AN EARLY VICTORIAN MAHOGANY EXTENDING DINING-TABLE
AN EARLY VICTORIAN MAHOGANY EXTENDING DINING-TABLE

ATTRIBUTED TO GILLOWS, CIRCA 1849

Details
AN EARLY VICTORIAN MAHOGANY EXTENDING DINING-TABLE
ATTRIBUTED TO GILLOWS, CIRCA 1849
The rounded rectangular top with three additional leaves on tapering ring-turned legs with brass caps and castors, the three leaves with restorations and veneered to undersides, with padouk runners
28¼ in. (72 cm.) high; 56¾ in. (144 cm.) wide; 142 in. (360 cm.) fully extended; one leaf 29¾ in. (76 cm.) long; two leaves 26½ in. (67 cm.) long
Sale room notice
Please note that the three leaves are slightly warped and the table is sold as viewed. The estimate should read £6000 - 9000.

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Lily Canvin
Lily Canvin

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Lot Essay

In 1804 Gillows illustrated and patented their Imperial dining-table in which a variable number of loose leaves were fitted between fixed end leaves, a design which, within a few years, largely superceded most earlier ones. Initially such tables had an arangement of as many as ten or twelve legs to support the central leaves when extended, but as the design was improved and the mechanism became more sturdy the centre legs were gradually removed. The form remained popular and an 1849 drawing from Ferguson & Co, one of the successors to the Gillow family business, for an Imperial telescopic dining table with four legs, for their client Mr. Allfrey, is an almost exact design for the present table (Susan E.Stuart, Gillows of Lancaster and London 1730-1840, 2008, vol.I, p.247, pl.244).

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