A REGENCY BRASS AND TORTOISESHELL CIRCULAR INK-STAND
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A REGENCY BRASS AND TORTOISESHELL CIRCULAR INK-STAND

ATTRIBUTED TO GEORGE BULLOCK

Details
A REGENCY BRASS AND TORTOISESHELL CIRCULAR INK-STAND
Attributed to George Bullock
The circular contre-partie inlaid dish with scrolling foliage, centred by a pen-tray and flanked by two circular cut-glass ink-wells with brass lids inlaid with a flower, the underside with a drawer
30in. (7.5 cm.) high; 15½ in. (39.5 cm.) diameter
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

This flowered inkstand-dish, appropriate for offerings at the altar of the love deity Venus, was conceived by George Bullock (d.1818) as a golden libation-patera. Its mosaiced compartments of flowered arabesques of Roman acanthus are boulle-inlaid in rose-coloured shell after the French antique or Louis Quatorze fashion. Its meander border of the native honey-suckle vine wreaths a pen-feather tray and glass-crystal ink-jars, whose diamond-cut wreaths of lozenged trellis evoke Rome's Temple of Venus.

The pattern may have been invented for Queen Charlotte, who was a visitor to Bullock's premises established in the Grecian Rooms, Piccadilly in 1812. One such inkstand described as 'A very sumptuous circular ink-stand, of the late George Bullock's Buhl manufacture with richly cut glass' was included in the Queen's effects sold anonymously in these Rooms, as 'The Remaining part of a valuable Collection of Curiosities [works of art]…', 24-26 May 1819, lot 38. Following his death 'at his house in Tenterden Street, Hanover Square' George Bullock was described as having 'carried taste, in the design of furniture, to a higher pitch than it was ever carried before in this country' (Annals of the Fine Arts, VIII, 1819, pp. 321-322). The Royal ink-stand is likely to have comprised this version of the pattern partly flowered in white mother-of-pearl. One such inkstand was sold anonymously, in these Rooms, 13 April 1989, lot 6 (£28,600) and again 16 November 1995 lot 317, (£17,250) and illustrated in M. Levy, 'Taking up the Pen', Country Life, 23 April 1992, p. 61. A rectangular tray ink-stand conceived from the same drawing (inscribed 'Mr. Boulton') as the present ink-stand was supplied to Matthew Robinson Boulton (d. 1842) for Tew Park in 1817 for the sum of £12 and sold by the late Major Eustace Robb, Tew Park, Great Tew, Christie's house sale, 27-29 May 1987, lot 13 (£7,700).

Patterns for the bowl of the plate and its raised rim feature in the Bullock Wilkinson tracings in the Birmingham City Museums and Art Gallery (M.3.74).

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