A GEORGE III ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD, ROSEWOOD, AMARANTH AND MARQUETRY WRITING TABLE
A GEORGE III ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD, ROSEWOOD, AMARANTH AND MARQUETRY WRITING TABLE

ATTRIBUTED TO PIERRE LANGLOIS, CIRCA 1760, SOME MOUNTS ASSOCIATED AND LATER

Details
A GEORGE III ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD, ROSEWOOD, AMARANTH AND MARQUETRY WRITING TABLE
ATTRIBUTED TO PIERRE LANGLOIS, CIRCA 1760, SOME MOUNTS ASSOCIATED AND LATER
The later three-quarter Greek-key pierced gallery surrounding a serpentine-shaped hinged top with an inlaid ribbon-tied spray of flowers, lifting to another hinged rosewood surface itself lifting to a storage well divided into four compartments, the frieze similarly inlaid with a single side drawer fitted with ormolu containers for sand and ink, the ink well glass-lined, on cabriole legs joined by a shelf-stretcher, later hinges to top and the interior hinged surface probably replaced in the 19th century.
29¼ in. (74 cm.) high, 20 in. (51 cm.) wide, 14¾ in. (37.5 cm.) deep
Provenance
Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury, Whitemarsh Hall, Philadelphia.
Mrs. Benjamin Stern, New York.
with Duveen Brothers, New York, 20 November, 1961.

Lot Essay

This small writing or work table was almost certainly executed by Pierre Langlois, one of the leading London cabinetmakers working at Tottenham Court Road from 1759, who produced a wide range of furniture in the French manner in the 1760s and 1770s.

His trade card, which is inscribed in both English and French, shows a similar table in the upper left-hand corner (reproduced in A. Heal, The London Furniture Makers, 1953, p. 94). This type of table, popular in France, gained favour in England in the 1760s and virtually identical examples were supplied by Langlois to Caroline, Lady Holland for Holland House, London and the Duchess of Northumberland for Alnwick, Northumberland. The Alnwick table is the only table with marquetry in the collection attributable to Langlois and is almost certainly the table noted by the Duchess of Northumberland in her 1763 Memorandum Books: 'A table inlaid Woods by L'Anglois. 8' (see P. Thornton and W. Rieder, 'Pierre Langlois, Ebéniste. Part 4', The Connoisseur, April 1972, p. 258, fig. 4). The Holland House table, now at Melbury House, Dorset, is accompanied by a Langlois commode similarly inlaid and probably supplied after 1763 (op.cit., fig. 3). The large blossoming floral sprays tied with ribbon, exaggerated curves and incut corners to the central panel are all characteristics typical to the work of Langlois at this time.

Another virtually identical table was sold anonymously, but with a Marjoribanks family label, Christie's New York, 16 April 1998, lot 133.

For information on the Stotesbury provenance please see lot 327.

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