Armchair from Eaton Hall A. Pugin, 1823 This photo shows the replicated original upholstery. The Victoria & Albert Museum |
This
magnificent chair is the work of Augustus Charles Pugin, painter, architect and
father of A.W.N. Pugin (famous for his work on the Palace of Westminster). The chair is covered in a contemporary red
and gold upholstery which was made based on the pattern of the original scheme,
using fragments of what remained and referring to illustrations of the chair
made by John Buckler. This new covering replaced a drab Twentieth Century upholstery (see picture below).
Buckler
had drawn the chair when he was commissioned to create paintings which would
record the newly decorated interiors of Eaton Hall in 1826. This chair was one of a pair which was used
in the drawing room of Eaton Hall in Cheshire, the home of Robert, Second Earl
Grosvenor. Lord Grosvenor was so enamored
of this chair and its mate that he commissioned smaller copies to be made for
use in Eaton Hall’s dining room. The
simplified set was covered in blue leather to match the blue and gold brocade
draperies in the room.
This chair and its mate (and copies) was crafted of carved and gilded mahogany set with pierced gothic tracery and panels of carved and gilded gothic foliage. They were made in Lancaster by Gillow & Co. based on Pugin’s designs, circa 1823.
This chair and its mate (and copies) was crafted of carved and gilded mahogany set with pierced gothic tracery and panels of carved and gilded gothic foliage. They were made in Lancaster by Gillow & Co. based on Pugin’s designs, circa 1823.
Here we see the upholstery which was replaced. |
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