Antique
English Furniture 16
tables and other pieces are coarser and clumsier
in appearance. The sabre leg was no longer used,
and almost all furniture had turned supports, often
tapered and carved.
Makers and Designers
The majority of English cabinet-makers are known
to us only by their names; only rarely is it possible
to say who made a particular piece. When this can
be done it is for one of two reasons: either because
the original bill has been preserved, or because
the name of the maker was inlaid, stamped or printed
on a paper label inside the article. The following
are some brief notes on a very few of the more important
designers and makers who worked in the eighteenth
century.
Samuel Bennett. A London maker who was working at
the beginning of the eighteenth century. A cabinet
is known with his printed label in one of the drawers.
Also, there are three cabinets in existence which
have his name inlaid on the inside of a door.
William Kent (1686 to 1748). An architect, and about
the first in England who not only designed a mansion
but also some of its contents. His furniture is heavy
in appearance and bears much carving, and as his
tables and chairs were usually gilt the effect is
very rich.
Thomas Chippendale (1718 to 1779). The best known
of all English cabinet-makers and designers. Born
at Otley, Yorkshire, he came to London and eventually
opened a workshop in St Martin's Lane. His book of
designs, The Gentleman and Cabinet Maker's Director,
was published first in 1752, enlarged in 1762, and
is the most famous of its kind in any country. Chippendale's
own firm made pieces for many of the biggest mansions
in England, and some of it remains in the rooms in
which it was first placed, and for which it was designed.
On his death, his business was carried on by his
son, also named Thomas.
John Cobb (died in 1778) and William Vile (died in
1767). Cobb is recorded as being notorious for a very
haughty manner, and stories are told of the difficulties
into which this led him.
English
Furniture
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