A SOUTH GERMAN IRON-MOUNTED WALNUT, MAPLE AND FRUITWOOD MARQUETRY TABLE CABINET
Property of a Private Collector from Liège, Belgium
A SOUTH GERMAN IRON-MOUNTED WALNUT, MAPLE AND FRUITWOOD MARQUETRY TABLE CABINET

PROBABLY NUREMBERG, SECOND HALF 16TH CENTURY

Details
A SOUTH GERMAN IRON-MOUNTED WALNUT, MAPLE AND FRUITWOOD MARQUETRY TABLE CABINET
PROBABLY NUREMBERG, SECOND HALF 16TH CENTURY
Inlaid overall with architectural landscapes depicting ruins and scrollwork, surrounded by foliage and egg-and-dart, the hinged fall front enclosing eight variously sized drawers surrounding a cupboard door enclosing a panelled interior
15 ½ in. (40 cm) high; 20 ½ in. (52 cm) wide; 13 ½ in. (34 cm) deep

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Carlijn Dammers
Carlijn Dammers

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Lot Essay

This cabinet belongs to a group of South German furniture mainly from Swabia, Bavaria and Tyrol inlaid with stylised ruins and elaborate scrollwork defining space and perspective. Such scenes of spectacular ruins were popularised by the Augsburg engravings, entitled Geometria et Perspectiva, published in 1567 by Lorenz Stöer (d. 1620). The most celebrated example of this Ruinenarchitektur marquetry is probably the Wrangelschrank in the Landesmuseum in Münster, which was presented by the Swedish general Carl Gustav Wrangel in 1566 to his daughter Hedwig Eleonore upon her marriage to Ernst Ludwig II of Putbus (see L. Möller, Der Wrangelschrank und die verwandten süddeutschen Intarsienmöbel des 16. Jahrhunderts, Berlin, 1956, pp. 5-14).

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