This is a variation on a theme that constantly recurs throughout the history of furniture – the chair or stool on an X-frame. This is a form that has origins in ancient Egypt, but is best documented in Ancient Rome, where it was known as a curule seat (sella curule). It was a marker of power for the magistrate, consul or leader seated on it, and tended to be a folding construction to allow for portability. This ancient political precedent is what sees its form frequently revived in Europe, even in periods that took lesser influence from Antiquity – the X-frame was particularly widespread in medieval Italy, for example, in a folding variation known as the ‘Savonarola’ chair. They were also prominent under Napoleon and recur in French Empire forms.
When considering the 17th century specifically, there is a relevant 1605 portrait of James I in the Museo del Prado (catalogue number P001954): dressed in the luxuriant splendour of divine kingship, he leans against a prominent chair with an X frame, bolstering the impression of formidable power by drawing on the decorative forms of Antiquity. The V&A also holds an X-frame chair from 1661 that was used by William Juxon, the Archbishop of Canterbury, during the coronation of Charles II (accession number W.13-1928). In terms of similarities with the present lot, though, the closer comparable example in the V&A is the late-seventeenth or early-eighteenth century example with the accession number W.6-1958 – this may not have the rich upholstery of this example, but has strikingly similar treatment of the legs, including the arrangement of the stretchers.