
Property of a Gentleman
Lot Closed
May 23, 01:43 PM GMT
Estimate
5,000 - 7,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
Property of a Gentleman
A George II brass and mother-of-pearl inlaid mahogany tripod tea table, the top attributed to Frederick Hintz
the dished scalloped top with engraved floral and shell-inlaid motifs on a spirally-fluted stem, terminating in cabriole legs and pad feet, top and base associated
57cm. high, 55.5cm. diameter;
1ft. 10 ½ in. high, 1ft. 9 ¾ in. diameter.
The design of the present table with its scalloped top inlaid with brass and mother-of-pearl is similar to a group of tables associated with the German-born cabinet-maker Johann Frederick Hintz, ( d.1776), examples of which are illustrated in Christopher Gilbert and Tessa Murdoch, John Channon and Brass-inlaid Furniture 1730-1760, 1993, pl. XXIV and figs. 149-150. Hintz traded at 'The Porcupine', Newport Street, and on 22nd May, 1738 advertised a sale of 'Choice Tea Boards, etc., all curiously [finely wrought] made and inlaid with fine Figures of Brass and Mother of Pearl. They will be sold at a very reasonable rate, the maker Frederick Hintz, designing soon to go abroad', ( G. Beard and C. Gilbert, eds., The Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840, Leeds, 1986, p.434).
Similar furniture was produced by other cabinet-makers in London at this period, including Abraham Roentgen and John Channon, but Hintz is regarded as the foremost exponent of this style of workmanship (Gilbert & Murdoch, op. cit . pl. XXV & figs.16-17, 145-148, & 155: Ralph Edwards and Percy Macquoid, The Dictionary of English Furniture, rev. ed., 3 vols., 1954, vol. III, P.206, fig. 15; and Christopher Claxton Stevens and Stewart Whittington, 18th century English Furniture, The Norman Adams Collection, 1983, pp.288-289, illus.).
For a similar example, see that in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum, London (W.3-1965).
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