|
Abraham Dallain, Berwick St, London 1774, 7 St Anne's
Court, Westminster 1799. Carver and gilder.
Several references can be found
to Abraham Dallain (d.1803), which probably all relate to the
same individual. He married Jane Gosset in 1750 at St James's
Westminster. He appears in a Parliamentary election poll book
in 1774 (DEFM). In his will, dated 9 May 1799 and proved 14 July
1803, Abraham Dallain, carver and gilder, late of Berwick St
and now of 7 St Anne's Court, made bequests to his five grandchildren,
of whom one, Abraham Harding was named as an executor. His relationship
with Isaac Dallain (qv) remains to be ascertained but it was
presumably a close one. They were descended from the D'Allain
family, Huguenots from Jersey, who had close family ties with
the Gossets over several generations.
Isaac Dallain by 1768-1782, Dallain &
Harding by 1782-1785 or later, Richard Harding
by 1789-1794. At 7 Berwick St, Soho, London 1782-1794. Carvers
and gilders.
Isaac Dallain is recorded in
partnership with R. Harding at 7 Berwick St, 1782, as 'successors
to Mr. Gosset' (DEFM), but they do not appear to have achieved
the same success as Isaac or Jacob Gosset (qv). Harding is presumably
to be identified with Richard Harding, who married Katherine
Dallain in 1773, and who subsequently traded independently. By
1790 Harding was described in London directories as carver and
gilder to the King, and on his trade card, 1791, as 'Carver and
Gilder to Her Majesty' (DEFM), but he is not recorded after 1794.
Isaac Dallain supplied Sir Gilbert
Heathcote, 1768-72, with various looking glass frames (for fuller
details, see DEFM). He supplied a frame for Ozias Humphrey's
portrait of Mr Austin for the 3rd Duke of Dorset in 1782, the
address on the receipt being given as the King's Arms, Berwick
St (Kent Record Office, U269, A243/12, information from National
Trust files). There is a reference in Joseph Farington's diary
in July 1793 to 'Dalling, the Frame makers sale', but it is not
known whether this links to one or other of the Dallain carvers
(Farington, vol.1 p.6).
William Davis 1862-1895, W. Davis & Sons 1896-1915
or later. At 188 Great Lister St, Birmingham 1862-1863 or later,
1 Cromwell St by 1865-1867, 16 Steelhouse Lane 1867-1875, 5 Edgbaston
St ('Five Doors from the Bull Ring') by 1875-1915 or later, 6
Edgbaston St by 1880-1915 or later. Carvers, gilders and picture
framemakers, later wholesale picture frame manufacturers, window
blind makers.
The son of George Davis, William Davis was apparently a hairdresser
before trading as a picture framemaker in Birmingham at 188 Great
Lister St in 1862. In 1868 he was already advertising the largest
stock of picture frames in Birmingham, including maple, gilt,
fancy veneered and white mouldings (Birmingham Daily Post
17 September and 17 December 1868). In 1875, following his removal
to 5 Edgbaston St, he advertised that his old shop in Great Lister
St was to be let (Birmingham Daily Post 10 March 1875).
By 1895 the business was listed as picture frame, glass tablet
& show card maker. William Robert Davis, Edgbaston St, picture
frame manufacturer, is recorded as taking out a mortgage on 29
January 1907 (Dudley Archives and Local History Service, 8469/1/5).
The business occupied other premises at one time or another including
21 Bishop St in 1895, 53 Moseley St from 1896 to 1900 or later
and 26 Freeman St in 1910.
In his trade catalogue of the
1880s, William Davis advertised white fancy mouldings, mounted
ready for gilding (including Alhambra pattern and Spike pattern),
best gold leaf frames in various patterns (offering a discount
for customers taking large frames with yellow rather than gold
sides), Rhenish mouldings, 9 feet lengths (in walnut, 'Single
Wavy', 'Wavy and Walnut', reeded gilt etc, 'equal to the gold
of a superior class to the German make'), German mouldings (referring
to the 'now extensive use of the German Gilt and Imitation Mouldings
for cheap Picture Frames'), rosewood and maple mouldings (veneered
on the edge, in 12 feet lengths), stained mouldings and various
ready-made frames and Oxford frames (W. Davis's Corporation
Picture Frame, Moulding and Window Blind Works, trade catalogue,
10pp).
