A QUEEN ANNE WALNUT DRESSING TABLE
A QUEEN ANNE WALNUT DRESSING TABLE

MASSACHUSETTS, 1750-1770

Details
A QUEEN ANNE WALNUT DRESSING TABLE
MASSACHUSETTS, 1750-1770
The molded rectangular top above a rectangular case fitted with one long drawer over three short drawers, the center short drawer with concave blocking above a conforming skirt with acorn drops all on cabriole legs with pad feet, an old label on back reads "From PJ Hynes/New and Second Hand Furniture /No. 3 Front St. Salem"
40½ in. (103 cm.) high, 34 in. (86.5 cm.) wide, 21 in. (53.5 cm.) deep
Provenance
Francis P. and Mabel Brady Garvan, Fairfield, Connecticut.
with John Walton, Jewett City, Connecticut.

Lot Essay

The dressing table was a popular form in New England in the eighteenth century. With its graceful cabriole legs, elegant proportions and restrained ornamentation, this walnut dressing table epitomizes the Queen Anne style. The simple scooped center drawer was a popular design element in Massachusetts, as was the flattened-arch silhouette of the skirt and the acorn-form pendant drops. For several closely related examples, see Israel Sack, American Antiques from Israel Sack Collection (New York), vol. IV, p. 904, P3653 and vol. X, p. 2601, P-6301.

Francis P. Garvan and Mabel Brady Garvan were pioneer collectors of American furniture. Their collection was gifted to Yale University in 1930 by Francis (class of 1897) in honor of his wife. It formed the core of Yale's collection and is considered to be one of the foremost museum collections of early American decorative arts.

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