine Antiques, vol. 53, no. 2, February 1948, inside front cover; Frances Gruber Safford, American Furniture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vol. 1, Early Colonial Period: The Seventeenth-Century and William and Mary styles, (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2007), n. 2, p. 50.Catalogue noteSolomon Fussell and/or William Savery are likely responsible for making this chair. Fussell, born in Yorkshire, immigrated to Philadelphia by 1725. He was likely trained by a German chairmaker due to the Germanic features present in his chairs. William Savery apprenticed with Fussell and continued to produce chairs in a similar style. For additional information on Solomon Fussell and William Savery see Benno Forman, “Delaware Valley 'Crookt Foot' and Slat-Back Chairs,” Winterthur Portfolio 15, Spring 1980, pp. 41-64, Frances Gruber Safford, American Furniture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vol. 1, Early Colonial Period: The Seventeenth-Century and William and Mary styles, (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2007), p. 48-50, no. 17, and Alexandra Alevizatos Kirtley, American Furniture 1650-1840: Highlights from the Philadelphia Museum of Art, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2020), p. 63, no. 25.
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