A GERMAN PARCEL-GILT, RED VERNIS MARTIN AND BEADWORK GAMES TABLE
A GERMAN PARCEL-GILT, RED VERNIS MARTIN AND BEADWORK GAMES TABLE

SECOND HALF 18TH CENTURY, ATTRIBUTED TO THE WORKSHOP OF JOHANN MICHAEL VAN SELOW

细节
A GERMAN PARCEL-GILT, RED VERNIS MARTIN AND BEADWORK GAMES TABLE
SECOND HALF 18TH CENTURY, ATTRIBUTED TO THE WORKSHOP OF JOHANN MICHAEL VAN SELOW
The moulded rectangular top covered in polychrome beads in geometrical tile pattern, above a shaped frieze drawer and sides decorated with chinoiserie motifs, on cabriole legs and hoof feet
18½ in. (47 cm.) wide; 24½ in. (62 cm.) high; 15 in. (38.5 cm.) deep
来源
The Dallas Pratt collection, Christie's London, 2 December 1997, lot 28.

荣誉呈献

Victoria von Westenholz
Victoria von Westenholz

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拍品专文

Although also made in French cities such as Nevers, Dangu and Villiers, amongst the most celebrated manufacturers of bead-work was the factory patronised by Duke Carl I of Brunswick and placed under the direction of Johann Michael van Selow in the 1750s. 'N.N (sic) van Selow - a shell worker' is first recorded as resident in Brunswick in 1755 and in July of the following year the council received instructions to lend van Selow's atelier 400 Reichstaler. As his advertisement in the Braunschweiger Anzeige of 1756 reveals, he specialised in
both large and small tables in 'corallier' (literally 'coral' but almost certainly meaning beadwork). Two tables with 'Glasperlen Mosaik' attributed to van Selow are illustrated in H. Kreisel, Die Kunst des Deutschen Möbels, Munich, 1970, vol. II, figs. 881 and 882. This games-table, with its colourful glass-beaded cloth with a Roman mosaic chequer of red squares trellised amongst blue and gold, is likely to have served for a game such as 'fox and geese'.