A GEORGE III POLYCHROME-DECORATED AND PARCEL-GILT CENTRE TABLE

细节
A GEORGE III POLYCHROME-DECORATED AND PARCEL-GILT CENTRE TABLE
The canted rectangular top decorated with a central roundel with doves drinking from a fountain, surrounded by radiating segments of simulated marble, with a moulded edge, above a plain frieze with paterae, on square tapering legs headed by pendant husks and joined by a X-stretcher, inscribed in ink to the underside of the top '...Beaded and to have fra... for Bags ...Come... to crew two Tables on their fame Bring Crew large one small Some most ... very... I want to speak to you about .... ....', and with remains of depository label '...AVEY... Clifton Pantechnicon R. NANGARE... 28.9... DAVEY &Co., Ltd., Bri...', previously but not originally black painted, lacking two frieze paterae
29 in. (74 cm.) high; 17¾ in. (45 cm.) wide; 13¾ in. (35 cm.) deep

拍品专文

The cut-cornered top, supported on elegant Grecian-scrolled legs, is painted with a trompe l'oeuil marble-mosaic that is centred by a medallion of the Capitoline Museum's celebrated Hadrianic mosaic, known as 'Pliny's Doves'. A related work-table, with painted top and husk-festooned legs, was supplied for Osterley Park, Middlesex in the late 18th Century (M. Tomlin, Catalogue of Adam Period Furniture London, 1982, p. 169, cat. no. T/9). Another closely related pair, with trompe l'oeil marble tops, is likely to have formed part of the late 18th Century furnishings introduced to Ham House, Surrey by the 5th Earl of Dysart (C. Claxton Stevens and S. Whittington, 18th Century English Furniture, The Norman Adams Collection, Woodbridge, rev. ed., 1985, p. 337).