Robert Davy by 1811-1843, Charles Davy 1843-1863.
At 16 Wardour St, London by 1811-1823, 83 Newman St 1822-1862,
85 Newman St 1863. Carvers and gilders, picture restorers, artists'
colourmen.
Robert Davy (c.1771-1841 or later)
claimed to have been established since 1799, according to his
label, which is often found on the back of his prepared panels
for artists. However, he is not found in directories before 1811,
when described as a carver and gilder. He supplied picture frames
for Paxton House, Berwickshire, in 1814 (National Archives of
Scotland, GD267/4/1, Home-Robertson papers). He took out insurance
with the Sun Fire Office as a carver and gilder from 16 Wardour
St in 1821 (Guildhall Library: Records of Sun Fire Office, vol.488
no.980758). He was also listed as a picture restorer in directories
in 1819 and 1827.
By 1825 Davy's special interest
in panels and millboards is apparent from his Post Office directory
listing as 'Prepared Pannel & Mill-board-manufacturer &
Artists'-colourman, Frame-maker, &c'. The same year he attended
a meeting of more than fifty master carvers and gilders who resolved
to resist the demands of journeymen for an increase in wages
(The Times 30 June 1825). His is probably the business
named as Robert Davy, which had an account with the artists'
colourmen, Roberson, 1828-39 (Woodcock 1997). He was recorded
in Newman St in the 1841 census as Robert Davy, Artists Colourman,
age 70 (ages were rounded down to the nearest five in this census).
Robert Davy was followed in business
by his son, Charles Davy, who traded as an artists' colourman,
see British artists' suppliers.
John Deare, active 1768-1794. At Tyburn Road, Walcott,
Bath 1768, Kingsmead St, Bath from 1766, 9 Kingsmead St 1794.
Carver and gilder, picture framemaker.
John Deare is known to have been
working in Kingsmead St in Bath from 1766 (Sloman 2002 p.68).
It is not easy to establish details of his career. John Deare
of Tyburn Road, Walcott, carver, gilder and picture framemaker,
and his wife Sarah, were parties to a lease in November 1768
(Hertfordshire Archives, DE/Pr/77238-77239). In May 1771 Gainsborough
paid Deare 46 guineas (Sloman 2002 pp.68, 207, see also National
Portrait Gallery website, Gainsborough
and Picture Framing). Deare advertised in 1782 and in 1794,
from the original Looking Glass House (Bath Chronicle
31 January 1782, 13 February 1794). The business of F. Deare
& Son was recorded in King's Mead St and Queen Square, Bath,
as carvers, gilders and picture framemakers, 1787-91 (DEFM).
John Deare died in 1794, bequeathing his house in Kingsmead St
to his wife Sarah, and referring to his son James Deare and brother
Phillip Deare in his will, dated 26 May 1794 and proved in September
1794.
Walter Leslie Deighton, see Alfred J. Mucklow
William Dickinson, see George Foord
Doig, McKechnie & Davies 1857-1884, Doig & McKechnie 1885-1895,
Doig, Wilson & Wheatley 1895-1957. At 60 George
St, Edinburgh 1857, 69 George St 1857-1861, 89 George St 1862-1875,
90 George St 1876-1957. Picture dealers, carvers and gilders,
picture restorers and printsellers.
Henry Doig (1818-1901) was a
partner in the firm of Doig, McKechnie & Davies, carvers,
gilders and plate glass merchants, which was formed from three
separate businesses. Henry Doig, carver and gilder at 6 South
St James's St, joined with McKechnie & Davies, 69 George
St and 10 Calton Hill, to form Doig, McKechnie & Davies,
listed as carvers, gilders and picture liners at 69 George St
and 10 Calton Hill in 1857. William McKechnie had been previously
listed as a picture framemaker at 10 Calton Hill in 1855. In
1875 Doig, McKechnie & Davies advertised a sale of surplus
stock prior to removal to new premises at 90 George St (The
Scotsman 14 December 1875).
