Side Chair

Description

Before becoming one of the best known Connecticut furniture makers of the late 1700s, Eliphalet Chapin worked in New York City and Philadelphia. His furniture shows evidence of that experience. For example, the back of this chair has a splat design found on New York pieces, while the untapered rear legs and the shell carving on the crest rail are typical of Philadelphia workmanship. The use of cherry, however, is characteristic of Connecticut furniture. This chair comes from a set recorded in Chapin's account book as having been supplied to Ebenezer Grant to form part of the dowry of his daughter Anne, who married the Reverend John Marsh of Wethersfield, Connecticut, on December 6, 1775. The set was owned by their descendants until 1986.

Provenance

Ebenezer Grant (1706-1797), East Windsor, CT; his daughter Anne, wife of Rev. Marsh, Wethersfield, CT; their daughter Mary Marsh, wife of William Watson; to their daughter Lydia Marsh Watson (1786-1880); to her niece Sarah (Watson) Dana (1814-1902), wife of Richard Henry Dana, Jr; hence by descent to owners in 1986; but geneology quoted in Sotheby cat. confusing and in part incorrect.

Side Chair

Eliphalet Chapin

c. 1775

Accession Number

1986.81

Medium

cherry

Dimensions

Overall: 96.8 x 59.1 x 51.1 cm (38 1/8 x 23 1/4 x 20 1/8 in.)

Classification

Furniture and woodwork

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund