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The peacock chair is unique in that its cultural significance has not waned throughout the years. It frequently appears across various forms of media, most recently holding a meaningful place in ...
A plastic covered sofa, wallpaper, a china cabinet filled with bone china, a peacock chair, a cast-iron pan, plate ...
This chair cradles moms-to-be in maternity photos, frames Grammy-winning musicians beckoning from album covers, commemorates ...
The regal seat continues to be part of Black American social traditions. The regal seat continues to be part of Black American social traditions. “I always dreamed of having a peacock chair just ...
Despite its significance as a symbol of Black Power established during the ’60s, the chair’s image — and the people that surround themselves with it — has remained an icon of wealth ...
The Peacock swept the U.S. during the mid-20th century, after many celebrities—among them, Dolly Parton, Al Green, and Donna Summer—began using the chair as a prop in publicity shoots.
I was reading the Wall Street Journal when I saw an article about the comeback of … the peacock chair!
A descendant of the regal peacock chair moves to the top of the pecking order—and no, we’re not talking about the ‘Game of Thrones’ seat. In this iteration, goldtone wire sits in for wicker.
Dismissed by some as a hippie embarrassment—or a creepy 'Addams Family' prop—the fantail-back peacock chair is entrancing new fans.
This was the peacock chair album cover, and it was everywhere. Al Di Meola, Dorothy Moore, Larry Gatlin, and Funkadelic each sat on a peacock wicker chair for their 1970s album covers.
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