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18th Century Marquetry Inlaid Card Table
$9,333.08
£6,800
€8,098.47
CA$12,816.65
A$14,427.39
CHF 7,633.76
MX$178,954.09
NOK 94,309.32
SEK 90,198.53
DKK 60,418.63
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About the Item
A very good quality 18th Century marquetry inlaid folding card table with a wonderful inset panel to the top depicting musical instrument, the frieze with various urns, jugs and drinking vessels. The top opening to reveal a baize covered card playing surface, with marquetry corner places. Riased on square tapering inlaid legs. Circa 1780
Possibly Baltic
Batch 69.
- Dimensions:Height: 29.53 in (75 cm)Width: 32.68 in (83 cm)Depth: 16.54 in (42 cm)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:1760
- Condition:Wear consistent with age and use.
- Seller Location:Brighton, GB
- Reference Number:Seller: SKU000015711stDibs: LU1227231515222
About the Seller
5.0
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1stDibs seller since 2015
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LAPADA - The Association of Arts & Antiques Dealers
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Shipping from: Brighton, United Kingdom
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John Cobb (c.1710–1778) was an English cabinetmaker and upholsterer. His work was once overshadowed by that of Thomas Chippendale but he is now regarded as being among England’s greatest furniture makers.
He is thought to come from Ashby, Norfolk and was the son of John Cobb and Mary Holmes.
It is believed that John Cobb was apprenticed in 1729 to Timothy Money (fl 1724–59), a Norwich upholsterer.
In 1755 he married Sukey, a daughter of the cabinetmaker Giles Grendey and is said to have acquired a ‘singularly haughty character’, strutting ‘in full dress of the most superb and costly kind...through his workshops giving orders to his men’, and on one occasion earning a rebuke from George III.
He worked with William Vile from 1750 until 1765 in premises at 72, the corner house of St Martin’s Lane and Long Acre. In the early 1750s, William Hallett, another cabinetmaker of the time, formed a working syndicate with Vile and Cobb. Vile and Cobb supplied furniture to the leading patrons of the day including George III and Queen Charlotte, the 1st Earl of Leicester at Holkham Hall, the 4th Duke of Devonshire at Chatsworth and the 4th Duke of Bedford at Woburn Abbey.
Vile and Cobb held the Royal Warrant from 1761 until April 1764 when Vile retired. While Vile created works in an Anglicised Rococo style, Cobb’s furniture of the 1770s was executed in an elegant Neoclassical style. Cobb was well known for his haughty disposition which did not always endear him to his customers, so it was no surprise that the Royal Warrant was awarded to two of their employees William France and John Bradburne instead of Cobb himself. Some of Cobb's work is in the Royal Collection at Buckingham Palace.
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