AN EARLY VICTORIAN MAHOGANY LARGE CENTRE TABLE
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AN EARLY VICTORIAN MAHOGANY LARGE CENTRE TABLE

BY HOLLAND & SONS

Details
AN EARLY VICTORIAN MAHOGANY LARGE CENTRE TABLE
By Holland & Sons
The rectangular top above a plain frieze on the long sides and a foliate-carved and scrolled strapwork frieze on the short sides, on scrolled foliage carved truss supports joined by a rectangular platform stretcher, on rectangular platforms with sunk castors, stamped ' HOLLAND & SONS' and with printed paper label with red ink "3"
36 in. (91.5 cm.) high; 72 in. (183 cm.) wide; 32¾ in. (83.5 cm.) deep
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 library-table with its sarcophagus-scrolled trestles of voluted and acanthus-wrapped trusses reflects the robust Grecian style promoted by Thomas King's, The Modern Style of Cabinet Work Exemplified, 1829 (E. T. Joy, The Pictorial Dictionary of British 19th Century Furniture Design, 1977, p. 542).

Holland and Sons were among the most distinguished furniture producers of the Victorian period, starting as Taprell and Holland at the begininning of the 19th Century, and becoming Holland and Sons in 1843. They supplied the furniture for many of the London clubs including the Athenaeum, the Reform Club and the Oxford and Cambridge Club. They took over premises in Mount Street in 1851 and their archives dating to 1942, when the firm ceased trading, are now preserved by the Victoria and Albert Museum. Messrs. Cope and Collinson's patent castors feature on furniture of the 1860's.

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