One of a pair of "Griffin Tripod" Stands
William Bullock
(English, 1773–1849)
George Bullock
(English, 1777/78–1818)
after 1805
Medium/TechniqueCast iron, wood, gesso, bronzed, painted, and gilded
Dimensions32 x 12 x 12 in. (81.3 x 30.5 cm x 30.5 cm)
Credit LineMuseum purchase with funds donated by Horace Wood Brock and the Frank B. Bemis Fund
Accession number2012.628.2
On View
On viewClassificationsFurniture
Collections
These griffin tripods are the earliest identified objects documenting the collaboration of the Bullock brothers. William’s innovative use of cast iron for fashionable, high-style furniture appears to be the earliest recorded example.
It is likely that William used George’s classical furniture to decorate the new Roman Gallery at his Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly, London, a museum which William commissioned to house his collection of curiosities brought back from the South Seas by Captain Cook (housed today in the British Museum). The masks, with their exaggerated ears embellishing each side of the triangular tops, may reflect William's interest in pre-Columbian artifacts or Greek masks.
about 1400–25
about 1890-1910
about 1870–90
1740–1800