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Eddy Bardawil Antiques
106 Kensington Church Street
London
London
W8 4BH
England

Telephone +44 (0)20-7221 3967
Fax +44 (0)20-7221 5124
Website www.eddybardawil.com

A large Regency mahogany hall bench (c. 1815 England)

Reference no. 74612

Medium

Mahogany

Dimensions

164.00cm wide    52.00cm high    37.00cm deep (64.57 inches wide  20.47 inches high  14.57 inches deep)

Literature

The imperial 'antique' design and ornament of this hall bench, evoking lyric poetry, derives from the fashion popularised by C. Percier and P. Fontaine's, Receuil de decorations Interieuses, 1801 and promoted by the connoisseur Thomas Hope (d.1842), author of a guide-book to his London mansion/museum entitled Household Furniture and Interior Decoration, 1807. The rectangular frame has architectural 'eared' ends that are supported on taper-hermed legs. These same elements feature in a stately throne pattern published in January 1807 and included in a Collection of Designs for Household Furniture and Interior Decoration, 1808, (pl. 58) issued by George Smith (d.1826), 'Upholder Extraordinary to His Royal Excellency the Prince of Wales'. Smith, who began his pattern-book in 1804, wrote of 'the great taste and elegance' of this design while also noting that 'French invention' lay behind his accompanying 'Library Fauteuil' pattern (ibid., pl. 47).
The hall seat pattern evolved from designs of an antique Roman marble seat, with fluted legs and drapery-covered seat, that was drawn by the architect Charles Heathcote Tatham (d. 1842) and published following his return from Rome in Etchings [...] of Ancient Ornamental Architecture, 1799 (pl. 46).

Condition

Very fine condition and colour.

Description / Expertise

A large Regency period mahogany hall bench, possibly by Marsh and Tatham, circa 1815
The rectangular moulded top with rounded ends, each centred by a roundel, on fluted tapering legs and spade feet.