A REGENCY MAHOGANY CARLTON HOUSE DESK
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more THE PROPERTY OF SIR PHILIP POWELL, C.H., O.B.E.
A REGENCY MAHOGANY CARLTON HOUSE DESK

BY GILLOWS

Details
A REGENCY MAHOGANY CARLTON HOUSE DESK
By Gillows
Crossbanded overall in rosewood, the curved galleried top above six mahogany-lined short drawers flanked by curved doors, with stepped sides enclosing two mahogany-lined drawers, with gilt-tooled green leather-lined writing-surface and hinged reading-slope, the leather continuing under the removable flanking drawer-sections, above three frieze drawers, on square tapering legs with brass caps and castors, the underside of some drawers inscribed in ink 'Nash Oak Lodge', stamped 'GILLOWS LANCASTER'
38 in. (96.5 cm.) high; 64½ in. (164 cm.) wide; 33 in. (84 cm.) deep
Provenance
Nash, Oak Lodge.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

The 1796 design for this 'Carleton House Desk' features in the Estimate Sketch Book of Gillow of London and Lancaster, and derives, with minor variations, from Messrs A. Hepplewhite & Co.'s 'Gentleman's Writing Table' featured in their Cabinet-Maker's London Book of Prices, 2nd ed., 1793 (pl. 21). In that year interest in the elegant furnishings of Carlton House was promoted by the publication of Thomas Sheraton's, The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Drawing-Book, which illustrated some interiors of the London mansion created by George, Prince of Wales, later George IV. Gillow's pattern, ordered from their London showrooms, was named after the large 'Writing Table', with a top which contained 'Drawers and 2 Cupboards', that had been invoiced in February 1790 by the Pall Mall court cabinet-maker John Kerr (d. 1808) (H. Roberts, 'The First Carlton House Table?', Furniture History, 1995, pp. 124-128). The present desk, which was ordered from London and manufactured in Lancaster, bears the inscription 'Nash, Oak Lodge'. It is therefore tempting to associate it with the architect John Nash (d. 1835), who was employed during this period at Richard Page's Middlesex estate, known as The Park. He was later architect to George, when Prince Regent, but already by 1798 he had exhibited at the Royal Academy a drawing of a magnificent conservatory dedicated to George as Prince of Wales (J. Summerson, The Life and Work of John Nash Architect, London, 1980, fig 7c).

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