An oak, inlaid and ash veneered chest, German, 17th century
An oak, inlaid and ash veneered chest, German, 17th century

Details
An oak, inlaid and ash veneered chest, German, 17th century
Probably Rhineland, the moulded lid with twin bordered lozenge inlay and star bursts to each corner, the sides with tromp l'oeil arches and parquetry floral borders, bearing carrying handles, the front two panels profusely inlaid with tromp l'oeil buildings around a parquetry square and with star bursts to the upper corners, on moulded plinth
48in. (122cm.) wide, 20½in. (52cm.) high, 18½in. (47cm.) deep
Provenance
Vesey Grange, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands, 28th September 1960, lot 59

Lot Essay

Noting the inlaid decoration centring on a fanciful steepled building. Late Victorian collectors compared this group of chests with Henry VIII's remarkable Palace of Nonesuch at Cheam, Surrey. The comparison has no basis in fact, since the elaborate buildings first appear in Cologne furniture, following Italian fashions for intarsia work. An important exploratory article by Benno Forman collates records of the immigrant craftsmen of Southwark and their products ('Continental Furniture Craftsmen in London: 1511-1625', Furniture History 1971, pp. 94-120). The article attributes the origins of the style to Cologne and neighbouring cities and charts its appearance in London and Norwich at the hands of German inlayers and chestmakers in the late 16th Century

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