Coromandel Coast, probably Madras (Chennai), India

Armchair

c. 1690–c. 1700
Ebony, ivory, and rattan
63.5 × 71.2 cm (25 × 28 in)

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● On view now — Galleries 231-233

Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026

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FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG

Made by Indian craftspeople, this chair integrates Indian decoration into a European form. It was likely intended for a merchant of the English East India Company, a trading corporation with headquarters in Madras (now Chennai), India. The locally sourced ebony is carved with eagles associated with the Hindu god Garuda and dragon-like serpents and mermaids that reference Nagas, a group of Hindu deities. Wide-mouthed monkeys eat fruit at the base of Europeanstyle twisted legs. Armed English soldiers under the scrolled armrests are symbolic (and perhaps subversive) reminders of the exploitative colonial power of the merchants who commissioned or sat in this chair.

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