Gallery 102, American Art, first floor (Miller/Worley Gallery)
Main Building
Gallery 102, American Art, first floor (Miller/Worley Gallery)
Main Building
This armchair was made in the port of Campeche, Mexico, from where the export of such "Spanish chairs" gave rise to the name Campeche chair frequently used to describe this form. The short chimney-like finials and the shell-carved arched crest rail evoke the Cathedral of Saint Francis in Campeche, underscoring the relationship between the design of furniture and architecture. The proportions, dimensions, and hammock-like seat—here, with its original stamped leather—point to its use as a chair of ease or, in Spanish, butaca. The Mexican butaca combined elements of seating borrowed from Asian, indigenous American, and European cultures to create by the 1700s this unique design.
From the earliest colonial times, trade in furniture within the Americas was brisk and included butaca chairs. This is the earliest known butaca to survive.
Gallery 102, American Art, first floor (Miller/Worley Gallery)
Title: | Butaca Chair |
Date: | 1730-1770 |
Artist: | Artist/maker unknown, Mexican |
Medium: | Mahogany; leather upholstery; brass |
Dimensions: | 38 1/4 × 27 3/4 × 25 1/4 inches (97.2 × 70.5 × 64.1 cm) Height (at front seat rail): 15 1/4 inches (38.7 cm) Height (at front of arms): 21 1/4 inches (54 cm) Height (at back of arms): 24 inches (61 cm) |
Classification: | Furniture/Furnishings |
Credit Line: | Partial gift of Bowman Properties and purchased with the Thomas Skelton Harrison Fund, 2012 |
Accession Number: | 2012-178-1 |
Geography: | Probably made in Campeche, Mexico, North and Central America |
Context: | Period: Colonial |
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Gallery 102, American Art, first floor (Miller/Worley Gallery)
Main Building