W.R. Harvey & Co. (Antiques) Ltd
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William and Mary Kingwood Escritoire
England
(
c. 1690
)
Artists
THOMAS PISTOR (worked from c.1690) 119.00cm wide 168.00cm high 53.00cm deep (46.85 inches wide 66.14 inches high 20.87 inches deep) LiteratureSee FHS Journal 2000, pp 43 to 60. Lit: "English Furniture, 1660 - 1714 From Charles II to Queen Anne ", Dr. Adam Bowett, illus. 7.30, page 209. "Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840", Geoffrey Beard & Christopher Gilbert Page 701. "Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture 1700 - 1840", Christopher Gilbert, Page 44. "The London Furniture Makers from the Restoration to the Victorian Era 1660-1840", Sir Ambrose Heal. Page 138. Description / Expertise
The most remarkable William and Mary period Oyster Kingwood Parquetry Inlaid Fall Front Escritoire attributed to Thomas Pistor. The top of this piece has a shaped moulding above a flat moulded section and a cavetto moulding, leading to the convex frieze. (It will be noted that the grain runs through all of these mouldings.) The frieze also conceals a Bible or Plan drawer, above a cross banded and geometrically Oyster veneered Fall, which opens to reveal three sections of pigeon holes - all of which can be removed disclosing secret compartments - above a central door; the inlay of which conforms to the outside of the Fall and which opens to reveal four more drawers, and is surrounded with a further arrangement of small drawers. The Fall is fitted with a leather writing panel. The base has two half width and two full width graduated drawers, and the whole is raised on flat bun feet. The sides are also exquisitely inlaid with geometric Oysters and cross banded to match the front. The Escritoire is a piece of furniture inspired by continental examples during the Carolean period and early examples are usually to be found in oak. By the William and Mary period the finest pieces were executed in Burr Walnut. This example, being in Kingwood and so perfectly executed with the Oyster veneered Parquetry roundels and interspersed hearts could only have been made for one of the finest families in the country - possibly even for royalty. Kingwood was an exceptionally rare wood during this period, and to find an entire large cabinet veneered on both the outside and the inside in Kingwood Oysters of such quality makes it indeed one of the rarest and finest examples on record.
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