A GEORGE III MAHOGANY SERPENTINE COMMODE
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY SERPENTINE COMMODE
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY SERPENTINE COMMODE
2 More
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY SERPENTINE COMMODE

ATTRIBUTED TO WILLIAM GOMM, CIRCA 1760 - 65

Details
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY SERPENTINE COMMODE
ATTRIBUTED TO WILLIAM GOMM, CIRCA 1760 - 65
The shaped rectangular top above a two short and three long drawers between canted angles carved with C-scrolls and volutes, the apron with flowerhead and rope-twist carved edge, on shaped bracket feet on castors, formerly with handles to the sides
35½ in. (90 cm.) high; 54 in. (137 cm.) wide; 27¾ in. (70 cm.) deep

Brought to you by

Celia Harvey
Celia Harvey

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

The commode is closely related to a commode likely to have been supplied to Edward, 5th Lord Leigh at Stoneleigh Park, Warwickshire in circa 1763, the year he came of age. In this period the firm of William Gomm & Son, cabinet-maker and upholsterer of Clerkenwell Close, London, were the principal suppliers of furniture at Stoneleigh Park; the commission from 12 May 1763 to October of the following year totaled a substantial £818 9s (Ed. G. Beard, C. Gilbert, Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840, 1986, p. 350). At least six 'Exceeding fine Serpentine Commode Dressing Tables' were supplied to Lord Leigh by William Gomm & Son, five of these were charged at 12 guineas each and one at 15 guineas.
A design for a related chest of drawers is included in Gomm's sketchbook dating from the early 1760s (now in the John Downs Collection, Winterthur Library, Delaware, USA), illustrated in L. Boynton, 'William & Richard Gomm', Burlington Magazine, June 1980, fig. 33. William Gomm subscribed to Mortimer's Universale Director, 1754, and Richard Gomm subscribed to Thomas Chippendale's Director, 1754, which included designs for related 'French commode tables'.
The present commode is similar to a pair of commodes supplied to Lord Leigh, included in Christie's London sale, 3 May 1963, lot 53 that have a similar form and comparable acanthus carving to the canted angles. Another commode from Stoneleigh Park with very ornate decoration, supplied to Lord Leigh probably for a bedroom apartment, lot 54, has a similar band of carved decoration on the apron. Another pair of commodes with related carving on the angles sold Christie's New York, 27 January 1990, lot 121 ($176,000 inc. premium).

More from The English Collector: 500 Years Decorative Arts Europe

View All
View All