Property of a Lady
A FEDERAL GILTWOOD MIRROR

Details
A FEDERAL GILTWOOD MIRROR
NEW YORK, 1790-1810

The broken rectangular cornice surmounted by a carved spread-wing eagle carved with a drapery swag, the eagle, grasping with its beak a ball-and-chain continuing to flaming urns, all above a rectangular carved frame with fluted columns enclosing a conforming looking glass with rosette carved corner blocks--47½in. high, 22in. wide

Lot Essay

Stylistic features on this looking glass such as the urn-and-flame finials and applied feather motifs across the frieze are directly adapted from plate no. 8 of George Hepplewhite's The Cabinetmaker and Upholster's Guide (1794). Hepplewhite refers to these designs as being "of the newest fashion, proper to be placed over chimney pieces, sofas, etc."