A GEORGE II MAHOGANY HARLEQUIN GAMES TABLE with rounded rectangular triple-flap top, crossbanded overall, enclosing a tea table and a tan leather-lined writing surface with pop-up back section containing six pigeon-holes and seven variously-sized mahogany-lined drawers with adjustable reading slope, above a plain frieze and on turned tapering legs and pad feet, restorations

Details
A GEORGE II MAHOGANY HARLEQUIN GAMES TABLE with rounded rectangular triple-flap top, crossbanded overall, enclosing a tea table and a tan leather-lined writing surface with pop-up back section containing six pigeon-holes and seven variously-sized mahogany-lined drawers with adjustable reading slope, above a plain frieze and on turned tapering legs and pad feet, restorations
29¾in. (75.5cm.) wide; 35½in. (90cm.) high, open; 15in. (38cm.) deep, closed

Lot Essay

This form of parlour pier-table with hinged leg and ingenious fitments, serving as tea, card and writing-table, earned itself the name 'Harleqeuin' after the Comedia del Arte's master-of-disguises. Its pattern, including sprung-hinged flaps for propping up the writing-box, features on a George II cabinet-maker's design-sheet alongside fifteen other functional hinged and ratcheted items, ideally suited to West End apartments. The sheet, now in the Victoria & Albert Museum (E2320-1889) bears the name 'Potter London', who may be identified with the Thomas Potter listed in partnership with John Kelsey in a 1738 account at Stourhead, Wiltshire (see: G. Beard and C. Gilbert, Dictionary of English Furniture Makers, 1986). Potter's inscription on the design-sheet appears on a medal-cabinet that derives from that now in the Victoria & Albert Museum (see: D. FitzGerald, Georgian Furniture at the Victoria & Albert Museum, 1969, fig. 37)

A related games-table was sold by the Executors of the late Colonel William Stirling of Keir in these Rooms, 15 November 1990, lot 59.

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