Easy Chair

CultureAmerican
Titles
  • Easy Chair
Datec. 1820–1830
Made inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
MediumMahogany; ash and yellow-poplar
Dimensions48 × 31 1/4 × 32 3/4 in. (121.9 × 79.4 × 83.2 cm)
Credit LineThe Bayou Bend Collection, gift of Mrs. Fred T. Couper, Jr.
Object numberB.79.295
Current Location
Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens
Chillman Parlor
On view

Explore Further

Department
Bayou Bend
Object Type
Description

Turned and carved front legs and acanthus-carved Grecian scrolled arm fronts provide a stylistic update and an interesting adaptation of the basic easy chair form introduced more than a century earlier. Traditionally a bedchamber form made for use by the elderly, many easy chairs were originally fitted out under the seat with a removable board with circular hole to receive a chamber pot (see B.60.93). Surviving moldings under the seat indicate such was the case for the Bayou Bend example.

Technical notes: Mahogany (legs); ash (seat rails), yellow-poplar (narrow strip inside right seat rail).

Related examples: A very similar example without the leaf carving in the arm fronts, also fitted out as a commode chair, is at Winterthur (acc. no. 88.14); an example thought to be from New York or New England is in a private collection in Natchez, Mississippi (Cooper 1993, p. 216, fig. 173).

Book excerpt: David B. Warren, Michael K. Brown, Elizabeth Ann Coleman, and Emily Ballew Neff. American Decorative Arts and Paintings in the Bayou Bend Collection. Houston: Princeton Univ. Press, 1998.


Provenance[Kenneth Hammitt, Woodbury, Connecticut]; purchased by Mary Frances Bowles Couper (1914–2009), Houston; given to MFAH, 1979.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
[no inscriptions]
[no marks]

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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scan from file photograph
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