A PAIR OF REGENCY BRASS-INLAID EBONIZED 'BOULLE' MARQUETRY DWARF BOOKCASES

CIRCA 1825

Details
A PAIR OF REGENCY BRASS-INLAID EBONIZED 'BOULLE' MARQUETRY DWARF BOOKCASES
Circa 1825
Each with raised superstructure with mirrored back, scroll uprights and verde antico marble tops, above open shelves on toupie feet, with paper label inscribed in ink ASTOR BOOKCASE/MAJOR AUCTION, reconstructed incorporating early 18th century elements, marble tops possibly replaced
46½in. (118cm.) high, 24½in. (62cm.) wide, 13in. (33cm.) deep (2)
Provenance
The Astor family

Lot Essay

These elegant dwarf bookcases typify the revived taste for Boulle furniture among English cognoscenti of the 1820's as popularized by such influential collectors as the Prince Regent, later George IV, and William Beckford. The demand for Boulle furniture (or 'Buhl', as it was known) was catered to by a range of antiquarian dealers in London who not only dealt in old furniture but would also adapt 18th century Boulle pieces or even make examples in the Boulle style.
Such dealers and cabinet-makers included Louis le Gaigneur who termed himself a 'French Buhl Manufacturer' and worked almost exclusively for George IV and his circle, the firm of Town and Emmanuel of 103 Bond St, 'Manufacturers of Buhl Marqueterie' and Thomas Parker of Air St., Piccadilly, who in 1813 supplied a pair of Boulle marquetry coffers-on-stands to the Prince Regent which remain in the British Royal Collection.