● On view now — Galleries 231-233
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
18th-century Dublin was a booming city, attracting furniture makers and customers from England and the rest of Europe. Among the former were the Kirkhoffer family, German Protestants who had fled the area of Germany known as the Rhineland-Palatinate to escape religious persecution. The family included John Kirkhoffer, who has been identified as the maker of this secretary desk thanks to modern technology, which revealed his signature inside the base of one of the small drawers, along with facitt / 1732 (made in 1732). It is fairly rare to find craftsmen’s names on their work during this time period. The Art Institute’s piece is one of a group of five similar secretary bookcases, one of which is in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. The Victoria and Albert’s cabinet is probably most similar to the Art Institute’s; it shares the same bold setback, with the upper portion of the secretary literally moved back in relation to the bottom half and sides.
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Artist unknown — Desk and Bookcase
Artist unknown — Desk and Bookcase
Artist unknown — Desk and Bookcase
John and Thomas Seymour — Tambour Desk and Bookcase
Artist unknown — High Chest of Drawers
The Netherlands, probably Amsterdam — Linen Cupboard (Kast)
Artist unknown — Desk and Bookcase
Thomas Seymour — Chest of Drawers with Dressing Glass
John Bankston — Cylinder Desk
John Townsend — Bureau Table
Herter Brothers — Sideboard
Alexander Roux — Sideboard