361 A
THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A FRANCO-FLEMISH EBONY, TORTOISESHELL AND IVORY-INLAID CABINET**

SECOND HALF 17TH CENTURY

Details
A FRANCO-FLEMISH EBONY, TORTOISESHELL AND IVORY-INLAID CABINET**
Second Half 17th Century
With rectangular cross-banded inlaid top above an assortment of fifteen ripple-moulded drawers decorated with tortoiseshell veneers and a floral design of polychrome composition in immitation of scagliola, above a later ebonized wood base with barley-twist legs and stretchers, on vasi-formed feet
62in. (157cm.) high, 46in. (117cm.) wide, 17¼in. (44cm.) deep

Lot Essay

This cabinet, with its distinctive tortoiseshell veneers and floral decoration of laque incrusté, relates to pieces made in the Low Countries during the middle part of the 17th century. C. Wilks, in Western Furniture, 1350 to the Present Day in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1996, pp. 64-5, discusses the technique of lightly engraving a veneered surface with scrolling foliate designs and filling the areas in with a composition of brightly colored bits. This type of decoration, which was probably done in immitation of scagliola, was developed to rival the works by the Italian and German cabinetmakers and was a specialty of Antwerp. A closely related Flemish cabinet from circa 1650-1670 is illustrated in M. Riccardi-Cubitt, Un Art Européen Le Cabinet de la Renaissance à l'époque Moderne, Paris, 1992, p. 60.