A PAIR OF SPANISH GILT BRONZE-MOUNTED IVORY, TORTOISESHELL, EBONY AND ROSEWOOD CABINETS ON STANDS**
Prospective purchasers are advised that several co… Read more PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE CALIFORNIAN COLLECTION (LOTS 356 - 360)
A PAIR OF SPANISH GILT BRONZE-MOUNTED IVORY, TORTOISESHELL, EBONY AND ROSEWOOD CABINETS ON STANDS**

17TH CENTURY, THE STANDS LARGELY LATER

Details
A PAIR OF SPANISH GILT BRONZE-MOUNTED IVORY, TORTOISESHELL, EBONY AND ROSEWOOD CABINETS ON STANDS**
17TH CENTURY, THE STANDS LARGELY LATER
One inlaid in première and the other in contre partie, each profusely engraved and inlaid with grotesque beasts and hunters in scrolling foliage, the broken molded pediment above a panel with coat-of-arms of the Vilchez family of Andalucia flanked by pierced scrolling foliage and a balustraded gallery with finials, above the breakfront carcase with frieze above the central door with two tiers of panels flanked by two Solomonic columns each, the upper panel inscribed 'En granada dano de MDCII' and 'En granada dano MDCII', respectively, below a coat-of-arms with rays, enclosing four drawers with two landscape scenes each, above a drawer, flanked by a column of four panelled drawers to each side, the sides and reverse of door with geometric inlay, above the molded band and on later claw-and-ball feet, the stands with breakfront top inlaid with geometric banding above three drawers, the central one simulated as two, on Corinthian Solomonic columns with conforming stretchers and on gadrooned ball feet, one with paper label inscribed '2883 12' and the other '2883 13' and with further paper label printed '125 2' and one inscribed 'Franzin' to the reverse of tops, the central drawer of one with green-rimmed paper label inscribed '44' and with green label inscribed '733 48', the top of one incised 'Ba...', the drawers of stands probably original, the gilt bronze elements largely of later date, restorations and replacements
100½ in. (255 cm.) high, 71½ in. (182 cm.) wide, 24½ in. (62 cm.) deep (2)
Provenance
The Vilchez family, Andalucia.
with Dino Franzin, Milan.
Acquired through Valerian Rybar & Daigre Design Corp., New York.
Special notice
Prospective purchasers are advised that several countries prohibit the importation of property containing materials from endangered species, including but not limited to coral, ivory and tortoiseshell. Accordingly, prospective purchasers should familiarize themselves with relevant customs regulations prior to bidding if they intend to import this lot into another country.

Lot Essay

These spectacular Spanish cabinets are of a type known as 'papeleira', which developed from the more functional 16th century drop-front secretaire-on-stand, or 'vargueno', and must rank among the most lavishly inlaid examples of this form recorded.

The sumptuous inlay, with elaborately scrolling arabesque foliage and figures in armour battling mythical beasts, often emerging directly out of the foliage, is a striking example of the 'grotesque' style which had been developed by Italian Renaissance artists such as Mantegna and Raphael (whose 'grotesques' in the Stanze of the Vatican are among the most celebrated examples), who themselves were directly inspired by similar fantastical imagery from ancient Rome. Giorgio Vasari, in the section on painting of his famous work Vite described how "...grotesques were a free and whimsical form of painting invented in Antiquity for decorating wall-surfaces... The artists depicted fantastical forms created from the caprice of nature or from the extravagant fantasy of the artists: they invented these forms without any rules..."

The 'grotesque' style, with its emphasis on rich surface decoration, naturally leant itself it to all facets of the decorative arts, and it was disseminated through print sources by designers such as Wendel Dietterlin and Christoph Jamnitzer in Germany, and Androuet Ducerceau in France (for a full discussion of the 'grotesque' style see A. Gruber ed., L'Art Décoratif en France: Renaissance et Maniérisme, Paris, 1993, pp. 191 - 275).

Other Spanish cabinets of simpler form and often with similar cresting of pierced metalwork, dated to the mid-17th century, include examples illustrated in M. Alonso, El Mueble en Espana Siglos XVI-XVII, Madrid, 1993, figs. 237, 239 and 241 - 2. The distinctive landscape marquetry panels of the internal drawers of the central compartment are of a rather more naive hand than the 'grotesque' panels, and relate closely to other cabinets sold at auction, including one sold by a Spanish Noble family, Christie's, London, 11 May 2000, lot 286, and another, with the arms of Don Francisco Fernandez of Cordoba, Duke of Sessa (1626 - 1688), sold Christie's, New York, 27 May 1999, lot 278.

The date of MDCII, or 1602, below the coat-of-arms of the Andalusian Vilchez family, is puzzling (and on the contre partie example seems to have been added later), as most cabinets of this type tend to be dated from the mid-17th century onwards, although the 'grotesque' designs are undoubtedly of earlier influence. It is possible that it refers to a significant date in the history of the Vilchez family which predates the creation of these remarkable cabinets.

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