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Table

Carving attributed to: John Welch (American, 1711–1789)
1745–60, with later alterations
Object Place: Boston, Massachusetts

Medium/Technique Mahogany, pine, marble
Dimensions Overall: 73.7 x 72.4 x 43.5 cm (29 x 28 1/2 x 17 1/8 in.)
Credit Line The M. and M. Karolik Collection of Eighteenth-Century American Arts
Accession Number41.586
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsAmericas
The only element of this table that is old or authentic may be the central leg. Exquisitely carved with a human face emerging out of foliage and C-scrolls and terminating in a bold, claw-and-ball foot, the leg has been attributed to Boston's leading eighteenth-century carver. The leg may have been saved from a damaged piece of furniture, with a new table fashioned to exhibit and highlight it. Since figural carving is extremely rare in eighteenth-century Boston, this table remains important, if only for its one leg.

Catalogue Raisonné Eighteenth-Century American Arts No. 50
ProvenanceEarly history uncertain (possibly in the Fayerweather or Carpenter families); 1931, published in Antiques (September 1931) by Wallace Nutting (antiquarian) as "privately owned" with the story that Nutting discovered the piece in "an old home in Cambridge, where its known history dates back more than a century"; by 1939, owned by or on commission with Israel Sack (antiques dealer), New York, New York; 1939, purchased from Israel Sack by Maxim Karolik, Boston, Massachusetts and Newport, Rhode Island; 1941, given by Karolik to the MFA as part of The M. and M. Karolik Collection of 18th century American Arts. Balch family. (?)