Apter-Fredericks

Important 18th & 19th Century Antique Furniture



Memorable Pieces

An Outstanding & Highly Important Side Cabinet Attributed to S. Jamar
An Important George III Mahogany Library Table of Superb Colour & Quality
A Most Exceptional George III Mahogany Serpentine Fronted Chest on Chest
A Magnificent Carlton House Boulle-Inlaid Table Designed for George, The Prince of Wales, The Prince Regent,
A George III Parcel-Gilt and Painted Satinwood Pier Table
A Pair of George III Giltwood Armchairs By Thomas Chippendale
An Important Pair of Regency Period Rosewood Side Cabinets
A Pair of George III Blue John Cassolettes by Matthew Boulton
A George II Walnut Side Chair
A George III Sycamore, Tulipwood Rosewood and Marquetry Pembroke Table
An Outstanding Campana Vase in Blue John or Derbyshire Fluorspar
A Pair of Nineteenth Century Bronze and Ormolu Oil Lamps
A George III Chippendale Period Sidetable
A Rare Queen Anne Blue Japanned Bureau Cabinet
A George III Chippendale Period Carved Mahogany Commode
A Very Rare Pair of Cloisonné Cranes
Saved For The Nation
A George III Rolled Paperwork Box, decorated by Mary Earnshaw of Wakefield in 1795
A George II Period Carved Mahogany Bureau Cabinet Attributed to Giles Grendey
A George III Inlaid Occasional Table in the Manner of Pierre Langlois
A George II Period Pedestal
A Pair of George III Period Satinwood, Decorated and Parcel-Gilt Side Tables
The Spencer Perceval armchair from the Palace of Westminster
A Pierre Langlois Commode
A Pair of Robert Adam designed Giltwood Torcheres
A Rosewood and brass mounted side table by John McLean
A George III Mahogany Card Table in the Manner of Ince & Mayhew
A Jewel in the Crown of Queen Anne Furniture
An Expanding Circular Dining Table by Robert Jupe
A Fine Pair of Harewood And Inlaid Side Tables by William Gates
A Pair of Queen Anne Walnut Stools
A George II Carved Mahogany Side-table Attributed to Giles Grendey
A Very Rare Pair of Queen Anne Giltwood Border Glass Mirrors
A Regency Period Gilt, Ebonised and Decorated Wall Sconce
A Regency Period Hall Seat Attributed to George Bullock
A Pair of Georgian Dolphin 'Slab' Tables in the Manner of James Richards, after the Designs by William Kent
A George III Regency Period Convex Mirror by Thomas Fentham

The following images, taken from our archives, illustrate a small selection of pieces we have handled over the past 60 years and which have given us special pleasure and enjoyment. Either for the pieces themselves, their origins or the collections in which they have been placed.

A Rare Queen Anne Blue Japanned Bureau Cabinet

A Rare Queen Anne Blue Japanned Bureau Cabinet

Height: 8'4" 254cm
Width: 40" 103cm
Depth: 24" 61cm

Decorated overall with gilt chinoiseries of figures, birds and flowers. The flattened double dome with five finials above a pair of shaped and arched panelled doors with bevelled plates enclosing a well fitted interior with small drawers, pigeon holes and folio dividers around a central cupboard enclosing further drawers above a pair of candle-slides. The lower section with a hinged fall enclosing a fitted interior with drawers and pigeon holes around a central cupboard above two short and two long graduated external drawers, above a shaped apron on bun feet.

English, Circa 1710

Margaret, Lady Orford (died 1781)
Thence to William Blundell Spence, Villa Medici, Fiesole, Italy

Lady Orford was the wife of Robert Walpole (Earl of Orford), who was a son of the first Prime Minister of England and also the eldest brother of Horace Walpole, the celebrated letter writer, novelist, collector, and amateur architect. After the death of Lord Orford and of her second husband Sewallis Shirley (d. I 765), Lady Orford moved to Italy; first to Naples and later to Florence. By coincidence, one of Horace Walpole's closest friends and correspondents, Sir Horace Mann, was British Consul in Florence ( I 740-1 786) at the time of Lady Orford's arrival there. Fortunately, the chatty Horace Mann-Horace Walpole correspondence provides a fairly detailed account of the eccentric Lady Orford's activities in Florence and Fiesole.

A letter from Mann to Walpole, dated 6th November 1776, clarifies somewhat the statements made earlier in the same year: '. . . her villa Lady Orford's, which she refitted and ornamented very elegantly. The access to it is very difficult though she has for a certain tract made a new road through the mountain.

Another letter dated 10th June 1779 written by Henry Swinburne and later published in a collection of his writings, states: 'We dined also with Lady Orford at Fiesole and a very convenient house perhaps the best furnished in Italy for neatness and propriety, but too high, too much confined and on a rock which reflects a burning heat in summer.'

This magnificent bureau cabinet belongs to a group of similar examples with identical flattened domes and fitted interiors. Another of this group was acquired by William Hesketh Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme (d.1925) and was discussed in an article by A.C. Tait in Apollo 'Furniture of the Lady Leverhulme Art Gallery' 1947.

It was also illustrated in 'The Dictionary of English Furniture' by Ralph Edwards, Volume One, page 133. Another green example of identical form was sold by Waring and Gillow in 1920 from Basildon Park, Pangbourne, Berkshire.

Although unmarked, the most likely maker of these bureau bookcases is John Belchier of St Paul's churchyard, whole label has been recorded on a similarly decorated bureau bookcase dating from the 1730's (C. Gilbert, 'Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture 1700 - 1840', Leeds 1996, fig.57). He, alongside Giles Grendey, supplied many japanned items of furniture including bookcases, chairs, mirrors, etc., many of which were exported to Italy and Spain such as the suite of furniture supplied to the Duke of Infantado's palace at Lazcano in Northern Spain.

The quality of this piece alone would be sufficient to mark it out as an exceptional example but it is also japanned in blue lacquer. It is far more typical to find red or black lacquer, occasionally one finds green lacquer and rarest of all, blue.