Chair
Collinson and Lock
Category
Furniture
Date
1896
Materials
Rosewood, satinwood, textile
Measurements
93.5 x 47 x 43 cm
Place of origin
London
Order this imageCollection
Standen House and Garden, West Sussex
NT 1213973.3
Summary
One of three chairs from a rosewood and inlaid bedroom suite, supplied to James Beale by Collinson & Lock in 1896. Comprising a wardrobe, dressing table, marble-top washstand, a pedestal cupboard and three chairs, each chair crossbanded throughout in satinwood, the back with shaped uprights and solid vase splat, the padded seat in cream and green brocade and with shaped front seat rail, standing on cabriole legs. The rest of the suite is NT 1213972.
Full description
The London firm of Collinson & Lock were established in 1870 and a year later published their catalogue of ‘Sketches of Artistic Furniture’. Their principal designer was T.E. Collcutt and they enjoyed considerable success throughout the 1870s and 1880s, merging with Jackson & Graham in 1884. They were themselves taken over by Gillows in 1897. The firm became especially well-known for their signature rosewood furniture with ivory intarsia designed by Stephen Webb.
Provenance
Supplied to James Beale in July 1896 by Collinson & Lock, 76-80 Oxford Street, London, part of 'A handsomely inlaid rosewood bedroom suite' at a cost of £294.
Makers and roles
Collinson and Lock, furniture manufacturer