A REGENCY MAHOGANY AND EBONISED TRIPOD TABLE
A REGENCY MAHOGANY AND EBONISED TRIPOD TABLE

IN THE MANNER OF MARSH AND TATHAM, EARLY 19TH CENTURY

Details
A REGENCY MAHOGANY AND EBONISED TRIPOD TABLE
IN THE MANNER OF MARSH AND TATHAM, EARLY 19TH CENTURY
The square ebony strung top above a tapering reeded column with a spreading base and a tricorn base with turned feet
28½ in. (73 cm.) high; 20 in. (51 cm.) square

Brought to you by

Elizabeth Wight
Elizabeth Wight

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Lot Essay

The tapered and reed-enriched pillar derives from a Roman candelabrum introduced in the early 19th century by the connoisseur Thomas Hope (d. 1842) at his Duchess Street mansion/museum and illustrated in his Household Furniture and Interior Decoration, 1807, pl.IX. A related table with brass three-quarter gallery and wing-scrolled feet, one of a pair in the collection of Lord and Lady White of Hull, was illustrated in Edward T.Joy, English Furniture, 1800-1851, 1977, p.65. They were subsequently sold Christie's, New York, 30 April 1997, lot 226.
A further pair formed part of the drawing-room furniture supplied around 1809 by the Mount Street firm of Marsh & Tatham for Southill, Bedfordshire (G.Jackson-Stops, 'Southill Park, Bedfordshire', Country Life, 28 April 1994, pp.62-67, and F.J.B.Watson, 'The Furniture and Decoration', Southill: A Regency House, London, 1951, pp.29-30, pl.45.

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