Lot Essay
The cabinet is veneered with cocus wood, a hard, dense wood with a chocolate brown heart and a yellow sapwood, often referred to, erroneously, as laburnum. It was imported from the West Indies and was often known as West Indian ebony. It was used as a cabinet wood between 1660-1740 and in this instance the cocus wood has been cut both obliquely and lengthways to provide a decorative 'oyster' effect and contrasting striped pattern (A. Bowett, "Myths of English Furniture History: Laburnum Wood Furniture", Antique Collecting, June 1998, pp. 22-23).
A pair of silver-mounted oyster-veneered cabinets is in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle, one illustrated in P. Macquoid & R. Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture, 1927, Vol. I, fig. 2, p. 163; they were given in circa 1665 by King Charles I's Queen, Henrietta Maria, to the Earl of St. Albans. Another cabinet on stand is illustrated in A Bowett, English Furniture 1660 - 1714, Woodbridge, 2002, p.54, pl. 2.35.
A Charles II cocus wood mirror was sold from the collections of Christopher Gibbs and Harris Lindsay, Christie's, London, 10 May 2006, lot 32 (£15,600 including premium).
A pair of silver-mounted oyster-veneered cabinets is in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle, one illustrated in P. Macquoid & R. Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture, 1927, Vol. I, fig. 2, p. 163; they were given in circa 1665 by King Charles I's Queen, Henrietta Maria, to the Earl of St. Albans. Another cabinet on stand is illustrated in A Bowett, English Furniture 1660 - 1714, Woodbridge, 2002, p.54, pl. 2.35.
A Charles II cocus wood mirror was sold from the collections of Christopher Gibbs and Harris Lindsay, Christie's, London, 10 May 2006, lot 32 (£15,600 including premium).