a Dutch walnut, oyster-veneered and marquetry cabinet

LATE 17TH CENTURY EARLY 18TH CENTURY

Details
a Dutch walnut, oyster-veneered and marquetry cabinet
Late 17th Century early 18th century
The rectangular cornice above the plain frieze, the cupboard doors each inlaid with a rectangular panel centred by an oval panel with a flower-head and surrounded by circular panels inlaid with ebony and ivory stars, the rectangular panelled base with three smaller ebony and ivory stars, on square tapering feet
170cm. high x 179cm. wide x 62cm. deep

Lot Essay

The tall cabinet with two doors on an open stand is one of the most characteristic items of Dutch veneered furniture of the William and Mary period. Its decoration varies from intricate marquetry to plain veneers. The distinctive contrasting star-motifs which embellish this piece also appear on a very similar cabinet in the Haags Gemeentemuseum (The Hague Munuicipal Museum) which is illustated in P.C. Ritsema van Eck, Meubelen 1600-1800, The Hague, 1975, no. 11.
A further, virtually identical cabinet in the Rijksmuseum, also on short legs, is illustrated in C.H. de Jonge, Holländische Möbel und Raumkunst, The Hague, 1922, p. 102.

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