THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN
A GEORGE III BRASS-BOUND MAHOGANY WINE-CISTERN

Details
A GEORGE III BRASS-BOUND MAHOGANY WINE-CISTERN
POSSIBLY BY GILLOWS OF LANCASTER

The spreading gadrooned and acanthus-carved removable lid with thyrsus finial, the tapering circular body with brass carrying-handles and tap, the moulded square pedestal with a raised cut-cornered panelled door enclosing a mahogany-lined interior with one shelf, above a drawer, on moulded spreading plinth, the drawer previously with removable liner, minor restorations
15¼in. (39.5cm.) wide; 50¼in. (127.5cm.) high; 15¼in. (40cm.) deep

Lot Essay

A design for a tub of exactly this form on a similar pedestal appears in Gillows' Estimate Sketch Book for 1767 (L. Boynton, ed., Gillow Furniture Designs, Royston, 1995, no. 176). The Gillow design is illustrated without a vase lid, which in this case is conceived as a scalloped ogival dome festooned with acanthus and terminating in a bacchic thyrsus finial. An example with a removable lead-lined draining box fitted in its base drawer is illustrated in R.Butler, Wine Antiques, Woodbridge, 1987, pl. 267.
There is an interesting connection with a later version of the same idea, also by Gillows, that was sold by Mr. and Mrs. Luke Dillon-Mahon from Clonbrock House, Co. Galway, Christie's house sale 1 November 1976, lot 85. The cistern was recognisably in the same tradition but the pedestal has become taller and closer to contemporary (circa 1780) pedestals for urns. A further variation with a slightly taller pedestal was sold anonymously, Sotheby's New York, 10 February 1973, lot 158.
A closely related example, exhibited by Norman Adams at the Grosvenor House Antiques Fair in 1967, is illustrated in G. Bernard-Hughes, 'A Treasure House in Park Lane', Country Life, 15 June 1967, p. 1522.
A final related example was sold from the estate of the late Mrs. Stephen P. Farish at Christie's New York, 26 January 1990, lot 318

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