A LATE REGENCY MAHOGANY AND LINE-INLAID DRUM-TABLE
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A LATE REGENCY MAHOGANY AND LINE-INLAID DRUM-TABLE

IN THE MANNER OF GEORGE BULLOCK, CIRCA 1815-1820

Details
A LATE REGENCY MAHOGANY AND LINE-INLAID DRUM-TABLE
IN THE MANNER OF GEORGE BULLOCK, CIRCA 1815-1820
En suite with the previous lot, with a gilt-decorated brown leather-lined top above four frieze drawers, on a spreading support inlaid with paterae and a wreath, on a concave-sided triform platform, with gilt paw feet, on castors, with a fixed top, possibly originally rotating, the upper surface re-positioned, oak-lined drawers, later feet and leather castors, the back of one drawer inscribed '3045'
30 in.(76 cm.) high; 41¾ in. (106 cm.) diameter
Provenance
Bought from Frank Partridge, London, January 1965
Special notice
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.

Lot Essay

These library-tables, with their laurel-crowned and altar-drum top, and altar-tripod pillar with laurel-wreathed palms and 'Apollo' griffin claws, serve to recall the triumph of the Art of Poetry.
This robust centre table form, in the French/antique manner, was introduced around 1800 by the connoisseur Thomas Hope (d. 1831), and
inspired by the work of his friend Charles Percier, whose architectural work was popularised by his Recueil de Décorations Intérieures, 1801. The table's Grecian-black inlay recalls the 'Etruscan' Grecian style popularised by The Works in Architecture of Robert and James Adam, 1773; and by Baron d' Hancarville's publication of Sir William Hamilton's Collection of Etruscan, Greek and Roman Antiquities (Naples, 1766-67).
Hope may also have been assisted by his architect Charles Heathcote Tatham (d. 1842) in the invention of this form of 'round monopodium' table, which was introduced at his Adam-built Duchess Street mansion/museum, which he part furnished in 1801 with a collection of Sir William Hamilton's Grecian vases. Hope's mahogany table, was ebony-inlaid with an 'Egyptian' starred diadem in harmony with the pedestal of the statue of the dawn-deity Aurora, which embellished his Breakfast Room. In 1804 Hope invited visitors to see his art collections at Duchess Street, and published a guide entitled, Household Furniture and Interior Decoration Executed from Designs by Thomas Hope, 1807 (pl. 39). The table was also engraved by Henry Moses in service as a card or 'loo' table, but with variations in its inlay, and published in Hope's Designs of Modern Costume, 1812. An enlarged edition of the latter was reissued in 1823 as A series of twenty-nine designs of Modern Costume drawn and engraved by Henry Moses, Esq. Hope's original table may also be that featured, but without the pillar inlay, in a watercolour executed about 1818 of the Small Drawing Room of his Surrey villa, The Deepdene (J. Morley, Regency Design, 1790-1840, London, 1993, p. 226 pl. LV).

The execution of the present library-table reflects the influence of the Tenterden Street cabinet-maker, George Bullock (d. 1818), whose work was lauded in R. Ackermann's The Repository of Arts, 1816. Closely related wreaths were employed by the latter on the top of a table in 'bog oak from the Isle of Man' supplied to the Duke of Atholl at a cost of £21 (A. Coleridge, 'The work of George Bullock, cabinet-maker, in Scotland I', Connoissseur, April/May 1965, p. 250, fig. 2).
The present drum table relates to two in oak, sold anonymously at Christie's, London, 5 April 2001, lot 77, and at Christie's, New York, 14 April 1984, lot 169. A closely related mahogany library-table was sold at Sotheby's, London, 12 July 1963 lot 107, whilst a satinwood and ebony-inlaid drum library-table was in the possession of the antique dealer R.A. Lee in the 1940s (R.W. Symonds, 'Some Aspects of Regency Furniture', The Antique Collector, Sept-Oct., 1948, fig.9). A table corresponding to that illustrated at Duchess Street in 1807, is in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London (D. Watkin, Regency Furniture and Interior Decoration, London, 1971).

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