NEW YORK, NY.- The John Townsend Chippendale Block-and-Shell Document Cabinet realized $3,442,500 at
Christies sale of Important American Furniture and Folk Art. A rare survival of colonial Newports merchant elite, this cabinet is signed by John Townsend, Newport, Rhode Island, 1755-1765, and was sold with the approval of the directors of the Chipstone Foundation to benefit the acquisitions funds.
John Hays, Deputy Chairman, Christies Americas, comments: Christies was honored to have been entrusted by the directors of the Chipstone Foundation with the sale of the block-and-shell document cabinet signed by John Townsend, which achieved $3.4 million a record price of for an American document cabinet. This remarkable object was signed twice by the renowned Colonial cabinet maker, John Townsend, and established the second highest price for the maker.
Diminutive in scale (27 ¾ inches high) but monumental in importance, this extraordinary document cabinet with drawers is a unique form signed by famed cabinetmaker John Townsend (1733-1809) and stands as his earliest known work with a tripartite block-and-shell façade, a design that would become a Newport classic. This document cabinet was long thought to have been dated 1756 and was accordingly revered as the earliest dated piece of block-and-shell furniture with both the convex and concave shaping. While its inscriptions do not include a date, the cabinet may still be the earliest example of a fully developed block-and-shell façade, and as such would represent one of the most significant innovations in early American furniture design. The cabinet is one of only six examples of tripartite block-and-shell furniture signed or labeled by Townsend, four of which are in public collections.
With exquisite dovetailing, meticulously planned mahogany drawer linings and carving of the highest caliber, this cabinet exhibits Townsends remarkable skills, which he had mastered at a relatively young age. Townsend's distinctive calligraphic script is seen not only in the two signatures, but also on the backs of the drawers in the lettering running from A through H, which are exceptionally well preserved in graphite. The cabinet is diminutive in scale and may have stood upon a table where in a raised position it would have resembled the upper section of a desk-and-bookcase. A portable form, the cabinet was discovered in a London private collection in the 1950s, sold at Christies London in 1955, and subsequently part of the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Stone, the founders of the Chipstone Foundation.