No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… 显示更多
A GEORGE II BURR-ELM BACHELOR'S CHEST

NORTH COUNTRY, CIRCA 1730

细节
A GEORGE II BURR-ELM BACHELOR'S CHEST
NORTH COUNTRY, CIRCA 1730
The rectangular caddy-moulded hinged top veneered in four sections enclosing a veneered interior above four graduated drawers between canted fluted angles, on bracket feet, minor restorations to feet, metalwork original
31 in. (78.5 cm.) high; 30½ in. (77.5 cm.) wide; 11¼ in. (28.5 cm.) deep
来源
Anonymous sale, Fellow's auctioneers, Birmingham, 1998.
注意事项
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

荣誉呈献

Rufus Bird
Rufus Bird

查阅状况报告或联络我们查询更多拍品资料

登入
浏览状况报告

拍品专文

This rare chest, executed in burr-elm, was restored by Peter Holmes of Arlington Conservation following its purchase by John Parry in 1998. The unusual fluted canted angles are often associated with cabinet-making practices in the North of England.

The term bachelor's chest refers to a shallow chest-of-drawers with a hinged top, usually enclosing a veneered surface. The top is usually supported by a pair of lopers placed to either side of the top drawer and is used for writing on, or as a dressing-table. The small size of the bachelor's chest suggests that it was designed as a piece of bedroom furniture, perhaps to fit in the window pier, to benefit from the daylight. The term 'bachelor's chest' was not used in the 18th century which has made identifying such chests in 18th century inventories difficult. The inventory of Sherborne House, Dorset of 1726 lists '2 folding walnut dressing tables drawers to the bottum [sic]' in a bedchamber and in another closet a 'walnut dressing Table to fold up with drawers to bottum [sic]' (A. Bowett, Early Georgian Furniture 1715-1740, pp. 105-106). Sherborne House was a Tudor house purchased by Henry Seymour Portman in 1720 and remodelled in the neo-Palladian manner by Benjamin Bastard of Blandford. The Hall contains a magnificent mural by Sir James Thornhill (d. 1734).