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Side chair

1735–1760

Dallas Museum of Art

Dallas Museum of Art
Dallas, United States

Made of maple with a heavy ball stretcher in front, rush seat, and a careful gradation of back slats, this side chair is a particularly well-preserved example of a popular type. Because of its well-liked style, relative comfort, and affordability, chairs such as these were made well into the early years of the twentieth century and can be found in a number of collections, both public and private. Centers of production included the Delaware River Valley of Philadelphia and South Jersey, but this type of chair shows a strong European influence as well. By grafting the ball-and-ring stretcher of fashionable New England chairs onto a local tradition of Germanic slat-back chairs, Philadelphia chairmakers were able to more effectively compete in the marketplace.


**Drawn from**

* Mabel Crispin Powers, "The Ware Chairs of South Jersey," _Antiques,_ Volume 9 (May 1926): 307-311.
* Richard H. Randall, Jr., _American Furniture in the Museum of Fine Arts Boston_, Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 1965, 178-79.

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  • Title: Side chair
  • Date Created: 1735–1760
  • Physical Dimensions: Overall: 41 3/8 x 18 1/4 x 16 3/4 in. (105.08 x 46.35 x 42.54 cm.)
  • Type: Furnishings
  • External Link: https://www.dma.org/object/artwork/3136426/
  • Medium: Maple and rush
  • Credit Line: Dallas Museum of Art, The Faith P. and Charles L. Bybee Collection, gift of Faith P. Bybee
Dallas Museum of Art

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