View full screen - View 1 of Lot 857. Fine and Rare Chippendale Figured Walnut Dressing Table, Attributed with John Elliott (w. 1753-1760), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Circa 1760.

Property from the New-York Historical Society

Fine and Rare Chippendale Figured Walnut Dressing Table, Attributed with John Elliott (w. 1753-1760), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Circa 1760

Auction Closed

January 23, 04:26 PM GMT

Estimate

6,000 - 8,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Fine and Rare Chippendale Figured Walnut Dressing Table

Attributed with John Elliott (w. 1753-1760)

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Circa 1760 


Height 28 3/4 in. by Width 35 in. by Depth 28 1/8 in. 

Irving Sands Olds (1887-1963), New York.

With its skirt ornamented with a concave shell topped with a spray of three leaves, this dressing table relates to a group of surviving high chests and dressing tables that have been associated to both Maryland and Pennsylvania. The nearest example is a dressing table that descended in the Hollingsworth Morris family from Philadelphia.1 A high chest that belonged to the Mifflin family in the collection of the U.S. Department of State and another in the collection of Historic Odessa Foundation in the Corbit-Sharp House have a very similar concave shells and skirt profiles.2 Two other case pieces are known that have related skirt profiles and shells but their legs are carved with acanthus leaves and their shells are more fully lobed. The first is a high chest in the collection of the Baltimore Museum of Art that has historically been associated to Maryland due to its discovery on the eastern shore.3 The last is a dressing table in the Bayou Bend collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.4


1 William Macpherson Hornor, Jr, Blue book, Philadelphia Furniture: William Penn to George Washington, (Philadelphia, PA: Hornor, 1935), pl. 66 and Guy Bush advertisement, Magazine Antiques (October 1986) 569.


2 Clement E. Conger and Mary K. Itsell, Treasures of State: Fine and Decorative arts in the Diplomatic Reception Rooms of the U.S. Department of State, editor Alexandra W. Rollins, (New York: H.N. Abrams, 1991), pp. 90-2, no. 10.


3 William Voss Elder III and Jayne E. Stokes, American Furniture, 1680-1880, from the Collection of the Baltimore Museum of Art, (Baltimore, MD: The Museum, 1987), pp. 74-5, no. 50.


4 David B. Warren, Michael K. Brown, Elizabeth Ann Coleman, and Emily Ballew Neff, American Decorative arts and Paintings in the Bayou Bend Collection, (Houston, TX: Museum of Fine Arts; Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998), p. 79, no. F130.