|
.
|
baptized
June 5, 1718, Otley, Yorkshire, Eng.
d. November 1779, London.
, one of the leading cabinetmakers of 18th-century England and one of
the most perplexing figures in the history of furniture. His name is synonymous
with the Anglicized Rococo style. Nothing is known of Chippendale's early
life until his marriage to Catherine Redshaw in London in 1748. In 1753
he moved to St. Martin's Lane, where he maintained his showrooms, workshops,
and home for the rest of his life. In 1754 he published his celebrated
Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director; this work was the most important
collection of furniture designs theretofore published in England, illustrating
almost every type of mid-18th-century domestic furniture. The first and
second (1755) editions contained 160 plates, the third edition (published
in weekly parts, 1759-62), 200; the designs largely were Chippendale's
improvements on the fashionable furniture styles and designs of the time.
Chippendale was elected to the Society of Arts in 1759 but declined reelection
in the following year. Meanwhile he had become a partner with James Rannie,
apparently an upholsterer, who died in 1766. Chippendale continued the
business alone until he took Thomas Haig, Rannie's former clerk, into
partnership in 1771. Chippendale's first wife died in 1772, and he married
Elizabeth Davis in 1777. He died of tuberculosis. Although head of an
important firm, Chippendale was not the greatest of all English furniture
makers, and his exaggerated posthumous reputation is attributable largely
to the Director. A 20th-century scholarly investigation revealed him as
essentially a collector and extremely talented modifier of already existing
styles, notably Rococo, which is characteristically used in Chippendale's
many designs for mahogany chairs with intricately pierced slats and for
elaborately carved case furniture. Other designs in the Director show
the Rococo adaptations of Chinese and Gothic styles, some to be carved
in softwood and gilded or japanned (an East Asian process, similar to
lacquering). Though the plates in the Director are signed by Chippendale,
it is now accepted that some were by other designers in the Rococo style,
notably Henry Copland, who had published designs earlier, and Matthias
Lock, whom Chippendale had hired to provide special designs for clients.
Chippendale's name is given indiscriminately to great quantities of mid-18th-century
furniture; but, in fact, only comparatively few pieces can be assigned
with certainty to his workshop. Once established as head of a large firm,
he did not make furniture himself. Even pieces that resemble designs in
the Director cannot be attributed to his firm without further evidence,
for the designs were available to contemporary cabinetmakers, some of
whose names appear in the original list of subscribers. Where a piece
corresponds to a Director plate and where the original owner was a subscriber
to the Director or is known to have employed Chippendale, a tentative
attribution may be made, such as the extraordinary bedroom suite at Badminton
House, Gloucestershire, now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
The American colonies borrowed heavily from the Director. From the 1760s
onward, influenced by the great English designer Robert Adam, Chippendale
adopted the new Neoclassical style. Existing bills for work carried out
by his firm at Nostell Priory and Harewood House, Yorkshire, during this
final phase of his career identify the fine Neoclassical mahogany and
marquetried satinwood furniture with which he supplied these houses and
show that, as cabinetmakers and upholsterers, his firm undertook all branches
of interior decoration. His cornice for a Venetian window, sofas, and
dressing tables canopied with overdrapes are characteristic of the upholsterer's
art in the mid-18th century. The superb satinwood and inlaid commodes
(possibly designed by Thomas Chippendale II) and other furniture at Harewood
House are masterpieces of the cabinetmaker's craft, upon which his reputation
may safely rest.
[
NEXT] [
ARTISTS INDEX ] [
PREVIOUS]
|
|