拍品专文
Diminutive in size, the top with a pronounced overhang and the skirt with a dramatic profile, this table combines New England refinement with rural inventiveness. The top and its molded edge are made out of one piece of wood, an unusual method as it required extensive labor to work down the wood and achieve a smooth, flat plane. Such practice contrasts with the more efficient method of applying molded strips and further suggests its country origins. The sycamore top and frame is a rare instance of the use of this wood as a primary material (for a high chest from Colchester, Connecticut with sycamore case sides, see Thomas P. Kugelman, Alice K. Kugelman with Robert Lionetti, Connecticut Valley Furniture (Hartford, CT, 2005), pp. 215-216, cat. 95).