THE PROPERTY OF A LADY (Lots 122-130)
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY SECRETAIRE-BOOKCASE by George Simson

Details
A GEORGE III MAHOGANY SECRETAIRE-BOOKCASE by George Simson

Inlaid overall with boxwood lines, the upper section with rectangular dentilled cornice above pendant Gothic acorns, with a pair of Gothic-glazed doors enclosing three shelves, the lower section crossbanded in kingwood, with fitted secretaire-drawer simulated as two long drawers and enclosing a suede-lined writing-surface, pigeon-holes and drawers, above three further long drawers and on splayed bracket feet, one interior drawer with inscription in/in IA/IA and printed paper label of GEORGE SIMSON UPHOLDER Cabinet Maker & Undertaker No: 19 South side of St. Paul's Church Yard. London
34in. (86cm.) wide; 83in. (210cm.) high; 18in. (46cm.) deep
Literature
The Antique Collector, February 1989, fig. 8

Lot Essay

George Simson established his cabinet-workshops in St. Paul's Churchyard in 1787 and a Piccadilly warehouse in Dover Street in 1793. He was a subscriber to both Sheraton's Drawing Book and his Cabinet-Dictionary of 1803. The former features a pattern, pl. 64, that corresponds to a Simson-labelled Lady's secretaire which is illustrated in The Dictionary of English Furniture Makers, Leeds, 1986, fig. 22. An example of the label on the present lot is also illustrated ibid., fig. 23, and is thought to be the label that Simson used in the late 1790s.
Simson is now also credited with the manufacture of the group of 'Weeks' cabinets that were retailed by Thomas Weeks at his museum-emporium in Titchbourne Street (ibid., p. 817). For an example of the group, see: R. Fastnedge, Sheraton Furniture, London, 1962, fig. 75

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