Chippendale Horseshoe Table
A George III rosewood and mahogany inlaid horseshoe desk, circa 1772.
Chippendale Horseshoe Table
A George III rosewood and mahogany inlaid horseshoe desk, circa 1772.
Accession Number
LDS 1279
Location
CARVED ROOM
Dimensions
72x 160x 95 cm
Classification
Furniture
Artist
Thomas Chippendale
Date Created
1772
Material & Techniques
Black rosewood, fustic?, holly (both natural and dyed in colours), mahogany, deal, oak.
Comments on construction: The top is veneered onto mahogany, the frame is of deal pieced together to create the curve and lipped on the lower edge with oak. The legs are probably oak veneered on all faces with rosewood and fustic?. Drawer dividers are deal. Drawers are mancineel? wood throughout veneered with rosewood and fustic?
Indepth information
Full History
Kidney (or horseshoe) shaped rosewood table, the moulded top with chevron-veneered ground inlaid with an oval boxwood patera, the top moulded and crossbanded in mahogany over a crossbanded frieze on square tapering legs inlaid with rectangular and circular panels and raised on block feet.
Rosewood and inlaid horseshoe shaped table, the top in paterae and chains of bell flowers within a purple wood cross-banded border, over three drawers to the frieze on square tapered legs inlaid with panels of purple wood
It is evident that the table was made originally without drawers, or at least without a centre drawer. The mortice for a central front-back rail can be seen in the position where the centre drawer now runs. The apertures for all three drawers cut through the frame and the dividers are oriented laterally rather than vertically. The cross-banding runs across the top of the drawer only because the lower cross banding is part of the frame needed to support the inserted drawer. However, it is possible that the drawers, although not part of the original design, were introduced as a contemporary workshop modification. Screws securing two drawer dividers to the top are eighteenth-century and the construction of the drawers is of high-quality. Furthermore, the use of mancineel in the drawer construction is highly unusual and does not suggest nineteenth or twentieth century work.
The whole of the underside of the frame is painted with a black wash, possibly original.
References
Receipt in archive dates it's arrival in December 1772.