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Armchair

Additional Title(s)
  • Slatback Chair
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Daten.d.
Mediummaple and rush
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. Gail-Oxford Collection
Label TextTall, narrow, slat-back chairs were very popular in America in the second quarter of the 18th century. Often made in sets of six or eight and decorated in a variety of paint colors and finishes, they were produced in both rural and urban shops. Rush seats such as the one seen here could be ordered in a variety of weaves and in degrees of quality ranging from fine to superfine. Prices varied accordingly. This handsome chair has elegant, pointed, bulb-shaped finials, five graduated slats with a gracefully arched profile on both the top and bottom edges, and a double vase-and-ring stretcher. These features are typical of chairs produced in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and throughout the Delaware
River Valley.
Status
Not on view
Object number2017.5.11
Armchair
Unknown, American
ca. 1700
Object number: 2017.5.67
Baluster-back Armchair
Unknown, American
ca. 1760-1790
Object number: 2020.15.9
Windsor Armchair
Unknown, American, 18th Century
ca. 1780-1800
Object number: 2017.5.27
Corner chair
Unknown, American
18th century
Object number: 2016.25.62
Chair
Unknown, American
ca. 1690-1700
Object number: L2015.41.107
Windsor Armchair
Unknown, American
ca. 1780
Object number: 2016.25.63
Slat-back Armchair
Unknown, American
ca. 1740
Object number: 2016.25.65
Comb-back Windsor Armchair with D Seat
Unknown, American
ca. 1760
Object number: 2016.25.74
Windsor Armchair
Unknown, American
n.d.
Object number: 2016.25.71
Child’s Ladder-back Armchair
Unknown, American
ca. 1800
Object number: 2016.25.72
Birdcage Windsor Armchair
Unknown, American
ca. 1800
Object number: 2016.25.73
Windsor Armchair
Unknown, American
ca. 1780
Object number: 2016.25.64