A GEORGE I VERRE EGLOMISÉ MIRROR

Details
A GEORGE I VERRE EGLOMISÉ MIRROR
The arched rectangular divided bevelled mirror plate within scarlet borders decorated in gilt with berainesque foliate strapwork and arabesque design with foliate-decorated divisions, within a foliate and egg carved frame, upper plate replaced, together with its original upper plate with Page coat-of-arms (broken)
90in. (229cm.) high, 39¼in. (100cm.) wide
Provenance
Probably supplied to Sir Gregory Page, 1st Bt. of Greenwich (1668-1720) and by descent to Sir Gregory Page, 2nd Bt., Wricklemarsh, Kent (d. 1775)
Colonel Way
Sold in these Rooms, 15 October 1994, lot 527
Literature
F. Lenygon, Furniture in England, 2nd ed., 1924, p. 211, fig. 313

Lot Essay

The original upper mirror plate is decorated with the coat-of-arms of Sir Gregory Page (d. 1720) who was created 1st baronet by George I in 1714. Sir Gregory was director and later chariman of the East India Company, and an M.P. for New Shoereham. The baronetcy expired when his son, also Sir Gregory of Wricklemarsh, Kend, died in 1775 ( J. and J. Burke, The Extinct and Dorman Baronetcies of England, 1838, p. 395). Christie's sold the contents of Wricklemarsh in a house sale of 24 April 1783. There were a large number of mirrors in this sale, howerver based on the descriptions in the sale catalogue it is not possible to identify the offered example.

A similar example was sold in these Rooms from the Estate of Mary, Viscountess Rothermere, 16 April 1994, lot 167. Another from the Estate of Wendell Cherry was sold Sotheby's New York, 20 May 1994, lot 75. Several others exist such as one acquired from Halnaby Park and now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (illustrated in G. Wills, English Looking Glasses, 1965, fig. 11).