A LATE VICTORIAN BRASS MOUNTED WALNUT HALL STAND
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A LATE VICTORIAN BRASS MOUNTED WALNUT HALL STAND

BY JAMES SHOOLBRED & CO., CIRCA 1880

细节
A LATE VICTORIAN BRASS MOUNTED WALNUT HALL STAND
BY JAMES SHOOLBRED & CO., CIRCA 1880
The rectangular galleried platform above a panel flanked by patera finials, with U-shaped bar further flanked by ring-turned columns, on brass bracket feet, the brass diamond registration mark above zinc drip-tray, stamped to the reverse JAS. SHOOLBRED & CO. 6603
38 in. (96.5 cm.) high; 21¾ in. (55.5 cm.) wide; 9 in. (23 cm.) deep
注意事项
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. This lot will be removed to an off-site warehouse at the close of business on the day of sale - 2 weeks free storage

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拍品专文

The umbrella stand, with galleried vase shelf and brass enrichments, has stylised flower enrichments reflecting the enthusiasm for 'Art botany' promoted by Christopher Dresser (d. 1904), the self-styled 'ornamentist', who contributed to Owen Jones's Grammar of Ornament 1856 and whose numerous publications included, Studies in Design 1874-6; Principles of Decorative Design, 1873; and Modern Ornamentation, 1886.
James Shoolbred and Company was located on Tottenham Court Road, a thriving centre for fashionable furniture shops from the 1860's. They created one of the first great department stores in London; their trade was diverse and they began producing furniture around 1870. They issued an important catalogue of the firm's work in 1876 and earned a Royal warrant in the mid-1880's. Their output encompassed all prevailing styles including Art Furniture, 'Old English' and 'Japanese' as is evident from the 1878 Paris Universal Exhibition in which they offered 'a very extensive selection of items' (E. Joy, ed, Pictorial Dictionary of British 19th Century Furniture Design, Woodbridge, Suffolk, 1977, p. xxxvi). Much of the furniture they designed was influenced by the 'Aesthetic taste', popularised by Oscar Wilde and the architect E.W. Godwin.