Lot 269

ATTRIBUTED TO HENRY T. WYSE (1870-1951) FOR THE SCOTTISH GUILD OF HANDICRAFTS
ARTS & CRAFTS MAHOGANY SIDE CHAIR, CIRCA 1900

Auction: 14 February 2019 at 10:00 GMT
Description
the tapered back with inset panel painted in oils with a tree in a landscape, the drop-in seat re-upholstered in Silver Studios woven fabric and raised on square tapering legs linked by stretchers
Dimensions
39.5cm wide, 105cm high, 39cm deep
Footnote
Literature: Cumming, Elizabeth and Jack, Heather 'Henry Taylor Wyse: Artist Teacher Craftsman', Aberbrothock 2016, pp.45-54
Note: Between 1897 and 1899 Henry Taylor Wyse was entering competitions in The Studio magazine, including designs for furniture. Whilst living in Arbroath on the east coast, he began exhibiting some of his new furniture at the Dundee Graphic Art Society, produced in collaboration with the cabinetmaker William Middleton. By 1902 he was combining the fine and applied arts by contributing painted panels which were incorporated into Middleton's furniture, which he had designed. This form of decorated furniture reflected sophisticated middle-class taste of the time, initiated by firms like Morris & Co. and promoted at the turn of the century by figures such as C.R. Ashbee and M.H. Baillie Scott. Between 1900 and 1902 Wyse published catalogues of their designs under the title 'Simple Furniture'. The furniture was promoted through the Scottish Guild of Handicraft, inspired by Ashbee's Guild of Handicraft, and set up with his friend Robert Maclaurin in 1898. Essentially a co-operative of independent like-minded craftsmen, the Guild promoted its members works at its gallery in Glasgow before moving to premises in Stirling in 1906.
