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Ernest William Gimson (English, 1846–1919)
Sidney and Ernest Barnsley (Chipping Campden, England, active 1893–present)
about 1900
Medium/TechniqueWalnut, rosewood; oak, pine, brass
Dimensions128.5 x 88.5 x 52.5 cm (50 9/16 x 34 13/16 x 20 11/16 in.)
Credit LineBequest of Minna Heidelberger in memory of Herbert Heidelberger
Accession number1993.563
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsFurniture
Collections
Description
Gimson and the Barnsley brothers trained as architects and formed a significant group of furniture designers and makers who upheld the Arts and Craft Movement's ideals of truth to materials, honesty of construction, and fitness of purpose. In 1893 they founded a rural community of craftsmen to preserve and enhance traditional methods and lifestyle. The names of Gimson and Barnsley are synonymous with the Cotswold Style, with its extensive use of native woods, forms based on seventeenth-century prototypes, and visibility of construction.
ProvenanceMade for the White House, Clarendon Park, Leicester for Arthur Gimson, half-brother of the designer. 1925, purchased by private collection; January 28, 1986, sold from this private collection at Christie's, London, lot 172 [see note 1]. By 1993, with Peter Finer, Shipston-on-Stour, Warwickshire, England; 1993, sold by Peter Finer and bought by the MFA through the bequest of Minna Heidelberger in memory of Herbert Heidelberger. (Accession date: June 23, 1993)

NOTES:
[1] According to Christie's, London, catalogue, January 28, 1986, lot 172, the piece was purchased in 1925 along with The White House and other furniture.