A LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND AMARANTH BUREAU PLAT
PROPERTY FROM A NOBLE COLLECTION (LOTS 401 - 447)
A LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND AMARANTH BUREAU PLAT

STAMPED 'B. PERIDIEZ' AND 'JME' TWICE, MID-18TH CENTURY

细节
A LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND AMARANTH BUREAU PLAT
STAMPED 'B. PERIDIEZ' AND 'JME' TWICE, MID-18TH CENTURY
The serpentine tooled leather-inset top with foliate-cast clasps to the corners over three frieze-drawers with foliate-cast handles and pierced foliate angles, the reverse with sham drawers, each end mounted with a pierced ruffled shell, on cabriole legs ending in foliate sabots, with two paper labels inscribed in ink 'Brynkinalt Rm' and 'No 3', several of the mounts with plugged holes, probably 18th century aftercasts
30 in. (76 cm.) high, 52 (132 cm.) wide, 30 in. (76 cm.) deep
来源
Arthur Hill-Trevor, 2nd Viscount Dungannon (1763-1837), Brynkinalt, North Wales, and thence by descent until sold Christie's London, 14 April 1983, lot 95.
出版
P. Kjellberg, Le Mobilier Français du XVIIIe Siècle, Paris, 1989, p. 638.

拍品专文

Brice Péridiez, maître before 1738.

This impressive bureau plat reflects the taste for the furniture of the ancien régime among sophisticated English collectors at the beginning of the 19th century. It was acquired, along with other fine examples of 18th century ébénisterie, by Arthur Hill-Trevor, 2nd Viscount Dungannon (1763 - 1837) of Brynkinalt, North Wales. By family tradition this group of furniture came to Brynkinalt as a gift from the Duke of Wellington, Lord Dungannon's near contemporary and first cousin. The links between the cousins were longstanding, since, following the death of the Duke's father Lord Mornington in 1781, the widowed and impoverished Lady Mornington spent much time with her mother and sister-in-law in Wales, taking her son, the future Duke, with her (E. Longford, Wellington: The Years of the Sword, London, 1969, p. 15).

The furniture sold at Christie's from Brynkinalt in 1983 included notable examples of Boulle pieces, offering a clear parallel with the Duke of Wellington's well-documented predilection for Boulle (F.J.B. Watson, 'The Great Duke's taste for French Furniture', Apollo, July 1975, pp. 44 - 9). However, it is also fascinating to note that one of these examples, a pair of Boulle pedestals, was sold at the celebrated sale of the Duke of York's collection at Christie's in 1827, and purchased by Edward Holmes Baldock, indicating that Lord Dungannon acquired them from this well-known dealer, whose clients included many of the great collectors of the period, including the Duke of Buccleuch and the Earl of Pembroke.