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Sofa

Possibly by: Duncan Phyfe (American (born in Scotland), 1770–1854)
about 1820
Object Place: New York, New York

Medium/Technique Mahogany, cherry, cane, modern upholstery
Dimensions 86.36 x 193.7 x 59.1 cm (34 x 76 1/4 x 23 1/4 in.)
Credit Line The M. and M. Karolik Collection of Eighteenth-Century American Arts
Accession Number39.114
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsFurnitureSeating and beds
The base and S-curved legs of this sofa and the chairs, exhibited nearby, may be traced to the "sella curulis," an ancient Roman folding stool that was a seat of honor for magistrates who presided over the Roman republic. During the Middle Ages, this chair was used by heads of state and church leaders; it reemerged in the mid-eighteenth century in Europe, with the start of Neoclassicism. The so-called curule form carried centuries of associations with the classical world, power, and leadership-all qualities highly valued in the new American republic.

Catalogue Raisonné Eighteenth-Century American Arts No. 124
DescriptionBack: 3 panels of caned beneath rail with curved surface; carved with paired cornucopiae, wheat-ears, festooned drapery in low relief. Ends: panel of caning below rail similar to back; front support with reed-moulding sweeps into cross-legged supports. Seat: caned, front rail reed-moulded; rails mahogany, braces cherry. Legs: paired cross-legged supports, each with paw-foot terminals of brass; surfaces at front reed-moulded. Turned stretcher between front and back legs.
ProvenanceEarly history unknown; purchased, probably at auction, for The M. and M. Karolik Collection of Eighteenth-Century American Arts and given to the Museum in 1939 (Accession Date January 12, 1939)