Henry Doig can be traced in successive
censuses. In 1861 he was listed at 12 Queen St, Edinburgh, as
a carver and gilder, age 43, born Callender, Perthshire, employing
18 men, 11 boys and one clerk, in 1871 at Duddingstone, as a
carver and gilder, age 58, born Callander, Stirlingshire, in
1881 at 90a George St, in 1891 at Portobello, as a picture restorer,
age 73, widowed, and in 1901, at Portobello, as a carver and
gilder, age 83, by now remarried, with two great grandsons in
the household, Henry and Laurence Brown, ages 20 and 17, the
one apprenticed as a lithographic artist, the other as a carver
and gilder.
Sole partner by 1895, Doig dissolved
the firm of Doig & McKechnie, selling his stock-in-trade
to Thomas Wilson and Benjamin Wheatley, who traded as Doig, Wilson
& Wheatley, fine art dealers (Edinburgh Gazette 3
May 1895). Benjamin Wheatley appears in the 1901 census as a
fine art dealer, age 36, born in Edinburgh.
In 1895, Doig, Wilson & Wheatley
advertised as picture restorers, printsellers and publishers
(The Scotsman 29 May 1895), also referring to 'All Varieties
of Designs in Framing', and mentioning the removal of T. Wilson
from 121 to 90 George St. The following month the business advertised
the sale of surplus stock owing to the amalgamation of the two
firms (The Scotsman 26 June 1895), with a further auction
being held at the end of the year, of 'the surplus stock of the
firms of Messrs Doig & M'Kechnie and Mr Thomas Wilson' (The
Scotsman 20 November 1895). In 1897 the business opened a
branch establishment at 26 Forrest Road (The Scotsman
26 July 1897). The business advertised as printsellers, picture
framers, picture restorers (The Scotsman 21 September
1904), subsequently claiming to have been established in 1840
(The Scotsman 16 December 1912). Later still it was advertising
'artistic framing' (The Year's Art 1928).
Henry Doig acted as Sir Joseph
Noel Paton's framemaker, colourman and dealer, as is apparent
from the artist's journals (Noel-Paton 1990 pp.79, 116). The
extent of his involvement is clear from entries concerning his
painting, The Good Shepherd, 1876 (formerly coll. Haydon
Hare), for which he not only supplied materials and framed the
finished work but dealt with the sale and exhibition of the work,
and acted as an intermediary with Queen Victoria who wished to
have a replica of the work (Noel-Paton 1990 pp.38-40, 98-9).
The Queen went on to commission an altarpiece for Osbourne, 1884-5,
with framing designed by the artist and made by Doig (the altarpiece
now belongs to Anmer parish church). Other works by Noel Paton
which Doig framed include Sir Galahad, 1879 (Christie's
11 June 1993 lot 132; repr. Noel-Paton 1990 pl.1).
Doig, Wilson & Wheatley's
label, whether as framemaker or as dealer, can be found on the
plain gilt oak moulding frame on Count Girolamo Nerli's Robert
Louis Stevenson, 1892 (Scottish National Portrait Gallery).
Sources: M.H. Noel-Paton and J.P. Campbell, Noel Paton
1821-1901, 1990 (quoting entries linking the artist to Doig,
1875-95).
Reginald Dolman, Reginald Dolman & Son,
see James Criswick
Aitken Dott 1842-1879, Aitken Dott & Son 1880-1984,
Aitken Dott Ltd 1984-1988, Aitken Dott plc from
1988. At Lady Lawson St, Edinburgh 1842, 12 South St David St
1844-1847, 16 South St David St 1846-1863, 14-16 South St
David St 1863-1874, 26 South Castle St or Castle St 1874-1982,
94 George St 1982-1993, 16 Dundas St, EH3 6HZ from 1993. Carvers
and gilders, framemakers, artists' colourmen, from the 1890s
also fine art dealers.
Aitken Dott (1815-92) set up
in business in Edinburgh in 1842. He married Jane MacOmish in
1848. He was recorded in the 1851 census as a master carver and
gilder at his father-in-law's address, 74 Lauriston Place, employing
six men, in 1871 at the same address, employing 11 men and five
boys, and in 1881 at 24 Castle St, employing 13 men and five
boys. His son, Peter, one of six children, was recorded in 1881
as a carver and gilder at the same address. The business had
an account with the artists' colourmen, Roberson, 1852-1908,
and is recorded in the Roberson ledgers as taking over that of
John Douglas Smith (qv) at 26 Castle St in 1887.
