
Allan Breed spent his early teens
buying old furniture at flea markets and auctions and by 19 was
employed by The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston in the restoration
lab where he was able to examine some of the finest American
pieces. After graduating from college with a degree in History he
began restoring furniture for collectors and museums. In 1977 he
built his first set of Chippendale chairs and has been reproducing
American furniture using traditional tools and techniques ever
since.
Allan consults with collectors and dealers on the authenticity of
early furniture and regularly lectures on furniture connoisseurship
at musems and at the education departments of Christie's and
Sotheby's in New York.
Allan is featured in this picture with his son Sam next to a
recently completed copy of a John Townsend Highboy.
Allan has contributed articles to:
- The Journal of Antiques and Fine Arts
- Art and Antiques
- Early American Life
- Fine Woodworking magazines
Appeared on the front and back covers of Fine Woodworking:
- October 1999
- September 200
- October 2000
- April 2009
- 25th Anniversary Issue
Allan's work has been exhibited at:
- The Currier Gallery of Art
- The Wadsworth Athenaeum
- The Portland Museum of Art
- The DeCordova Museum
Allan's work can be seen in the permanent collections:
- The Peabody-Essex Museum
- Strawbery Banke Museum
- The Nightingale-Brown House in Providence
- The Old South Meeting House in Boston
Allan has lectured on American furniture at:
- Winterthur
- Williamsburg
- The Philadelphia Museum of Art
- The Henry Ford Museum
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York
- others.
Although Allan has taught the intricacies of period furniture
making to collectors for over two decades, he took on the teaching
of cabinetmaking to other woodworkers on a large scale in 1998 when
he began traveling to Washington DC to teach a nine-member group
from the Washington Woodworker's Guild to build Goddard-Townsend
secretaries.
Since then he has guided woodworkers from around the country
through the intricacies of chair making, bombe chests and Rococo
carving.