Details
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY PEMBROKE TABLE
The moulded rectangular crossbanded twin-flap top inlaid with boxwood and crossbanded in tulipwood, above a mahogany-lined frieze drawer and a conforming simulated drawer to the reverse, on channelled tapering scrolled cabriole legs headed by shell motifs, brass caps and leather castors
38½ in. (98 cm.) wide; 28½ in. (72 cm.) high; 28 in. (71 cm.) deep
Sale room notice
The measurements of this lot are 38½ in. (98 cm.) wide; 28½ in. (72 cm.) high; 28 in. (71 cm.) deep.

Lot Essay

A. Hepplewhite & Co.'s The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Guide, 1st ed., London, 1788, pl. 62, illustrates two designs for 'Pembroke Tables' with the comment that 'Pembroke Tables are the most useful of this species of furniture: they may be of various shapes'. They also provide a pattern for a bowed 'leaf' with rounded corners (pl. 64). This table evolved from the mid-18th Century 'breakfast table' which furnished bedroom apartments, and its serpentined and elegantly tapering legs terminating in scroll feet in the Louis XV manner, relate to those on a dressing-stool published by Hepplewhite (pl. 16).
A related table formerly in the Frederick Poke collection, is illustrated in C. Claxton Stevens and S. Whittington's 18th Century English Furniture, The Norman Adams Collection, Woodbridge, rev.ed., 1985, p. 320. A similar Pembroke table was sold by Mrs. M.L. Sangster in these Rooms, 15 April 1982, lot 72 and another was sold anonymously also in these Rooms, 25 February 1993, lot 68.

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