![]() |
A detail of Bunny Mellon's chairs, Lot 1301, Sale N09247. Sotheby's, New York. |
![]() |
Bunny Mellon's set of 'loop' chairs. Lot 1301, Sale NO9247. Sotheby's, NY. Estimated: $60,000 to $80,000. Sold: $181,000 (with buyer's premium). |
![]() |
The chairs as they appeared in DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH FURNITURE. Image via Emily Evans Eerdmans |
As documented in an article by Shax Riegler in the January, 2009 issue of "The Magazine Antiques," the chairs were formerly owned by noted collector Frank Green, and illustrated in A HISTORY OF ENGLISH FURNITURE by Percy MacQuoid, first published in four volumes from 1904 to 1908. (The chairs also appeared in the DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH FURNITURE, FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO THE LATE GEORGIAN PERIOD.)
![]() |
A chair from the same set appears when "Country Life" magazine publishes photos of the home of founder Edward Burgess Hudson at 15 Queen's Gate, London. Image via Country Life Picture Library. |
![]() |
The Yellow Bedroom at Ditchley Park showing one of the side chairs. Watercolor by Alexandre Serebriakoff. |
![]() |
The Writing Room at Ditchley Park showing the antique armchair. Watercolor by Alexandre Serebriakoff. |
![]() |
Cover of the 1976 auction catalog showing two of the side chairs. Image via Emily Evans Eerdmans. |
![]() |
A Mellon arm chair, Lot 1301, as it was displayed in the pre-sale exhibition. Photo courtesy of Christopher Spitzmiller |
![]() |
Views of the pre-sale exhibition at Sotheby's showing the display of the eight chairs of Lot 1301. Photo courtesy of Christopher Spitzmiller. |
And Furthermore
The Devoted Classicist has been a fan of the late Rachel "Bunny" Mellon since her contributions to the gardens at the White House. Starting with the Rose Garden in 1961 and then the East Garden, dedicated as the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden in 1965, the heiress (Listerine) who married into an even larger fortune attracted attention in the community of those appreciating the mix of the formal and informal in residential garden design. In the early 1990s, an Attingham classmate who was a foundation employee working from the Brick House gave me some insight into the then-relatively-private Mellons and their 4,000 acre estate (now about 2,000 acres listed for sale with 40 structures for $70 million) Oak Spring Farm near Upperville, Virginia.
Auction catalogs can be an invaluable resource for studying (both fine and) the decorative arts. However, interior views shown in catalogs are routinely rearranged to give a better representation of the lots offered; too seldom are they an accurate record of the original setting. Nor can the descriptions be counted on as 100% accurate, even in the most prestigious and expensive catalogs.
Despite declarations from self-appointed tastemakers and arbiters of style/design that traditional decoration is passé, there has been a media frenzy surrounding Interiors, the three day auction of the furnishings from the estate of the late Mrs. Mellon with proceeds to benefit the Gerard B. Lambert Foundation, a horticultural foundation which will continue to operate the library at Oak Spring. While it is true that spare, neutral, do-it-yourself schemes still remain the most popular trend in interior design, clearly there is still interest in antiques and decoration among those in-the-know. This successful sale is a reminder that one should follow one's own taste and not what is the so-called current fashion.