A PAIR OF GEORGE II GILT-GESSO TRIPOD STANDS
A PAIR OF GEORGE II GILT-GESSO TRIPOD STANDS
A PAIR OF GEORGE II GILT-GESSO TRIPOD STANDS
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Following the auction, this lot will be stored at … Read more
A PAIR OF GEORGE II GILT-GESSO TRIPOD STANDS

CIRCA 1720-40

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE II GILT-GESSO TRIPOD STANDS
CIRCA 1720-40
Each with a dished circular top, decorated with strapwork and foliage above a turned and tapering shaft and a tripod base with foliate pad feet, restorations, re-gilt
36 ½ in. (93 cm.) high; 12 in. (31 cm.) diameter (the tops)
Provenance
With Phillips of Hitchin, 1977.
Ronald Phillips Ltd., London, 2006.
Private Collection, Chicago.
Literature
Connoisseur, March 1977 Illustrated/advertised for the Camden Antiques Fair, 26 March - 3 April 1977 with Phillips of Hitchin.
Ronald Phillips Ltd., Antique English Furniture, 2006, pp. 20-21 (illustrated)
Special notice
Following the auction, this lot will be stored at Crozier Park Royal and will be available for collection from 12.00pm on the second business day after the sale. Please call Christie’s Client Service 24 hours in advance to book a collection time at Crozier Park Royal. All collections from Crozier Park Royal will be by pre-booked appointment only. Tel: +44 (0)20 7839 9060 I Email: cscollectionsuk@christies.com.

Brought to you by

Charlotte Young
Charlotte Young Associate Director, Specialist

Lot Essay


The 'gueridon' pedestals for vases or candelabra formed part of an early 18th Century pier set and accompanied a table and mirror. The circular tray-top is enriched with an acanthus-flowered mosaic compartment in the Louis Quatorze 'Roman' or 'antique' manner popularised by the Oeuvres (1702) of Daniel Marot (d. 1752) 'architect' to William III. Roman acanthus foliage and husks also enrich its tapered pillar and its tripod 'claw'. Elaborate early examples were supplied by James Moore (d.1726) in 1724 for Hampton Court Palace (R. Edwards & M. Jourdain, Georgian Cabinet Makers, London, 1955, rev. ed., fig. 30) and for Blenheim Palace between 1716-22, the latter now lost. Moore, in partnership with John Gumley, supplied a number of triads - sets comprising a table, pair of stands and a mirror, for the royal palaces though none of the sets remain in their entirety (A. Bowett, Early Georgian Furniture 1716-1740, Woodbridge, 2009, p. 203).

The general form and decoration of the present columns relate to those of pedestals from the collection of Margaret, Countess of Suffolk and Berkshire, sold Christie's, London, 25 July 1969, lot 127. Another pair was sold anonymously, Christie's, London, 14 June 2001, lot 133 (£15,275 including premium).

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