A GERMAN ORMOLU AND SILVER-MOUNTED MAHOGANY, FRUITWOOD AND SATINWOOD GUERIDON
A GERMAN ORMOLU AND SILVER-MOUNTED MAHOGANY, FRUITWOOD AND SATINWOOD GUERIDON
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A GERMAN ORMOLU AND SILVER-MOUNTED MAHOGANY, FRUITWOOD AND SATINWOOD GUERIDON

ATTRIBUTED TO MICHAEL RUMMER, HEIDELBERG, CIRCA 1785-90

Details
A GERMAN ORMOLU AND SILVER-MOUNTED MAHOGANY, FRUITWOOD AND SATINWOOD GUERIDON
ATTRIBUTED TO MICHAEL RUMMER, HEIDELBERG, CIRCA 1785-90
The pierced galleried top with ormolu banding surrounding a floral spray reserve above a paneled frieze with spring-loaded drawers mounted with lion's masks and drapery swags,the paneled square tapering legs headed with rosettes and with ribbon-tied husks above ormolu-mounted overlapping circlets, joined by shaped strechers surmounted by an urn
31 in. (79 cm.) high, 23 ½ in. (59.5 cm.) diameter
Provenance
Divers Amateurs, Lair Dubreuil, Paris, 18 April 1913, lot 122 (as attributed to Roentgen).
Special notice
Please note this lot will be moved to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services (CFASS in Red Hook, Brooklyn) at 5pm on the last day of the sale. Lots may not be collected during the day of their move to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services. Please consult the Lot Collection Notice for collection information. This sheet is available from the Bidder Registration staff, Purchaser Payments or the Packing Desk and will be sent with your invoice.

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Lot Essay

The highly sophisticated pictorial marquetry roundel to the center of the top and overall form of this table with its spring-loaded drawers and silver mounts makes it possible to attribute it to the German cabinet-maker and celebrated marqueteur Michael Rummer. A comparable table sold Christie’s London, 10 June, 2004, lot 118 (£41,825). Another related example with a marquetry panel of the resting huntsman, signed and dated by Rummer 1780/MR, is exhibited at the Landesmuseum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte in Schloss Oldenburg. A closely related table attributed to Rummer, and undoubtedly executed in the same workshop, though with fewer marquetry panels but instead fitted with a complicated pop-up section and slightly further mounted, was sold by the March family; Boulle to Jansen, Christie's, London, 11 June 2003, lot 39 (£77,675). A further table of rectangular outline, most probably also from the same workshop and displaying closely related legs headed by identical gilt-metal flowerhead rosettes, though erroneously attributed to Johann-Gottleib Fiedler, was offered Sotheby's, London, 14 June 2000, lot 67.
Rummer (1747-1821), from Handschuhsheim near Heidelberg, is credited with producing some of the finest marquetry panels in the à la mosaïque technique developed by the Roentgen workshop in the late 1760's and example of which is lot 117 in this sale. This new type of marquetry was first mentioned in an advertisement for the Hamburg Lottery of 1769, describing the first prize as 'Ein bureau... mit Chinuesischen Figuren, a la Mosaique eingelegt'. In contrast to traditional marquetry techniques based on scorching and engraving for effects of shade and detail, the new technique created 'pictures in wood', with painterly marquetry panels assembled from minute pieces of wood cut with incredible precision. Heidelberg parish council Mieg's 'Beytrag zur vaterländischen Geschichte der Einlegekunst in Holz' of 1780 already documents Rummer's career during his life time. Mieg writes how Rummer, having previously spent a year in London and a year in Poland working for Prince Polinsky, came to fame during his second stay with Roentgen in Neuwied when working on important commissions for Marie-Antoinette and Prince Karl Alexander von Lothringen (1778/79). In both cases he was responsible for the complex figural marquetry, including theatrical, allegorical and historical scenes, which became a recurring decorative motif during the 1770's and early 1780's. The figurative scenes executed for Prince Karl Alexander von Lothringen in 1779, which were just like the scene of the resting huntsman on this table based on paintings and drawings of Januarius Zick (1732-1797), are by far the most sophisticated examples (now in the Österreichisches Museum für Angewandte Kunst, Vienna).

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