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We have 703 guests online| Furniture Specific: Looking beyond labels |
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| Written by Fred Taylor |
| Tuesday, 30 June 2009 10:34 |
Isn't it exciting to go to an auction or a show and see a piece of furniture that actually has its maker's name on it? I don't mean Ethan Allen or Sears or Drexel. I mean somebody important - like one of the Stickleys or Hunzinger or Roux. Granted Roux's marks are a little hard to find, but they do exist in the form of stencils in the beginning all the way to fancy engraved paper labels after 1850. In fact, contrary to common opinion a great many individual cabinetmakers and turners marked their work in one way or another. Over 1,500 have been identified and classified, many in recent years. At one point it was thought that Duncan Phyfe had marked as few as 12 of his works and as many as 16. There may be room for doubt on that subject because Phyfe used a greater variety of marks than most of his contemporaries and it seems unlikely he would have gone to so much trouble to mark so few pieces. So how can you be sure that the label matches the actual maker and is truly part of the provenance? First you have to know a little something about the purported maker and what business he was in. A good example is the New Orleans cabinetmaker and wine merchant Prudent (aka Prudence) Mallard. He was born and trained in France and first went to America in 1829. But because New York did not suit his asthmatic condition he had moved to New Orleans by 1832. In the antebellum heights of New Orleans society he was famed as the maker of the best Rococo Revival furniture around. His signature pieces were the beds that fit only under the 18-foot ceilings of New Orleans mansions and area plantations. Those, coupled with armoires of sufficient space to hide a reclining illicit lover (according to one legend) made Mallard the toast of the town and his success enticed northern cabinetmakers like J. and J.W. Meeks to open retail branches in New Orleans. But a little investigation reveals that Mallard was also an importer of fine European goods, including furniture, for his select clientele. He is reported to have owned several ships, which he loaded with cotton in New Orleans, unloaded in Europe and reloaded with furniture for the return trip. He advertised his importation facilities along with his locally manufactured furniture and his active upholstery business. But did he actually make any of the furniture that made him famous? There appears to be doubt on that subject. According to Stephen Harrison, former associate curator of decorative arts at the Dallas Museum of Arts and former curator of decorative arts at the High Museum in Atlanta, Mallard's labels always said "manufactured by P. Mallard" or some variation of that phrase. Harrison contends that the word "manufactured" in this context simply means "assembled," as in "uncrated and assembled." Another interesting point is that there is no record of Mallard owning high capacity equipment and when Mallard's business was liquidated in 1874 there was no steam-powered machinery capable of making large furniture. Maybe it had been sold previously or maybe it never existed. Another pause for reflection occurs in the case of Robert J. Horner, the New York cabinetmaker and carver of so many outstanding examples of legendary winged griffins as decorative elements in his elaborately decorated and carved creations. After working as a clerk in a lace business Horner opened his own curtain and lace shop and then opened a retail furniture outlet in 1886. He soon began making his own furniture to sell and specialized in the Aesthetic Movement. Following that he turned out the many heavily carved pieces in oak and mahogany that utilized classical figures such as caryatids and the mythological creature the winged griffin as a primary element.
Then there is the matter of the name itself. Is it the name of the cabinetmaker or the name of the retailer? As we saw with Mallard even in the 19th century there were furniture retailers of considerable size and influence and they often had the right to label a piece of furniture any way they chose, no matter who made it. An example of this can be seen in the venerable name of Wanamaker found on some very fine furniture. Wanamaker's was an upscale retail department store in New York and Philadelphia and did not manufacture any furniture. John Wanamaker in Philadelphia founded Wanamaker's in 1861 and the family retained control of the stores and the name until 1978 when all was sold.
Send your comments, questions and pictures to Fred Taylor at P.O. Box 215, Crystal River, FL 34423 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . Visit his Web site at www.furnituredetective.com.
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 30 June 2009 12:48 |







Fred Taylor is a freelance writer based in central Florida, who earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in finance from the University of Florida. While he is perhaps better known in his role as a nationally syndicated columnist on the subject of antique furniture, he is interested in almost all things related to Florida. He has covered many auctions both inside and outside the Sunshine State for leading antiques trade publications. Fred and his wife, Gail, love to travel Florida’s highways and byways on a Harley-Davidson motorcycle.
