AN IMPORTANT RÉGENCE STYLE ORMOLU-MOUNTED BRASS-INLAID, TORTOISESHELL AND EBONIZED "BOULLE" BUREAU PLAT

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AN IMPORTANT RÉGENCE STYLE ORMOLU-MOUNTED BRASS-INLAID, TORTOISESHELL AND EBONIZED "BOULLE" BUREAU PLAT
THIRD QUARTER 19TH CENTURY

With a serpentine rectangular ormolu-moulded top inset with a gilt-tooled green leather writing surface with a foliate brass-inlaid border above a shaped conforming frieze fitted with three drawers opposing three drawers, on cabriole legs with overscrolling foliate sabots--31in. (78.7cm.) high, 90½in. (229.8cm.) wide, 44½in. (113cm.) deep

Lot Essay

The construction of the offered lot may suggest that this bureau plat was made in the latter part of the second quarter of the 19th Century, There are several evidences of this, particularly the wide, flat dovetails, high quality brass inlay, and the hand-milled screws with cropped ends completed with thick tortoiseshell veneer.

Five leading cabinet makers were producing furniture for the aristocracy and the emerging merchant-class during the second quarter of the 19th Century. Specifically noted are Befort Pere, his son Befort Jeune, Jean Beurdeley, Joseph Cremer and Frédéric Roux (brother of Alexander Roux, American, who was located on Broadway in New York), all of whom produced exemplary pieces similar to the offered lot. Two such works of similar design are illustrated in Chrisopher Payne, 19th Century European Furniture, 1981, page 108, as well as a bureau, sold Christie's Ireland, Eniskerry, Co. Wicklow, Ireland, September 25, 1984, lot 489, Powerscourt sale.

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