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Lot 79: A GEORGE III IRISH INLAID HAREWOOD D-SHAPE COMMODE BY WILLIAM MOORE OF DUBLIN CIRCA 1790

Est: $80,000 USD - $120,000 USDSold:
Sotheby'sNew York, NY, USOctober 12, 2007

Item Overview

Description

the tulipwood banded top with stringing and rayed panels of figured harewood, centered by a shaded boxwood fan medallion with pendant foliage and with a broad band inlaid with running band of scrolling tendrals, leaves and berries, the frieze fitted with a drawer and inlaid with fluting and oval panels of yew wood above a confroming central door similarly inlaid and with a central oval panel of yew wood, the sides similarly inlaid and banded, the stiles banded and with a broad panel inlaid with anthemion and sprays of stiff leaves supported on square tapered legs inlaid with stringing and with square molded toes, the back with a printed label ...TRAHAN & CO., Ltd. / ...movals and Warehousing / ...PHEN' S GREEN / PLACE DUBLIN.

Dimensions

measurements height 35 3/4 in.; width 43 1/4 in.; depth 19 3/4 in. alternate measurements 90.8 cm; 109.9 cm; 50.2 cm

Artist or Maker

Provenance

John Hamilton Whitcrift, Esq., Kilree House, County Kilkenny, IrelandWith Hotspur Ltd., London, 1976The Property of a Gentleman, Sold Christie's, London, November 11, 1999, lot 165

Notes

As The Knight of Glin and James Peill remark in Irish Furniture, Yale University Press, 2007, pp. 162-166, 'By far the most important cabinet-maker' (in Ireland) 'who reflected the new taste for neo-classicism and the Adam style was William Moore'. Possibly the son of William Moore, a cabinet maker recorded at Inns Quay and Charles Street, who died in 1759, he appears to have attended the School of Landscape and Ornament Drawing at the Dublin Society of Drawing Schools in 1768, after which he was employed in the workshop of John Mayhew and William Ince, before returning to Ireland at some time before December 1777. The firm of Mayhew and Ince is recorded in London between 1758 and 1804 and, although their actual work is not well documented, they were 'the most significant......of the major London cabinet makers of the 18υth century' (Beard & Gilbert, The Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840, 1986, pp. 589-597) . In 1782 he placed an advertisement in Faulkener's, Dublin Journal, addressed 'To the Nobility and Gentry' informing 'those that may want inlaid work'....that....'he has brought the manufacture of such perfection to be able to sell for almost one half its original prices; as the greatest demand is for pier Tables, he has just finished in the newest taste a great variety of patterns, sizes and prices......card tables of new construction...also small pier tables with every article in the inlaid way'. In a very similar advertisement in the Dublin Evening Post he also mentions 'his long experience at Messrs. Mayhew and Ince'. The inlaid work found on the present commode is closely related to a number of other commodes attributed to Moore by The Knight of Glin and James Peill (op. cit.) including one in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum (fig. 231), and another formerly in the collection of Lady Binning (fig. 222). Other related commodes include a pair sold Sotheby's, New York, October 20-21, 2003, and one sold Sotheby's, London, July 3, 2003, lot 35. th th th See: Furniture History,

Auction Details

English Furniture

by
Sotheby's
October 12, 2007, 12:00 PM EST

1334 York Avenue, New York, NY, 10021, US