THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A MAHOGANY AND WHITE-PAINTED SERVING-TABLE

AFTER A DESIGN BY ROBERT ADAM

Details
A MAHOGANY AND WHITE-PAINTED SERVING-TABLE
After a design by Robert Adam
The rectangular top with turned-baluster brass gallery and an entrelac edge, above a fluted and lappeted frieze divided by patera, on six square tapering fluted legs headed by gadrooned capitals, on concave- spreading stepped square feet, redecorated and with signs of cream underpainting, repaired split to top
74¼ in. (188.5 cm.) wide; 33½ in. (85 cm.) high; 29½ in. (75 cm.) deep
Provenance
By repute the Lascelles family, Stapleton Park, Yorkshire.
Sale room notice
The height of this serving table is 45¾ in. (116 cm.) to the top of the gallery.

Lot Essay

The basic sideboard-table pattern relates to that of a pair of 'eight legged' tables with mahogany tops inset with ribbon-guilloche borders, that the carver Sefferin Nelson executed in 1773 for Kenwood House, Hampstead, to a design by the architect Robert Adam (d.1792). The design was illustrated in R. and J. Adam's The Works in Architecture, London, 1774, (vol. I, no. 2. pl. VIII) (J. Bryant, 'Back as Adam Intended', Country Life, 3 November 1988, pp. 192-195). A similar mahogany top features on the sideboard-table designed by Adam in 1767 for Osterley Park, Middlesex, while the frame's antique flute and flowered-patterae enrichments together with hermed feet also appear on the Breakfast Room side tables designed by Adam in 1777 for the same house (E. Harris, The Furniture of Robert Adam, London, 1963, figs. 15 and 32).
A related form of leg features on the sideboard-table designed about 1780 for Saltram House, Devon (E. Harris, op.cit., fig. 35). The brass balusters supporting the plate-rail are a simplified version of those of the Kenwood tables.

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