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ITEM SW01279:
A Carved Mahogany Chippendale
Kneehole Desk, New York, c.1890, labeled "Sypher
& Co."

Sypher and Company was
like the Hagen Brothers at the turn of the century
in New York, producing the finest cabinetwork in New
York, and perhaps anywhere else in America. Ernest
Hagen actually bought Phyfe's tools, etc. and was
a follower in his tradition. This desk retains a portion
of its original label, though we were unable to decipher
the maker until we found a matching complete label,
shown below. Although we knew it was a fabulously
hand-made piece of the best quality and materials,
which, to most people, except the expert, would be
deemed of the period (1780). The labeled piece we
found is exhibited in the Pendleton House collection
of the Rhode Island School of Design.

The piece itself has exceptional
claw and ball feet with carved knees. The quality
is equal to the best of any period example. Interestingly,
the shell in the middle of this piece is a magnificently
carved Victorian expression of the Chippendale shell
which immediately tells one it is 1890 and not 1790
Sypher
was not trying to fool anyone. I imagine this desk
wouldn't have been terribly valuable at the end of
the 19th century if it were period and therefore about
100 years old. At any rate, many very wealthy people
in New York had furniture from their family handed
down and wanted compatible pieces to fill out rooms,
etc., and that's why we see much Hagen style Phyfe
furniture from families that purchased from Phyfe
and his contemporaries in the early 19th century.

We have
left this piece in "as-found" condition
with much of its original surface, and its original
label on the back. The brasses are original.
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Height:
31 in. Width: 37 1/2 in. Depth: 20 in.
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