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Auction archive: Lot number 132

A Pair of Baroque Walnut Armchairs

Fine Furniture and Decorative Arts
17 Jul 2017 - 18 Jul 2017
Estimate
US$800 - US$1,200
Price realised:
US$2,125
Auction archive: Lot number 132

A Pair of Baroque Walnut Armchairs

Fine Furniture and Decorative Arts
17 Jul 2017 - 18 Jul 2017
Estimate
US$800 - US$1,200
Price realised:
US$2,125
Beschreibung:

A Pair of Baroque Walnut Armchairs french or italian, 17th/18th century each having a padded back and stuffover seat within open arms having scroll hand holds, the upholstery worked to depict figures in various landscapes, raised on carved fore-legs joined by an openwork scroll panel and a turned H-form stretcher, ending in scroll feet. Height 47 1/2 inches. Estimate $ 800-1,200 Property of the Minnesota Historical Society from the Mary Griggs Burke Collection About Mary Griggs Burke: In the exhibition and collection catalogue Bridge of Dreams, published in conjunction with the 2000 Metropolitan Museum of Art's Masterpieces of Japanese Art from the Mary Griggs Burke Collection, Burke credits her mother, Mary Livingston Griggs, for developing her astute eye and passion for collecting. Livingston Griggs raised the family in her St. Paul, Minnesota childhood home and filled it with old master paintings and European furniture collected from her travels. The Burbank-Livingston-Griggs house, now on the National Register of Historic Places, was built in Saint Paul in 1862-1865. Of her childhood home, Mary Griggs Burke wrote, "Throughout mother's life she found much pleasure in collecting antiques, which on a large scale included complete eighteenth-century paneled European rooms, which were - cleverly and amazingly - installed in the Victorian house." In 1968, Mary Griggs Burke bequeathed the home to the Minnesota Historical Society for use as a museum. The Society operated the museum until 1996 when it deaccessioned and sold the house; the contents were deaccessioned in 2016. Regarding the house's influence on her collecting, she said, "By the time Mother had finished redoing it, the mid-nineteenth century house contained such a variety of styles and objects from different cultures, including a few Chinese ceramics, that it was like a museum. Living in such an environment undoubtedly helped me to develop a respect for rare, carefully crafted objects, and being surrounded by so many interesting things probably gave me an eclectic taste. Collecting was in my blood." Mary Griggs Burke's donation of objects to the Met provided the museum with one of the most impressive collections of Japanese art in the world, and she befittingly came to be known as "the Mother of Japanese Art in America." Leslie Hindman Auctioneers is honored to work with the Minnesota Historical Society on the Mary Griggs Burke Collection. Each in overall good, stable condition. Old scuffs, marks and scratches throughout consistent with age and use. Upholstery dirty with scattered repairs. One chair with restoration to arms near hand rests. Additional images available upon request.

Auction archive: Lot number 132
Auction:
Datum:
17 Jul 2017 - 18 Jul 2017
Auction house:
Leslie Hindman Auctioneers
1338 West Lake Street
Chicago IL 60607
United States
info@lesliehindman.com
+1 (0)312 280 1212
Beschreibung:

A Pair of Baroque Walnut Armchairs french or italian, 17th/18th century each having a padded back and stuffover seat within open arms having scroll hand holds, the upholstery worked to depict figures in various landscapes, raised on carved fore-legs joined by an openwork scroll panel and a turned H-form stretcher, ending in scroll feet. Height 47 1/2 inches. Estimate $ 800-1,200 Property of the Minnesota Historical Society from the Mary Griggs Burke Collection About Mary Griggs Burke: In the exhibition and collection catalogue Bridge of Dreams, published in conjunction with the 2000 Metropolitan Museum of Art's Masterpieces of Japanese Art from the Mary Griggs Burke Collection, Burke credits her mother, Mary Livingston Griggs, for developing her astute eye and passion for collecting. Livingston Griggs raised the family in her St. Paul, Minnesota childhood home and filled it with old master paintings and European furniture collected from her travels. The Burbank-Livingston-Griggs house, now on the National Register of Historic Places, was built in Saint Paul in 1862-1865. Of her childhood home, Mary Griggs Burke wrote, "Throughout mother's life she found much pleasure in collecting antiques, which on a large scale included complete eighteenth-century paneled European rooms, which were - cleverly and amazingly - installed in the Victorian house." In 1968, Mary Griggs Burke bequeathed the home to the Minnesota Historical Society for use as a museum. The Society operated the museum until 1996 when it deaccessioned and sold the house; the contents were deaccessioned in 2016. Regarding the house's influence on her collecting, she said, "By the time Mother had finished redoing it, the mid-nineteenth century house contained such a variety of styles and objects from different cultures, including a few Chinese ceramics, that it was like a museum. Living in such an environment undoubtedly helped me to develop a respect for rare, carefully crafted objects, and being surrounded by so many interesting things probably gave me an eclectic taste. Collecting was in my blood." Mary Griggs Burke's donation of objects to the Met provided the museum with one of the most impressive collections of Japanese art in the world, and she befittingly came to be known as "the Mother of Japanese Art in America." Leslie Hindman Auctioneers is honored to work with the Minnesota Historical Society on the Mary Griggs Burke Collection. Each in overall good, stable condition. Old scuffs, marks and scratches throughout consistent with age and use. Upholstery dirty with scattered repairs. One chair with restoration to arms near hand rests. Additional images available upon request.

Auction archive: Lot number 132
Auction:
Datum:
17 Jul 2017 - 18 Jul 2017
Auction house:
Leslie Hindman Auctioneers
1338 West Lake Street
Chicago IL 60607
United States
info@lesliehindman.com
+1 (0)312 280 1212
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