Classic Design: Furniture, Clocks, Silver & Ceramics

Classic Design: Furniture, Clocks, Silver & Ceramics

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 131. An antiquarian carved oak four-poster bed, 17th century and later.

Property from a Private Collection

An antiquarian carved oak four-poster bed, 17th century and later

Lot Closed

November 12, 03:07 PM GMT

Estimate

6,000 - 8,000 GBP

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Lot Details

Description

with stylised foliate carving throughout interspersed with gargoyles, the backboard with two panels of a plant in bloom contained in arches and flanked by caryatids, the posts with column capitals and a guilloche pattern


measurements of frame: 206cm high, approx 205cm wide, 151cm deep;

6ft. 9 ¼ in., 6ft. 8 ¾ in., 4ft. 11 ½ in.

measurements of mattress area: 139.5cm wide, 175.5cm deep;

4ft. ⅞ in., 5ft. 9 ⅛ in.



Please note that this lot will not be on public view in our New Bond Street galleries, but we would be happy to arrange a viewing by appointment at our warehouse in Greenford. To enquire, please contact cameron.dileo@sothebys.com

At the end of the 18th and early 19th century there was great interest in ‘Antiquarian’ furniture, with pieces designed to reference the past or produced to imitate. The publication of Henry Shaw’s Specimens of Ancient Furniture in 1836 reflected this interest at the time, with finely engraved plates featuring ‘antiques’ and pieces wrongly thought of as being English and early. Some of the great Regency designers produced furniture in earlier styles and occasionally ‘copies’. Grandiose architectural projects, such as Wyattville’s extravagant Gothic designs for Windsor, also looked to earlier models. There was a ready market for oak furniture produced in ‘historic’ styles and sometimes sold as period. In 1839, the Wardour Street cabinetmaker, R.H. Bowman wrote, ‘for the last 40 or 50 years instead of that gorgeous, splendid furniture of Queen Elizabeth’s time we have had poor, plain and paltry’, and in 1841, the Art Union reported, ‘A taste has of late years arisen for carved furniture of the Tudor, Louis Quartorze and Renaissance periods’ (ibid.). Cabinetmakers, suppliers and designers were also quick to sell and design work in historic styles. With Edward Holmes Baldock supplying rich ebony Colonial furniture thought to be English and earlier and Richard Bridgens producing designs in his interpretation of an Elizabethan style amongst others. This superb tester bed is in that tradition.