European Furniture, Silver, & Ceramics

European Furniture, Silver, & Ceramics

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 94. A Matched Set of Eight George II Style Walnut Armchairs, Second Quarter 20th Century.

The Passion of American Collectors: Property of Barbara and Ira Lipman

A Matched Set of Eight George II Style Walnut Armchairs, Second Quarter 20th Century

Lot Closed

April 19, 05:34 PM GMT

Estimate

15,000 - 25,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

The Passion of American Collectors: Property of Barbara and Ira Lipman


A Matched Set of Eight George II Style Walnut Armchairs, Second Quarter 20th Century


conserving the original upholstery, each with a pale gold velvet slip cover


height 35 ½ in.; width 21 in.; depth 22 in.

90 cm; 53.5 cm; 56 cm

Commissioned by Sir Winston Churchill
Thence by descent to the Countess Peel, granddaughter of Sir Winston and daughter of Lady Soames, Sir Winston Churchill's only surviving child
Sotheby's London, 4 June 2008, lot 190

The chairs, which were commissioned in the 1930s by Sir Winston Churchill, came about as the result of a dinner party that both Sir Winston and his wife Clementine attended, given by Sir Evan and Lady Dorothy Charteris at 118 Eaton Square. Churchill so admired the chairs both for their appearance and perhaps more importantly for their comfort that he later asked Lady Dorothy's permission to copy them.


The 1930s were not easy years for Churchill and later came to be known as the 'wilderness years'. For most of this period Churchill appeared to be at odds with popular opinion and it was not until 1939 when he entered the War Cabinet as First Lord of the Admiralty that his prophecies of the forthcoming war became apparent. 


Sir Evan Charteris was the son of the tenth Earl of Wemyss while his wife, Lady Dorothy, was the daughter of the fifth Earl of Kenmare. She had formerly been married to Lord Edward Arthur Grosvenor, son of the First Duke of Westminster. 


When considering the relationship between Charteris and Churchill it is interesting to note that the following account is recorded in Lady Soames's book Clementine Churchill:

In August 1939 Winston and Clementine and their daughter Mary went to stay in the south of France with Consuelo and Jacques Balsan. Also in the party was Paul Maze who was staying with his family at Le Moulin on the estate. But agreeable though the company was, here again political tensions lurked only just below the surface.  Paul Maze recounted in his diary on the 21 August 1939 how he had....... "Dined at the Château. Winston was fuming but with reason as the assemblée didn't see any danger ahead". 

Charteris was also present at this dinner and on retiring to bed shouted down to Paul Maze "Don't listen to him. He is a warmonger". Maze records "He (Winston) was depressed as he left". 


The chairs, which appear to have been commissioned in two stages, no doubt as personal finances allowed, were originally intended for 11 Morpeth Mansions, Churchill's home in London. They were later used by Sir Winston as his private dining chairs at his much loved home Chartwell in Kent.