AN IRISH GEORGE II GILTWOOD SIDE TABLE
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AN IRISH GEORGE II GILTWOOD SIDE TABLE

BASICALLY MID 18TH CENTURY AND ADAPTED

細節
AN IRISH GEORGE II GILTWOOD SIDE TABLE
BASICALLY MID 18TH CENTURY AND ADAPTED
With later breche violette marble top above an egg-and-dart frieze and central lion mask apron suspending oak garlands, on lion mask headed monopodia supports, raised in height and altered in width, originally with a wooden top, re-gilded
37in. (94cm.) high; 73½in. (186.5cm.) wide; 28½in. (72.5cm.) diameter
注意事項
This lot is offered without reserve. No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. This lot is subject to storage and collection charges. **For Furniture and Decorative Objects, storage charges commence 7 days from sale. Please contact department for further details.**
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Also see illustration on page 118

拍品專文

This 'Roman' marble-topped sideboard-table is designed in the George II fashion evoking the feast of Bacchus in antiquity. Its frieze displays a bacchic lion-head with 'Jupiter' oak garlands; while lion-paws support its legs. In its overall form it relates to 'Roman' table patterns in William Jones The Gentleman or Builder's Companion, 1739; and to one invented in the 1730s by the architect William Kent (d.1748) and published J. Vardy, Some Designs of Mr Inigo Jones and Mr William Kent, 1744. It is significant to note, therefore, that Jones's book was imported into Dublin in the same year and was 'sold by Robert Owen in Skinners Row for 12s'.

An Irish giltwood console table of similar character, originally from Dromoland Castle, Co. Clare, is in a Private Collection (and will be illustrated in the forthcoming book on Irish Furniture by The Knight of Glin and James Peill, 2006). Its apron is hung with garlands centred by a lion mask with 'wild' mane; similar features appear on the Trade Card of William Wilkinson of Chequer Lane, Dublin, presumably the same man as William Wilkenson, carver and gilder, recorded in Dublin Directories in Chequer Lane, 1761-1774 and at 34, Exchange Street, 1775-1784.

Several of this table's distinctive features - including the garlanded lion mask with 'wild' mane and square section legs - are also shared with the Kentian oak and pine side table in a Private Collection, sold at Adams, Dublin, 7 September 1994. A further related pair of tables, although without lion's-masks to the angles, is at Malahide Castle, Dublin (Gerald Kenyon, The Irish Furniture at Malahide Castle, 1994, pp.32-33).