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High chest of drawers, ca. 1762–75
American
Mahogany, tulip poplar, yellow pine; 91 3/4 x 44 5/8 x 24 5/8 in. (233.1 x 113.4 x 62.6 cm)
John Stewart Kennedy Fund, 1918 (18.110.4)

The naturalistic carving on this tall chest is the work of highly skilled London-trained craftsmen who came to Philadelphia before the Revolutionary War to seek their fortunes. Characteristically, these makers took motifs from London pattern books and rearranged them to suit local taste. Thus, the scroll pediment with finial bust and the cornice moldings were taken directly from illustrations in Thomas Chippendale's famous Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director (1762, 1982.1133). The serpent-and-swan motif in the central bottom drawer is from Thomas Johnson's New Book of Ornaments (1762, 1985.1099).


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  • High chest of drawers, ca. 1762–75
    American
    Mahogany, tulip poplar, yellow pine; 91 3/4 x 44 5/8 x 24 5/8 in. (233.1 x 113.4 x 62.6 cm)
    John Stewart Kennedy Fund, 1918 (18.110.4)