Chair (sedia) painted with exotic figures
Unknown (Italian)
Item type:furnitureDate of creation:1725-1750Height:109.0 cm (42 15/16 in.)Width:52.5 cm (20 11/16 in.)Depth:45.5 cm (17 15/16 in.)Technique / Medium:painted wood (walnut)Place of creation:ItaliaDescription
This chair's center slat shows a man playing a tambourine while a woman dances. It is one of three now displayed in the Gardner Museum's Early Italian Room, described on their website as follows: The slats on this set of chairs are delightfully painted with various figures in exotic ancient Middle Eastern, African, or Asian garb. Although painted furniture is often connected with Venice, the chairs possess an unusual mixture of stylistic forms and decorative designs, and may have been made in central Italy, perhaps Lucca or Rome. Isabella Stewart Gardner first placed the chairs in her Chinese Room, where they accorded beautifully with the eclectic mixture of Japanese and Chinese objects, as well as nineteenth-century paintings.They are now arranged among painted cassone and altarpieces. Gentile Bellini’s Seated Scribe, displayed in the same gallery, strengthens the links between the arts of Italy and the East. || Source: Fausto Calderai, "Chairs," in Eye of the Beholder, edited by Alan Chong et al. (Boston: ISGM and Beacon Press, 2003): 129.
Iconclass
43C92one pair dancing; man and woman dancing as a couple
Instruments [MIMO Code] (notes)
Tambourine [2746]
RIdIM images


Image URLs
image link 1RIdIM record id
5589