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Jacobean Asian Art and Furniture

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Armchair, X-Frame, 19th Century, English Jacobean-Style, Upholstered in a Green
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
Surmounted with finials above the rectangular back and seat with a loose cushion. The scroll arms are supported by an ‘X’ frame with stretchers.  Back height including finials 123 cm., 48 ½ in., seat height 55 cm., 21 ½ in., Width 66 cm., 26 in, depth 64 cm, 25 in. This was the first model of upholstered chair first recorded in 1466, and enormous expense was lavished on the silk or velvet upholstery. It was a chair of state and confined to Royal Palaces and a few Great Houses where it would have been in a room of state. This chair is upholstered in a lavish, green silk damask brocaded with gold threat and traditionally embellished with bullion fringe. The ‘X’ chair evolved in the late 15th-early 16th century. In the Ewelme Inventory of 1466 the Dukes of Suffolk travelled to Oxfordshire with ‘a chaire of tymbre of astate covered w blue cloth of gold and panells of copper..a case of lether thereto’ in which the chair would have been packed. The woodwok on ‘X’ was completely covered with silk or velvet, the seat consisting of loose cushions resting on webbing and were confined to Royal Palaces and a few Great Houses. The more important of Henry VIII’s embroidered chairs were of this type and they are represented in portraits of the age. Cardinal Wolsey’s standard of luxury exceeded that of other courtiers and in his inventory a large number of these upholstered chairs are noted. Early into Elizabeth’s reign the Royal coffer-maker William Green supplied the Crown with the frames for a number of ‘X’ chairs and provided the coverings of gold, velvet and other rich fabrics trimmed with fringes and secured with copper nails on which enormous sums were expended. Towards the end of the Elizabethan period richly upholstered ‘X’ chairs were supplied by coffer makers and became fashionable in great establishments rivaling continental standards of luxury in furnishings. When an inventory was taken in 1583 at Kenilworth castle a number of chairs of this type were among the furniture in the possession of the Earl of Leicester, Robert Dudley. Although their position was not recorded, it can be assumed that they were in a room of state : ‘ A chaire of crimson velvet, the seate and back partlie embrothered with R.L in clothe of gold and the beare and ragged staffe in clothe of silver garnished wtihe lace and studded with gilt nailes...
Category

Late 19th Century Antique Jacobean Asian Art and Furniture

Materials

Silk

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