A PAIR OF NORTH EUROPEAN NEOCLASSIC ORMOLU-MOUNTED AND BRASS-INLAID ROSEWOOD CONSOLES

CIRCA 1790

Details
A PAIR OF NORTH EUROPEAN NEOCLASSIC ORMOLU-MOUNTED AND BRASS-INLAID ROSEWOOD CONSOLES
circa 1790
Each with rectangular breakfronted white marble top above a galleried frieze mounted with foliate scrolls alternating with pierced trellis panels, on turned tapering faux-fluted legs headed by acanthus-cast leaves joined by an interlacing stretcher and with toupie feet, each with a paper label inscribed G No 9, one with a paper label inscribed in ink Deux Consoles en Bois de Rose de Chateau de Drottningholm en Suede-Fin 18ieme Siecle Ancienne Collection Ctss...
36¼ in. (92 cm.) high, 35½ in. (90 cm.) widee, 18 in. (46 cm.) deep (2)

Lot Essay

Drottningholm Palace, standing beside Lake Malaren and the official residence of the Swedish Royal family, is often referred to as the Versailles of the North. Queen Hedvig Eleonora (1636-1715), wife of Karl X, acquired the site in 1661 and commissioned Nicodemus Tessin the Elder to build a new palace modelled on Vaux-le-Vicomte to replace the old building which burnt down shortly after she took possession. Parts of this magnificent baroque structure were later remodelled in the fashionable neoclassical taste of the 1760's by Queen Louisa Ulrika, younger sister of Frederick the Great of Prussia, including the installation of a library decorated in white and gold by the architect Jean Eric Rehn. The elegant form of these consoles relates to the furniture supplied to the palace in the 1780's by Gottlieb Inversson which displayed a market french iunfluence, although certain details of their construction point to an origin other than Swedish.