A RUSSIAN PATINATED AND GILT BRONZE-MOUNTED MAHOGANY BUREAU
A RUSSIAN PATINATED AND GILT BRONZE-MOUNTED MAHOGANY BUREAU

IN THE MANNER OF HEINRICH GAMBS, LATE 18TH EARLY 19TH CENTURY

Details
A RUSSIAN PATINATED AND GILT BRONZE-MOUNTED MAHOGANY BUREAU
In the manner of Heinrich Gambs, late 18th early 19th Century
The rounded rectangular top and galleried sides surmounted by a superstructure with a rounded-rectangular stepped top and sliding door enclosing a fitted interior with four small drawers and a central pigeon-hole with adjustable sliding dividers and one long drawer, flanked to the side by two herms and two further drawers, the frieze of the lower section with one long drawer and two graduated drawers to each side and three conforming writing-slides with a gilt-tooled leather writing-surface, on square tapering legs and bronze feet, the drawers to the upper section lined in mahogany, the ones to the lower section in ash
53½ in. (136 cm.) high; 58¾ in. (149 cm.) wide; 26 in. (66 cm.) deep

Lot Essay

This desk with its canted Egyptian priestess head herm-supports and stepped cornice, relates to a desk, formerly in the Winterpalace, that is attributed to the Russian court cabinet-maker Heinrich Gambs (d. 1831) and which is now in the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg (A. Chenevière, Russian Furniture, London, 1988, p. 149, fig. 144, and 'St. Petersburg um 1800', exhibition catalogue, Recklinghausen, 1990, p. 417, cat. 378). David Roentgen, under whom Gambs had trained, unsuccessfully attempted to set up a collaboration between him and Gambs between 1789 and 1790 and make him his representative in St. Petersburg. Gambs emigrated in these years to Russia and established his own rapidly growing workshop that opened a furniture shop linked to it by 1795. In 1810 he was nominated Imperial Court Furniture Supplier and in an inventory of the Hermitage in 1811 there were already 135 pieces of his identified. His firm was continued by his sons Peter (d. 1871) and Ernst (d. 1849) and existed for over seventy years.

The former step-corniced secrétaire-cartonnier relates to a form illustrated in 1800 in Sammlung von Zeichnungen der neuesten Londoner und Pariser Meubles, Leipzig, fig. 7 (G. Himmelheber, Deutsche Möbelvorlagen, Munich, 1988, p. 238, no. 999), while the canted herm-supports feature in the same publication (fig. 1) on a table (Himmelheber, op. cit., p. 329, no. 1591).

More from Important European Furniture

View All
View All