PAIR OF LARGE VICTORIAN OAK AND PAINTED GLASTONBURY CHAIRS
MANNER OF A. W. N. PUGIN, MID 19TH CENTURY
£3,200
Auction: 28 October 2015 at 10:00 GMT
Description
of Gothic style, each with carved toprail above quatrefoil carved back and Lovelace coat of arms, solid seat with upholstered cushion, shaped arms, on x-framed legs with recessed brass castors, joined by a turned stretcher (2)
88cm wide, 117cm high, 75cm deep
Footnote
Provenance:
Comissioned for Horsley Towers, Surrey, probably between 1846 and 1860 (see illustration on page 14 of the catalogue, where they appear at the back wall).
Note:
An original medieval Glastonbury chair survived in the Bishop's Palace at Wells where Pugin almost certainly saw it, and another example was known at Strawberry Hill. Pugin copied the form exactly, although he did not add the original carved decoration to his versions (see V&A collection, British Galleries, Room 122e). The present examples are elaborately carved to the backs with coats of arms. The full coat of arms dates from the 30 June 1838, when William King, 8th Baron King of Ockham was elevated to the titles 1st Earl of Lovelace and Viscount Ockham. The chairs were likely to have been made after 1846, when the 1st Earl started living at Horsley Towers, and before 1860; as on the 29 Sept 1860 William King adopted the name and arms King-Noel by royal licence.
Literature:
Atterbury, Paul and Wainwright, Clive, Pugin: A Gothic Passion, London 1994, p. 132, illus. plate 233.
Provenance: Torridon House, Home of The Earls of Lovelace. Click here for further information: http://bit.ly/1MmigxQ