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Early 18th Century North European Country House Bookcase

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  • Antique 18th Century George III Period Light Oak Country House Bureau Bookcase
    Located in Petworth,West Sussex, GB
    An attractive antique late 18th century, George III period bleached oak with ebony inlay two stage English country house bureau cupboard or bookcase. Circa 1790. Having a moulded cornice with inlay, above two fielded and inlaid panelled doors, opening to reveal a white painted interior with adjustable shelves inside, the inlaid bureau fall opening to reveal a lovely fitted interior with various drawers, compartments and leather surface, with a straight apron running along the top, with two short oak lined drawers and three long oak lined graduated drawers below, with brass plate handles, standing on splayed bracket feet. Great quality. A good piece of Georgian antique furniture. Complete with working locks and key. The dimensions are: Height: 203cm (79.9in) Width: 112cm (44.1in) Depth: 51cm (20.1in) The antique oak bureau bookcase...
    Category

    Antique Late 18th Century British George III Bookcases

    Materials

    Oak

  • 20th Century English Country House Bookcase
    Located in Gloucestershire, GB
    Original 20th century ebonized bookcase with painted chinoiserie decoration and peacock blue interior. circa 1920.
    Category

    20th Century British Country Bookcases

    Materials

    Wood

  • Early 18th Century Walnut Bureau Bookcase
    Located in Martlesham, GB
    Early 18th century walnut bureau bookcase, the shaped cornice above a mirrored front bookcase with the two doors opening to reveal ...
    Category

    Antique 1740s British George II Bookcases

    Materials

    Walnut

  • 19th Century Country House Pine Display Bookcase
    Located in Petworth,West Sussex, GB
    A late 19th century Gothic revival country house stained pine two door glazed bookcase or display cabinet. Moulded cornice above a pair of large stunning astragal glazed doors which ...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century British Victorian Bookcases

    Materials

    Pine

  • North European Painted Library Bookcase
    Located in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire
    Early 19th C North European painted library bookcase with adjustable shelving. Great wavy glass in the glazed doors. 1820. Shelf depth in top...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century German Bookcases

    Materials

    Oak, Pine

  • Early 18th Century George I Figured Walnut Bureau Bookcase
    By Peter Miller
    Located in Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
    A superb and exceptionally well proportioned early 18th century figured walnut ‘pagoda topped’ double dome bureau bookcase, circa 1720 England. The upper section is surmounted with what is believed to be the original solid walnut finials and soft bevelled mirror plates, opening to a removal bank of walnut veneered and feather banded drawers, cantered by pigeonholes below two shelves. Candle slides are neatly stowed below the bookcase doors to reflect the light. To the moulded bureau, the fall opens to reveal pigeonholes, long and short asymmetric drawers each beautifully veneered in figured walnut and feather banded, cantered by a cupboard door which neatly conceals an open compartment and drawer. Below the fall, two short and two long graduating oak lined drawers are each book-matched in superb sections of hand-cut figured walnut veneers over bun feet. It should be noted that this exceptional desk and bookcase, is not only of the finest cuts of figured walnut veneer but exquisitely made at the pinnacle of design which had gradually evolved predominantly in London, during the late 17thand early 18thcentury. The actual description 'desk-and-bookcase' appears to be first recorded in the accounts of the Royal cabinet-maker Gerrit Jensen (fl.1680-d.1715) who supplied several for the Royal Household from 1710 (Bowett, op. cit.), and another described as 'a walnut writing desk, the top for books and patons and glass in the doors asked' for the 5th Earl of Salisbury, Hatfield House.  Another maker of this form of desk was the London cabinet-maker John Gumley (1691-1727) who advertised in Richard Steele's Lover on April 24 1714 that he 'hath taken for a Ware-house, and furnished all the upper part of the New Exchange in the Strand' continuing with an extensive list of his stock including 'Desks and Bookcases.' In 1714 he supplied one of these in walnut to James 1st Duke of Montrose for the sum of £11. Russian cabinetwork of this period was strongly influenced by Tsar Peter I return to Russia after his studies in London. He subsequently sent twenty-four cabinetmakers who were working in Amsterdam to London to train as furniture makers. One of these cabinetmakers named Fedor Martynov made furniture for the Empress Anna Ioannovna. Martynovs drawings are almost identical to the present piece. Literature Mallett’s Great English Furniture, London: Bullfinch Press 1991, p.248, fig 287, by Lanto Synge, English Furniture 1660-1714 From Charles II to Queen Anne, by Dr Adam Bowett, Woodbridge: Antique Collector’s Club, 2002 Chapter 7 Case Furniture 1689–1714 pp.221-223 fig. 7:53 A walnut bureau bookcase of the same form and period sold from the private collection of Patricia Kluge...
    Category

    Antique Early 18th Century British George I Bookcases

    Materials

    Walnut

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