In 1890 Aitken Dott & Son
advertised the variety of their frame styles, and their price
ranges giving proportionate costs, including: French (New process,
rich in design) at 160s, Own Hand-made (of durable quality and
of purest gold) at 100s, Manufactured (of good quality and best
gold) at 80s, Dutch Metal Imitations (suitable for temporary
purposes) at 40s and Oak and Black Mouldings, also offering to
line and clean pictures, and featuring artists' materials, in
particular as agents for Dr Fr. Schoenfeld's Celebrated Genuine
Oil and Water Colours (Post Office Directory). In 1894 the business
advertised that they had cleaned pictures at Inveraray Castle,
Blair Castle,Tyninghame, Oxenford and elsewhere (Glasgow Herald
6 October 1894). An agent for Cambridge colours, 1897, made by
Madderton & Co Ltd (qv), Aitken Dott advertised in Madderton's
literature as 'Artists' Colourmen & Importers of French &
German Materials'.
Aitken Dott's son, Peter McOmish
Dott (b.1856), created 'The Scottish Gallery', now the oldest
commercial gallery in Scotland, at 127a George St in 1896 (The
Scotsman 16 October 1896), trading as McOmish Dott &
Co, before relocating to 26 Castle St in 1901 or before (The
Year's Art 1897, 1901). He displayed work by many Scottish
painters, including the Scottish Colourists and Edinburgh School
artists.
In 1915 George Proudfoot, who
had been with the firm since 1908, took over the running of the
business and in 1930 was recorded as sole partner, as indicated
on the business's invoice for work done on the frame for Sir
James Guthrie's Statesmen of the Great War, 1924-30 (National
Portrait Gallery). Following his death in about 1939, the business
was run by his wife until acquired in about 1955 by William J.
Macaulay (d.1975) (information from William Jackson). In 1968
there were 40 staff and managers in five separate departments
in the business, affectionately known as 'Dott's', consisting
of the Gallery, Architectural Materials and Books, Art and Graphic
Materials, Framing, Prints and Restoration, and General Administration
(information from William Jackson).
By 1975 the proprietor was William
Jackson (b.1943). In 1986 Aitken Dott plc sold its interests
in framing and artists materials to concentrate on The Scottish
Gallery. A London branch of the Scottish Gallery was set up in
1988, becoming the William Jackson Gallery Ltd in 1991. The business
now describes itself as a leading dealer in contemporary and
20th-century Scottish painting and contemporary objects (The
Scottish Gallery), with Guy Peploe as managing director.
More work needs to be done on the surviving company records (see
below) to elucidate the history and work of this long-lived business.
Dott's work for institutions
included supplying a 'richly gilt & burnished single swept
frame to drawing' to the National Gallery of Scotland in 1895
for David Wilkie's Abbotsford Family, including a plate
glass, lettering the frame's slip with the artist's name and
the picture's subject and hanging the picture at the Gallery
as a total cost of £4.5s.6d. Among aristocratic clients
were Lord Belhaven (a picture in a Murthly moulding, 1875), the
Earl of Haddington (a half-length laurel frame in 1875) and the
Earl of Stair.
Dott's work for artists was wide
ranging. In the later 19th century and early 20th century, judging
from one of the few surviving records of receipts (National Library
of Scotland, acc.10421, item 3), the business was framing work
by David Cameron, Robert Herdmann (a Carlyle oak pattern in 1876),
Norman McBeth, William MacTaggart, David Scott and various others.
In the 20th century, it would appear that Aitken Dott & Son
made various frames for James Guthrie (see also above). The business's
frame label can be found on E.A. Walton's Self-portrait,
c.1918-22 (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge).
Sources: Information kindly supplied by William
Jackson, 30 July 2007, primarily concerning the 20th-century
history of the business. Company records in the form of accounts,
correspondence etc, 1875-1955 at National Library of Scotland
(acc. 10421, online
catalogue ); other papers, 1870-1979, including ledgers,
accounts, day books, picture stock book, correspondence etc privately
held (National Register of Archives, NRA 22835 Aitken Dott).
