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John Townsend - Heckscher, Morrison H. - Yale University Press
  • May 16, 2005
    240 p., 9 x 12
    124 b/w + 110 color illus.
    ISBN: 9780300107173
    ISBN-10: 030010717X
  • Cloth: $75.00 sc
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Art and Architecture
History

Published in association with The Metropolitan Museum of Art

John Townsend

Newport Cabinetmaker

  • Morrison H. Heckscher
      REVIEWS             PREVIEW             CONTENTS             EXCERPTS      

                        

John Townsend (1733–1809) is one of the most revered cabinetmakers of Colonial America. He spent his life in Newport, Rhode Island, leaving a uniquely large body of documented work. This handsome and generously illustrated book—the first publication ever devoted to Townsend—looks at the life and legacy of this extraordinary cabinetmaker.

The book opens with an overview of Newport and a discussion of other important cabinetmakers, including Job and Christopher Townsend, John’s father and uncle. John worked as an apprentice to his father before establishing his own shop when he was twenty-one. The catalogue section of this volume presents new color reproductions, including details of carving and construction and inscriptions and labels, of all thirty-five documented pieces by John Townsend. Comparative works by Christopher, Job, Job Jr., and Edmund Townsend as well as by John Goddard, another significant Newport cabinetmaker of the time, are also featured. Other documentation includes: a genealogical chart of the Townsend and Goddard families; wills and inventories of Christopher and John Townsend; a list of Townsend family furniture; names of John Townsend’s clients; and a list of all documented Newport furniture.

Morrison Heckscher is Lawrence A. Fleischman Chairman of The American Wing, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

EXHIBITION SCHEDULE

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, May 6 – September 25, 2005

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