We’ve all heard of musical chairs, a game of elimination involving players, chairs, and music. With one fewer chair than players, when the music stops the player who fails to sit on a chair is eliminated. A chair is then removed and the process repeated until only one player remains. So far so good, but have you ever heard of the musical bed? The object actually existed, but I can tell you that it was certainly not a game! In 1882, Sadiq Muhammad Khan Abbasi IV, Nawāb of Bahawalpur, anonymously commissioned a bed in rosewood covered with about a third of a ton of chased and engraved sterling silver from La Maison Christofle in Paris. The Nawāb was very precise in his design specification, calling for a bed of “dark wood decorated with applied sterling with gilded parts, monograms and arms, ornamented with four life-size bronze figures of naked females painted in flesh color with natural hair, movable eyes and arms, holding fans and horse tails.”
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Charles Gounod: “Ah! je ris de me voir,” from Faust
Any information on the whereabouts of this bed would be appreciated. Please contact me at [email protected] 🙂