Francis Draper 1854/5-1915, Francis Draper &
Son 1915-1929, Francis Draper 1930-1941. At 24 Nassau
St, Middlesex Hospital, London 1856, 70 Great Titchfield
St, W 1856-1863, 1 Green St, Grosvenor Square 1864-1886, 67 Park
St, Grosvenor Square 1887-1913, 110 Albany St NW 1914-1941. Also
at 91 Davies St 1890-1897, 1A Davis Mews 1898-1902, 9 Sedley
Place, Oxford St 1903-1906, 10 Sedley Place 1907-1913. Carver
and gilder, picture framemaker, initially listed as gilder and
painter.
Francis Draper (1832-1924) was
born 12 January 1832, the son of Joseph and Mary Draper. Draper
was apprenticed to Robert Thick (qv), describing himself as being
'out of my time' on 12 January 1853, when he would have been
21 (Thick account book p.161b). He continued to assist Thick
on an occasional basis until December 1853 (Thick account book
p.47b), before setting up in business in his own right in 1854
or 1855. His partnership with William Barry, trading as carvers,
gilders and picture framemakers at 70 Great Titchfield St, was
dissolved in August 1856 (London Gazette 8 August 1856).
At the time of his wedding to Eliza Niven (1832-before 1881)
on 4 March 1857, he was living at 70 Great Titchfield St.
Draper's business expanded over
time, as the census records reveal: in 1861 he was listed as
employing one man, two apprentices and a boy, in 1871 11 men
and two boys and in 1881 20 men. Draper worked for the National
Portrait Gallery from 1884 and, according to his later trade
label, the governments of Australia, Canada, India and South
Africa and also for many members of the Royal Family (repr. Simon
1996 p.135). He was described by Sir Charles Holmes, Director
of the National Portrait Gallery, as 'best of fellows and frame-makers',
following an afternoon spent trout fishing together in 1914.
It was probably Holmes's friendship which led to Draper being
employed at the National Gallery, where Holmes became Director
in 1916. A note in Draper's hand, dated December 1920, records
the inexorable rise in the costs of framemaking around the time
of the First World War, from 9d per hour for employing a gilder
in 1912 to 2s.3d in 1920 (National Portrait Gallery, Duplicate
of Accounts, vol.8, p.125).
The business traded as Francis
Draper & Son from 1915, when Draper was 83 years old, and
was perhaps continued by his son, Frank Draper (b. c.1861). By
1930 the business seems to have been acquired by Chapman Bros
(qv). Although trading as Francis Draper, the name of E.J. Chapman
is given on the business's invoices and by 1935 Draper's address
at 110 Albany St appears in directory entries for Chapman Bros.
For the National Portrait Gallery,
Draper made numerous frames including a Watts frame in 1912 for
Emily Childers's Hugh Childers (repr. Simon 1996 p.117)
and a 'Tudor' frame in 1925 for a copy of Hans Holbein's William
Warham (repr. Simon 1996 p.181). A labelled frames is the
Watts frame on Lord Leighton's portrait of his father (Sotheby's
9 June 1999 lot 122).
Sources: Information from parish records and other family
details kindly communicated 1999 and 2004 by Peter Lockwood,
great-great-grandson of Francis Draper's brother; Robert Thick
account book 1847-54, p.17 (annotation by Draper recording his
father's death, 26 November 1848), p.161b (note by Draper, 21
May 1911, stating that he commenced business in January 1855;
however his trade card gives the date as 1854); Census records
give Draper living at 88 Great Titchfield St in 1851, 71 Great
Titchfield St in 1861, at Acton, Middlesex in 1871, 1 Green St
in 1881 and at 67 Park St in 1891 and 1901.
Frederick Draycott, 27 Duke St, Bloomsbury, London 1830-1854.
Carver and gilder.
In the 1841 census Frederick
Draycott or Draycotte, carver and gilder, age 40 (ages were rounded
down to the nearest five years in this census) was listed in
Duke St, and in 1851 Fras? Draycott, carver and gilder, age 51,
born Marylebone, was at 27 Duke St. There may be a connection
with the J. Draycott who in 1825 attended a meeting of more than
fifty master carvers and gilders who resolved to resist the demands
of journeymen for an increase in wages (The Times 30 June
1825). By the time of the 1861 census, Frederick Draycott was
living at Wapping, described as 'Attached to fine art committee'.
