A PAIR OF ENGLISH GILTWOOD MIRRORS
A PAIR OF ENGLISH GILTWOOD MIRRORS

ONE GEORGE III, CIRCA 1765, ONE LATE 19TH CENTURY

Details
A PAIR OF ENGLISH GILTWOOD MIRRORS
ONE GEORGE III, CIRCA 1765, ONE LATE 19TH CENTURY
Each with a later oval plate within a ribbon-tied crossed palm frond frame
66 ½ in. (169 cm.) high, 38 ½ in. (98 cm.) wide
Provenance
Acquired from Jayne Thompson Antiques, Harrodsburg, Kentucky.

Lot Essay

The pier-glass, enwreathed by the Arcadian satyr Pan's sacred reeds, is designed in the George III 'Roman' fashion. The crossed palm fronds, symbolizing concord and victory, was a favorite design of John Linnell (1729-1796). The design closely relates to Linnell's surviving manuscript drawings of circa 1760 for a side of a room, illustrated in Helena Hayward and Pat Kirkham, William and John Linnell, vol. II, London, 1980, p 115, fig. 220. It is suggested that Linnell could have adopted the motif from William Chambers' ornamental decorations to the chimney pieces of Osterley House in Middlesex. Another strikingly similar design was published by Mayhew and Ince in their pattern book, The Universal System of Household Furniture, London, 1762 (pl. 77).

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