A GEORGE II MAHOGANY CENTRE TABLE
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A GEORGE II MAHOGANY CENTRE TABLE

Details
A GEORGE II MAHOGANY CENTRE TABLE
The serpentine rectangular top with pierced and moulded balustraded gallery with re-entrant corners and handles to the centre, above a shaped breakfront frieze on lappet-headed channelled cabriole legs and scroll feet, restorations to gallery, the underside with handwritten label 'This is the property of The Viscountess Walden', the top constructed of two pieces of identically-figured mahogany, suggesting that the tray-top itself was probably originally removable from its identically-shaped mahogany base
28 1/8 in. (71.5cm.) high; 32½ in. (82.5 cm.) wide; 24 in. (61 cm.) deep
Provenance
Possibly the Earls of Seaforth in the 18th century and by descent to Julia Stewart-Mackenzie (d.1937), Viscountess Walden (1873-76).
Bought from Norman Adams, 18 January 1982.
Literature
C. Claxton Stevens and S. Whittington, 18th Century English Furniture, The Norman Adams Collection, Woodbridge, rev. ed., 1985, p. 299 ('This is a fine example of a table which came to Norman Adams Ltd. in untouched original state and which needed no restoration save a great deal of waxing to revive its dull, dry surface and bring back its deep natural shine').
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 PROVENANCE
The title of Viscount Walden is the second subsidiary title of the Marquesses of Tweeddale but it appears only ever to have been used for a short period, between 1862 and 1876, and the title Viscountess for a very short period indeed. The second son of the 8th Marquess of Tweeddale used that courtesy title after the death of his elder brother, who had used the more usual title of Earl of Gifford. Lord Walden married twice. His first wife, Helena Kielmansegge, daughter of the Hanoverian Minister in London, was married in 1857 and died in 1871. He married his second wife, Julia Stewart-Mackenzie, in 1873 and when his father died in 1876 he became Marquess. The owner of this table is far more likely to have been his second wife and the label would have been applied in the period 1873-76.
THE ICONOGRAPHY
Conceived in the George II 'Roman' manner, the tray's reed-moulded balustrade is supported by 'vase' pedestals alternating with medallions of reed-moulded and open-fretted libation-paterae. The central handles sit above projecting tablets in the table frieze, which is scalloped in triumphal-arches. Its truss-scrolled columnar legs are wrapped by palm-leaves and terminate in Ionic volutes. Such 'vase' balustrades were popularised by the Book of Architecture, 1728, issued by the Rome-trained architect James Gibbs, while the feature of 'tablets and medallions' reflects fashionable 'Roman' interior decoration introduced in the mid-18th century.

The East India trade to China had introduced lacquer versions of these tea-tray tables, which generally served in window-piers of parlours or fashionable bedroom apartments for the tea-service display. In addition to the lacquered and fretted imports, these tables were also decorated with japanning in imitation of lacquer such as that featured in the 1727 parlour view of the Grantham house of the antiquarian William Stukeley (d.1766) (F.Scoons, 'Dr.William Stukeley's House at Grantham', The Georgian Group Journal, vol. IX, 1999, pp. 158-165).
An exaggeratedly serpentine tripod tea-table, with the same patterned gallery, in the possession of the author, was illustrated in R. Edwards and P. Macquoid, The Dictionary of English Furniture, London, rev. ed., 1954, vol. III, p. 206, fig. 12. A serpentine tray of this form, although with fewer balusters, is illustrated in M. Jourdain and F. Rose, English Furniture: The Georgian Period 1750-1830, London, 1952, p. 191. fig. 157.

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