A PAIR OF REGENCY BRASS-INLAID CALAMANDER GAMES TABLES

ATTRIBUTED TO GEORGE OAKLEY, CIRCA 1800

Details
A PAIR OF REGENCY BRASS-INLAID CALAMANDER GAMES TABLES
ATTRIBUTED TO GEORGE OAKLEY, CIRCA 1800
Each with a hinged swiveling D-form top opening to a baize gaming surface above a brass-inlaid paneled frieze on lyre form supports and down-curved legs ending in brass paw caps and casters, one with pencil inscription 11/13/39 and a printed paper Sussex depository label
29 in. (74 cm.) high, 35¾ in. (91 cm.) wide, 17½ in. (44.5 cm.) deep (2)

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Lot Essay

The cabinet-maker George Oakley (d. 1840) was among the specialist manufacturers of Grecian-black calamander furniture, ormolu-enriched in the French fashion and with 'buhl' inlay. He ran one of the more successful Regency London firms with various associates producing stylish furniture for, among others, the Prince of Wales, later George IV (see The Dictionary of English Furniture-Makers, Leeds, 1986, pp. 654-660). The firm was granted a royal warrant in 1799 after receiving a visit from Queen Charlotte and other members of the Royal family upon which '...her MAJESTY, the Duke and Duchess of YORK , and the PRINCESSES, &c., highly approved of the splendid variety which has justly attracted the notice of the fashionable world' (Morning Chronicle, May 1799).

The geometric brass inlay relates to a suite of furniture probably supplied by Oakley for Sir Arthur Grey Hazlerigg. Upon his succession as 11th Baronet in 1817, he refurbished his Leicestershire estate, Noseley Hall (see Noseley Hall; Sotheby's house sale, 28-29 September 1998, lots 146 and 147).

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