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'Greek' Chair

Designed by Edward William Godwin
(1833-86)
Manufactured by representatives of William Watt


Walnut; the upholstery of later date
40 1/4 in (102.2 cm) x 16 3/4/ in (42.6) x 19 1/4/ in (49.5 cm)
English (London), circa 1885.


LITERATURE:
Susan Weber Soros, The Secular Furniture of E.W. Godwin, 1999, no.185
Decorative Arts 1900, ex'n cat., Detroit Institute of Arts, 1994, no.12.


PROVENANCE:

Vereker Hamilton; by descent to Elizabeth, 2nd Baroness Kilbracken; by descent to Katherine Godley; thence by descent.


Godwin's design for this chair was published in The Building News, 18 December 1875. Under the heading 'Working Drawings of Inexpensive Furniture' and described as 'Cheap chair', it was shown 'Three ways'. The present model is traditionally known as the 'Greek' chair because the legs are based on a chair depicted in the Parthenon (Elgin) marbles in the collection of the British Museum, London.


Three identical chairs survive. The first is in the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the second in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (see H. Blairman & Sons, Furniture and Works of Art, 2000, no. 20, and the present example.


Private collection

 

Aes Arch. Godwin.jpg