A GEORGE II GILT-GESSO SIDE TABLE
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A GEORGE II GILT-GESSO SIDE TABLE

REDUCED IN WIDTH, THE TOP ASSOCIATED

Details
A GEORGE II GILT-GESSO SIDE TABLE
REDUCED IN WIDTH, THE TOP ASSOCIATED
The top decorated with a central cartouche surrounded by C-scrolls, acanthus, ho-ho birds, stags and hunting dogs, above a pierced frieze carved with a central mask and ruffled surround flanked by floral swags and scrolling foliage, each broken cabriole leg headed by scrolled feathers and Indian mask and scrolling vine carving on hairy-hoof feet, restorations to rails and legs, previously brown-painted, the top re-gessoed, re-gilt overall, the carved floral swags replaced
31½ in. (80 cm.) high; 43½ in. (110 cm.) wide; 27½ in. (70 cm.) deep
Provenance
Sir William Lever, Bt., 1st Viscount Leverhulme, The Hill, Hampstead.
With Christopher Gibbs, London in the 1970's.
Anonymous sale, Christie's, New York, 18 October 2001, lot 148 [when brown painted].
Literature
P. Macquoid, English Furniture, Tapestry and Needlework of the XVIth - XIVth Centuries, 1928, vol. III, no. 262, plate 68.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Isobel Bradley
Isobel Bradley

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Lot Essay

Although associated, both the top and base of the present lot are distinctive and the combination of the two makes a particularly unusual table. There appears to be few directly comparable pieces. The gilt-gesso top with the integration of animals within the more standard decorative strapwork and scrolling foliage show the influence of both the late 17th century French designers Daniel Marot, André Berain and particularly the lighter, more fanciful Régence elements popularized in the engravings of Nicolas Pineau. On the base, the exaggerated features of the Indian masks and vigorous, late-Baroque carving of the frieze, while also derived from late 17th century French prototypes, recalls more closely the massive decorative elements used in the furniture of the English architect William Kent.

Similar gilt-gesso examples carved with Indian masks, though masks less exuberant than on the present lot, include one from the collection of Lord Plender (see R.W. Symonds, Masterpieces of English Furniture and Clocks, 1986, p.72) and another in the collections of the Duke of Devonshire (see P. Macquoid, A History of English Furniture: The Age of Mahogany, 1906, p.30). A third gilt-gesso games table of the same date, with a strapwork and foliage top on an associated base with Indian masks with plumed headdresses more restrained than any of the above, was sold Christie's, New York, 22 April 1995, lot 242.

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