A SPANISH WALNUT EXTENDING TABLE

ARAGON, THIRD QUARTER 16TH CENTURY

Details
A SPANISH WALNUT EXTENDING TABLE
Aragon, Third quarter 16th Century
The rectangular top with two leaves, above a moulded frieze, above turned fluted and spirally-reeded legs and spirally-fluted and reeded end-supports, flanked to either side by panelled scrolls joined by a rounded stretcher and on moulded bases, minor restorations
33 in. (84 cm.) high; 109 in. (278 cm.) wide, extended; 33 in. (84 cm.) deep
Literature
Mara Paz Aguil Alonso, El Mueble en Espaa, Siglos XVI-XVII, Madrid, 1993, pp. 337-338, fig 282.

Lot Essay

This rare walnut table was probably executed in Aragon. Certain aspects in the construction and the distinctive spirally-fluted legs were specialities of cabinet-making in that province. The first scholar to discuss this type of table was A. Byne, whose early photograghs and drawings were first compiled in Spanish Interiors and Furniture, New York, 1921-1925 (Plates 257-259). A further related example in Fanlo in the region of Huesca, is illustrated in G. Hardendorff Burr, Hispanic Furniture, New York, 1964 (2nd ed.), p. 55, fig 53.

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