View full screen - View 1 of Lot 1140. Very Fine and Rare Queen Anne Carved Mahogany Tilt-Top Tea Table, Attributed to John Goddard, Newport, Rhode Island, Circa 1760.

Very Fine and Rare Queen Anne Carved Mahogany Tilt-Top Tea Table, Attributed to John Goddard, Newport, Rhode Island, Circa 1760

Auction Closed

January 19, 09:11 PM GMT

Estimate

5,000 - 8,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Very Fine and Rare Queen Anne Carved Mahogany Tilt-Top Tea Table

Probably Providence, Rhode Island

Circa 1760


Height 27 1/2 in. by Width 27 7/8 in. by Depth 28 1/4 in.

Patricia E. Kane et al., Art and Industry in Early America: Rhode Island Furniture, 1650–1830, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Art Gallery, 2016), p. 327n5;
Rhode Island Furniture Archive: RIF5348.

This round "snap" table is one of only nine other tables in this unusual design known: one at the Museum Fine Arts, Boston; one at the Lyman Allyn Museum in New London, Connecticut; one at the Newport Restoration Foundation; one formerly owned by Herbert Newton (present location unknown); one at Winterthur Museum; one at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and two others offered at auction in 1969 and 1981.1All tables in the group have circular tops, triangular platforms, and cabriole legs. Despite the similarity of design, the tables vary considerably in their size, materials, construction, and decoration. Most are fitted with a cabinet between the outer columns. The currently offered example, a table at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and one which sold in these rooms are the only three known examples with only columns. Winterthur's table is the largest of the group and is the only one with a shaped lower edge to the platform. The tables at the Museum Fine Arts, Boston, Lyman Allyn Museum and the Newport Restoration Foundation both have the five-toed paw feet found on some Newport stands. Newport cabinetmakers also produced a similar triangular platform with four-toed paw feet that was used extensively on fire screens. The platform base is an English design. Ince and Mayhew included a teakettle stand with a platform base in The Universal System of Houshold Furniture.


Of the seven tables in the group, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the exampled offered at auction in 1981 both reputedly were made by John Goddard. The table at the Lyman Allyn Museum's history states that it was owned in the late eighteenth century by John and Sarah (Starr) Deshon of New London.


1 For the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston table, see Edwin J. Hipkiss, Eighteenth-Century of American Arts: The M. and M. Karolik collection of paintings, drawings, engravings, furniture, silver, needlework & incidental objects gathered to illustrate the achievements of American artists and craftsmen of the period from 1720 to 1820, (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1941), pp. 110-1, no. 59 has a tradition of manufacture by John Goddard as a gift for his daughter Catherine. Catherine Goddard married Perry Weaver, and the table descended in the Weaver family of Rhode Island. The Sotheby's example sold in the Important Americana: Furniture, Folk Art, Silver, Porcelain, Prints and Carpets, January 20-21, 2012, sale 8823, lot 177. The Lyman Allyn Museum example was published in Malcolm A. Norton, "The Cabinet Pedestal Table," The Magazine Antiques 4, no. 4 (November 1923): 224-25. For the Newport Restoration Foundation table, see Michael Moses, Master craftsmen of Newport: The Townsends and Goddards, (Tenafly, NJ: MMI Americana Press, 1984)fig. 1.36. The Winterthur example was published in Nancy E. Richards and Nancy Goyne Evans with Wendy A. Cooper and Michael S. Podmaniczky, New England Furniture at Winterthur: Queen Anne and Chippendale Periods, (Winterthur, DE: Winterthur Museum, 1997), pp. 278-9, no. 147. Philadelphia Museum of Art's table is published in Alexandra Alevizatos Kirtley, American Furniture 1650-1840: Highlights from the Philadelphia Museum of Art, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2020), p. 263, no. 269. Parke Bernet Galleries, Important Eighteenth Century American Furniture, October 25, 1969, lot 84. Sotheby Parke Bernet, Fine Americana September 26, 1981, sale 4692Y, lot 445 which by tradition was purchased from John Goddard in 1768 and descended in the Durfee and Borden families of Newport, Portsmouth, and Pawtucket, Rhode Island and Fall River, Massachusetts.