A GEORGE I COCUS WOOD CONCERTINA-ACTION GAMES TABLE
THE PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF T. GORDON LITTLE
A GEORGE I COCUS WOOD CONCERTINA-ACTION GAMES TABLE

CIRCA 1720

細節
A GEORGE I COCUS WOOD CONCERTINA-ACTION GAMES TABLE
CIRCA 1720
The eared quarter-veneered and crossbanded top enclosing a baize-lined interior with counter wells and inlaid dishes above a plain frieze on lappeted club legs and pad feet
30 in. (76 cm.) high, 34 in. (86.5 cm.) wide, 17 in. (43 cm.) deep

拍品專文

The card-table is veneered with an unusual timber called cocus wood, a hard, dense wood with a chocolate brown heart and a yellow sapwood, often referred to, erroneously, as laburnum. It was imported from the West Indies and was often known as West Indian ebony. It was used as a cabinet wood between 1660-1740 and in the present instance, a section of cocus wood has been sawn lengthways to provide a decoratively striped veneer (A. Bowett, 'Myths of English Furniture History: Laburnum Wood Furniture', Antique Collecting, June 1998, pp. 22-23). A cocus wood card-table of this form is preserved at Ickworth, Suffolk and is illustrated in R. Edwards, The Shorter Dictionary of English Furniture, 1964, London, p. 519, fig. 7. Another is in the collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (illustrated in The Gibbs Room installation, D. Fitz-Gerald, ed., Georgian Furniture, London, 1969, no. 14). A further similar example formerly in the collection of H.R.H. The Princess Royal and The Earl of Harewood, Harewood House, Yorkshire, was sold The Humphrey Whitbread Collection, Christie's, London, 5 April 2001, lot 54.