A LATE VICTORIAN BRASS-MOUNTED HALL STAND
A LATE VICTORIAN BRASS-MOUNTED HALL STAND

ATTRIBUTED TO SHOOLBRED & C0., CIRCA 1880

Details
A LATE VICTORIAN BRASS-MOUNTED HALL STAND
ATTRIBUTED TO SHOOLBRED & C0., CIRCA 1880
The two brass urn-finials capping the fluted uprights connected by two horizontal bars with brass hanging-hooks, above a rectangular tier with gallery on a solid backplate supported by a brass scroll above D-shaped stick-holders, the base with a drip-tray on brass outswept feet, some hooks replaced
76 in. (193 cm.) high; 26 in. (66 cm.) wide; 9½ in. (24 in.) deep
Sale room notice
This lot should be described as brass-mounted mahogany.

Brought to you by

Elizabeth Wight
Elizabeth Wight

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Lot Essay

James Shoolbred and Company was located on Tottenham Court Road, a thriving centre for fashionable furniture shops from the 1860s. They operated one of the first great department stores in London, and while their trade was diverse, they began producing furniture in around 1870. They issued an important catalogue of the firm's work in 1876 and earned a Royal warrant in the mid-1880s. Their output encompassed all prevailing styles including Art furniture, 'Old English' and 'Japanese' as is evident from the 1878 Paris Universal Exhibition in which they offered 'a very extensive selection of items' (E. Joy, ed.,Pictorial Dictionary of British 19th Century Furniture Design, Woodbridge, Suffolk, 1977, p.xxxvi). Much of the furniture they designed was influenced by the 'Aesthetic Taste', popularised by Oscar Wilde and the architect E. W. Godwin.
A nearly identical stand was sold Christie's, London, 24 January 2008, lot 246 (£15,500).

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