A REGENCE EBONY AND BRASS MARQUETRY COMMODE
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A REGENCE EBONY AND BRASS MARQUETRY COMMODE

EARLY 18TH CENTURY AND LATER ORMOLU MOUNTED

Details
A REGENCE EBONY AND BRASS MARQUETRY COMMODE
EARLY 18TH CENTURY AND LATER ORMOLU MOUNTED
With a later black marble top above a shaped front with three long drawers inlaid with foliate engraved arabesque cartouches, inlaid shaped angles and sides, on foliate clove hoof sabots, some brass inlay and the ormolu mounts probably late 19th century
31¼ in. (79.5 cm.) high; 48½ in. (123 cm.) wide; 24¾ in. (63 cm.) deep
Special notice
This lot will be removed to an off-site warehouse at the close of business on the day of sale - 2 weeks free storage

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Lot Essay

The overall shape of this commode and its première partie brass marquetry is reminiscent of grander models, such as those pieces by Nicholas Sageot of the late 17th and early 18th century. He was renowned for his inventiveness in the spirit of Jean Bérain (d. 1711), who was enormously influential, publishing numerous engravings of 'antique' and 'arabesque' designs. For a commode by Sageot see Christie's London, The Exceptional Sale, 5 July 2012, lot 8. This in turn is related to another commode stamped by Sageot, though with four rather than three drawers, previously in the collections of the Dukes of Newcastle and sold at Christie's, London, 16 December 1999, lot 50 (287,500). Another closely related commode is that from the collection of Barbara Piasecka Johnson, previously in the collection of the duchesse de Talleyrand, sold Sotheby's, New York, 21 May 1992, lot 69 ($385,000).

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