A GEORGE III YEWWOOD, MAHOGANY AND ENGRAVED MARQUETRY SECRETAIRE-BOOKCASE
PROPERTY FROM A CALIFORNIA COLLECTION (LOT 523)
A GEORGE III YEWWOOD, MAHOGANY AND ENGRAVED MARQUETRY SECRETAIRE-BOOKCASE

ATTIBUTED TO MAYHEW AND INCE, CIRCA 1775

Details
A GEORGE III YEWWOOD, MAHOGANY AND ENGRAVED MARQUETRY SECRETAIRE-BOOKCASE
ATTIBUTED TO MAYHEW AND INCE, CIRCA 1775
With broken arched cresting inlaid with feathered husks and paterae above a dentiled and faux-fluted frieze, with a pair of glazed doors with silk-lined interior, the base with secretaire-drawer enclosing a fitted interior above three mahogany-lined graduated drawers, on later bracket feet, fitted for electricity
102¾ in. (261 cm.) high, 41 in. (104 cm.) wide, 20 in. (51 cm.) deep
Provenance
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 20 November 1986, lot 175 (with plinth base).
Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 30 April 1997, lot 126.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 8 April 2004, lot 276.

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

This secretaire-bookcase can be confidently attributed to the pre-eminent cabinet-makers William Mayhew and John Ince. Most significantly, the use of yewwood with ebonized details as featured within the trompe l'oeil flutes of the frieze as well as the display of shaded and engraved marquetry are signature characteristics of their oeuvre. Paterae wheel medallions are found on a pair of serpentine commodes almost certainly supplied by the firm to the 2nd Viscount Palmerston for Broadlands, Hampshire (H. Roberts, 'Furniture at Broadlands - II,' Country Life, 5 February 1981, p. 347, fig. 3). A similarly fluted frieze features on a satinwood and marquetry breakfront attributed to the firm and sold '50 Years of Collecting: The Decorative Arts of Georgian England,' Christie's, London, 14 May 2003, lot 40. A pair of mahogany bookcases by Mayhew and Ince with carved fluted friezes was purchased by the Queen Mother for Clarence House from Olantigh, Kent. One of these appears in a photograph of the recently refurbished Lancaster Room, M. Hogg, 'Clarence House,' The World of Interiors, October 2003, p.199.

More from 500 Years: Decorative Arts Europe, including Oriental Carpets

View All
View All