F. Draycott's trade label from
27 Duke St, on John Simpson's Sir Herbert Taylor, c.1833
(National Portrait Gallery) described him as 'Carver and Gilder,
Looking Glass And Picture Frame Manufacturer', offering various
additional services, including regilding old frames, restoring
paintings, polishing and silvering glasses and, most unusually,
'Harps and Organ Pipes Gilt'.
Sources: DEFM.
James Dryhurst (active 1725, died 1765/6), Cavendish
St, London. Carver.
Primarily a carver, rather than
picture framemaker. He worked at Stowe in 1725 (DEFM), for the
Duke of Chandos on his house in Cavendish Square, 1727-8, and
for Lord Northampton on his house in Grosvenor Square, 1761-2
(Geoffrey Beard, Craftsmen and Interior Decoration in England
1660-1820, Edinburgh, 1981, p.257). Dryhurst took James Daniel
Nicholls as an apprentice in 1736, James Thomas Gaff in 1743
and John George Leigh in 1745, in each case for a premium of
£25 (Boyd). In his will, dated 2 April 1765 and proved
21 February 1766, he described himself as carver of Cavendish
St, St Marylebone; an earlier will had been proved on 14 January
1766 and then the grant of probate revoked.
Dryhurst provided frames and
frame mouldings for work at the Foundling Hospital in 1754 and
1757 (Simon 1996 p.55, see National Portrait Gallery website,
Art of the Picture Frame | Foundling
Museum). The largest painting now in the Picture Gallery
at the Foundling Hospital is Charles Brooking's Flagship
before the Wind, given by the artist in 1754. On 13 November
1754 James Dryhurst charged a total of £9.18s for an elaborate
and richly carved frame for this work. This sea-piece was intended
to match one by Peter Monamy, given in 1747. Dryhurst also supplied
standard pattern frames for two full-length portraits at the
Hospital, of a type in use at the Hospital since 1746. He was
paid £3.15s on 15 June 1757 for '50ft large ovelo to 2
frames with Egg and Tongue and bead with Ribbon and Stick', a
payment which would appear to be associated with Joshua Reynolds's
Lord Dartmouth, and another full-length, possibly Benjamin
Wilson's Francis Fauquier which may have started life
as a full-length. Reynolds's portrait measures 91 1/2 x 54 ins
and with a 2 ins wide frame would have required almost exactly
25 feet in moulding. James Dryhurst also supplied architectural
carving for the Hospital and it is as an architectural carver
that he is best known.
John Dubourg (active 1742, died c.1786), James
and George Dubourg c.1786-1790, George Dubourg
1790-1794. In Long Acre, London probably continuously from
1749, 83 Long Acre 1789-1794. Carvers and gilders.
John Dubourg and his wife Susanna
had several children between 1742 and 1759, including a son,
George, christened 26 January 1748 at St Martin-in-the-Fields.
John Dubourg, carver, can be found in Long Acre in the 1749 election
poll book (DEFM). In his will, dated 8 July 1782 and proved 28
March 1786, John Dubourg of Long Acre left the lease on his house
to his wife, Susannah, directing his sons George and James Dubourg,
'to carry on the business', but left instructions for his 'stock
in trade, pictures and glasses &c' to be sold as soon as
convenient after his decease. This sale took place on 3 August
1786, when his stock was sold by the auctioneer, Weare (British
Museum Print Room, Whitley papers, vol.5, p.547). George and
James dissolved their partnership as carvers and gilders in July
1790 (London Gazette 27 July 1790), leaving George Dubourg
to continue trading for a few years. The name is sometimes found
spelt Dubourgh, Duberg or Duburge.
The business may have been carried
into the next generation: John Dubourg, carver and gilder, can
be found at 41 Great St Andrew's St, Seven Dials, 1826-8.
Joseph Wright of Derby used 'Dubourg'
for picture framing and packing cases, 1759-61, according to
an account totalling some £83, transcribed in Wright's
account book (National Portrait Gallery, see Mitchell 1990 pp.274-5);
these frames were in the rococo style. Philip Passavant gave
'Mr Dubourgh's, Long Acre' as his contact address when exhibiting
at the Society of Artists in 1771.
