A GEORGE III KINGWOOD, YEW WOOD, SYCAMORE, MAHOGANY AND MARQUETRY WORK TABLE
PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED PRIVATE COLLECTION 
A GEORGE III KINGWOOD, YEW WOOD, SYCAMORE, MAHOGANY AND MARQUETRY WORK TABLE

ATTRIBUTED TO MAYHEW AND INCE, CIRCA 1760-70

Details
A GEORGE III KINGWOOD, YEW WOOD, SYCAMORE, MAHOGANY AND MARQUETRY WORK TABLE
ATTRIBUTED TO MAYHEW AND INCE, CIRCA 1760-70
Inlaid with floral sprays overall, the serpentine hinged top enclosing two subsidiary hinged lids with chequered stringing, revealing a mahogany-lined compartment, the shaped frieze fitted with a drawer to one side, on cabriole legs joined by an undertier
28 ½ in. (72.5 cm.) high; 20 in. (51 cm.) wide; 14 in. (36 cm.) deep
Provenance
Acquired from Moss Harris, London, 1968.

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Carys Bingham
Carys Bingham

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Lot Essay

The distinctive floral marquetry, chequered stringing and use of yew wood veneers is closely associated with the Golden Square, Soho, cabinet-makers Messrs. Mayhew and Ince. Principal among these is the use of yew wood as a large scale veneer, 'the only wholly idiosyncratic veneer wood the firm used and possibly unique to Mayhew and Ince among London cabinet-makers of this date' (C. Gilbert, The Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840, Leeds, 1986, pp. 589-593). The firm supplied a veneered yew wood commode to Sir Brook Bridges of Goodnestone Park, Kent, that was exhibited in Treasures from Kent Houses, Royal Museum, Canterbury, September-October 1984, no. 57.

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