A PAIR OF REGENCY ORMOLU-MOUNTED CALAMANDER, SIMULATED-CALAMANDER AND PARCEL-GILT CARD-TABLES
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A PAIR OF REGENCY ORMOLU-MOUNTED CALAMANDER, SIMULATED-CALAMANDER AND PARCEL-GILT CARD-TABLES

BY GEORGE SIMSON, EARLY 19TH CENTURY

細節
A PAIR OF REGENCY ORMOLU-MOUNTED CALAMANDER, SIMULATED-CALAMANDER AND PARCEL-GILT CARD-TABLES
BY GEORGE SIMSON, EARLY 19TH CENTURY
Each with hinged swivel-top banded in satinwood enclosing a baize-lined playing-surface, the frieze centred by a mask, scroll and anthemia mount, above twin turned, grained columns with gilt foliate bases on a platform base with four downswept legs, with later brass paw caps and castors, the underside of one with depository labels 'R. STRAHAN & CO LTD. DUBLIN' and 'COWLEY CARRIERS LTD. OXFORD', the interior of one inscribed '301 20/X/73 A/S/X/R' and with cabinetmaker's label 'GEORGE SIMSON, UPHOLDER , CABINETMAKER & UNDERTAKER, NO.19 Southside of St Pauls Church Yard, LONDON.', repairs to columns, the mounts probably added
28½ in. (72 cm.) high; 36 in. (91 cm.) wide; 18 in. (45 cm.) deep (2)
來源
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 26 January 1983, lot 133.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 9 July 1992, lot 46.
出版
C. Gilbert, Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture 1700-1840, Leeds, 1996, p. 431, fig. 865.
注意事項
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

拍品專文

The tops of Indian black-flamed calamander are inlaid with ribbon-bands of golden satinwood whose corner volutes form palm-flowers, while their 'Roman' tablet-panelled friezes are enriched in the French fashion with ormolu bas-relief flowers framing central plaques of rose-wreathed Venus masks tied by palm-flowered and voluted ribbons. The latter pattern derives from the altar-pedestal of a bronze vase that is likely to have been executed around 1800 for the connoisseur Thomas Hope (d. 1832) by the Piccadilly bronze-founder Alexis Decaix (T. Hope, Designs for Household Furniture and Interior Decoration, 1807, pl. XLIX). The tables' Grecian-black frames comprise paired pillars, whose bases are wreathed with golden palms, while their altar-pedestals are raised on Grecian-scrolled 'claws', whose trusses are enriched with flowered reliefs and terminate in bacchic lion-paws.
One table bears the trade-label adopted by the Upholder George Simson (d. circa 1840) following the establishment of his St. Paul's Churchyard premises in the late 1780s.

The same patterned castor-fitted paws feature on one of Simson's rosewood sofa tables while a similar patterned top appears on another of his calamander card-tables, which has a single palm-flowered pillar (C. Gilbert, Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture 1700-1840, Leeds, 1996, figs. 862 and 866).

During the 1790s British victories over the Dutch forces in Ceylon had helped popularise the fashion for Calamander wood, whose blackness well suited the contemporary 'Grecian' style. The wood was noted as 'lately introduced' by Thomas Sheraton in The Cabinet Dictionary, 1803. In 1810 George Oakley supplied a related four-pillared window-pier card-table and en suite sofa-table, and these are illustrated by R. Fastnedge and M. Jourdain, Regency Furniture, rev. ed., London, 1965 (figs. 157 and 134).