Joseph Duffour (active 1733, died 1776). At 'The Golden
Head', Berwick St, Soho, London 1752, 1763 and probably for much
longer. Carver and gilder, papier mâché maker.
Joseph Duffour (d.1776), a French
Catholic, was a leading London framemaker and also a supplier
of ornament in papier mâché. The carver and gilder,
'Duffour', almost certainly Joseph Duffour, advertised as the
'Original Maker of Papie Máchie' (trade card, repr. Heal
1972 p.51), and already by 1749 he was called by Mrs Delany 'the
famous man for paper ornaments like stucco'.
Duffour was active by the 1730s.
He took an apprentice named Cook in 1743 (DEFM) and another,
Peter Smith, in 1749 (Boyd). This Peter Smith was mentioned in
the painter, Joseph van Aken's will in 1749. He may be the Peter
Smith of Covent Garden who was made bankrupt in 1766 (Gentleman's
Magazine April 1766). Duffour was very well acquainted with
another French carver, Jean Antoine Cuenot (qv), as he testified
in 1763 as one of the witnesses to Cuenot's will.
As a widower, Duffour married
Mary Ann Goupy in 1746 (Jacob Simon, 'New Light on Joseph Goupy
(1689-1769)', Apollo, vol.139, Feb. 1994, p.18); their
son William Duffour (d.1787) was also initially a framemaker,
before becoming a floor cloth maker, operating from 30 Berwick
St and then by 1786 at Little Titchfield St, Cavendish Square.
It is worth noting that Joseph Duffour had a brother Peter, whose
marriage he witnessed in 1733, and who had several children;
it should also be noted that there were several men living in
London by the name of Joseph Duffour in the first half of the
18th century.
For the Prince of Wales, Joseph
Duffour supplied the magnificent frame on John Wootton and William
Hogarth's Frederick Prince of Wales in the Hunting Field
at a cost of £57.15s in 1734 (Royal Collection, see Millar
1963 p.183). He billed the Prince of Wales for other frames and
glass amounting to £97.7s in 1737, including a set of 12
frames for pictures of Cupid and Psyche.
Duffour supplied work for various
country house owners. He was paid by John, 2nd Duke of Montagu
for 'carving work' in 1738 and his name occurs in the accounts
of Charles 5th Lord Baltimore, Gentleman of the Bedchamber to
the Prince of Wales, 1745-6 (Murdoch 1985 p.202). He provided
picture frames for the 2nd Earl of Egremont at Petworth House,
Sussex, 1752-7, both in the rococo style, for eight little works
by Elsheimer, and the Maratta style, one of the earliest references
to this style in England being contained in his bill for a gilt
'Carlomarat' frame in March 1752 (Simon 1996 p.65). 'Duffour'
was paid for making frames for William Windham of Felbrigg Hall,
Norfolk, 1756 (information from Alastair Laing, 1994). He also
supplied frames for Longford Castle, Wiltshire (Country Life,
vol.70, 1931, p.717).
He appears to have made frames
for Thomas Hudson, the most fashionable London portrait painter
in the late 1740s and early 1750s, judging from payments in the
artist's bank account, 1751-3, and he also regilded the frame
for Hudson's painting, Benn's Club of Aldermen, in 1762
(Goldsmiths Company).
Another Duffour, René
Duffour, is sometimes referred to as a carver and gilder, for
example in the Dictionary of English Furniture Makers
but it is not clear that such a maker ever existed.
Sources: Duchy of Cornwall, Frederick Prince of Wales household
accounts, vol.7, p.196 (for frames for the Prince of Wales in
1737), and also Michael Levey, The Later Italian Pictures
in the Collection of Her Majesty the Queen, 2nd ed., Cambridge
1991, p.98; Gervase Jackson-Stops, 'Great Carvings for a Connoisseur:
Picture Frames at Petworth', Country Life 25 September
1980 p.1030; Christopher Rowell, 'The 2nd Earl of Egremont and
Egremont House', Apollo, April 1998, vol.147, pp.15-21;
Thomas Hudson 1701-1779, exh. cat., Iveagh Bequest, Kenwood,
1979, no.53.
|