Apter-Fredericks

Important 18th & 19th Century Antique Furniture



Satinwood

A George III Satinwood Console Table
A Fine and Rare George III Satinwood & Marquetry Bonheur du Jour
A Regency Period Rosewood & Parcel-Gilt Side-Cabinet
A George III Sheraton Period Oval Tray
A George III Satinwood Drum Table
A George III Satinwood, Harewood, Burr-Yew and Marquetry Breakfront Bookcase Attributed to Mayhew & Ince
A George III Parcel-Gilt and Painted Satinwood Pier Table
A George III Satinwood Bonhuer du Jour in the Manner of George Simson
An Exceptional Eighteenth Century Dutch Centre Table
A Rare Pair of George III Sheraton Period Satinwood Pole Screens
A George III Satinwood and Decorated Bookcase
A Pair of George III Adam Period Rosewood Semi-Elliptical Console Tables
A George III Sycamore, Tulipwood Rosewood and Marquetry Pembroke Table
A Fine Pair of George III Satinwood Card Tables
A George III Satinwood "Harlequin" Pembroke Table in the Manner of Henry Kettle
A George III Period Personal Weighing Machine or 'Sanctorius's Balance'
A George III Rolled Paperwork Box, decorated by Mary Earnshaw of Wakefield in 1795
A Pair of George III Period Satinwood, Decorated and Parcel-Gilt Side Tables
A Fine Pair of Harewood And Inlaid Side Tables by William Gates
An Important Regency Mahogany Sideboard With a Pair of Pedestals en Suite. Attributed to George Oakley
George III Satinwood "Harlequin" Pembroke Table in the Manner of Henry Kettle

A George III Satinwood "Harlequin" Pembroke Table in the Manner of Henry Kettle

Height: 28" 71cm
Width: 20" 51cm / 37" 94.5
Depth: 29" 73.5cm

The rectangular satinwood top with yew-wood panels to the centre of each of the top and flaps above two drawers with dummy drawers to the reverse and supported on four square tapering legs terminating in brass box castors. The table is of excellent colour and quality.

Hepplewhite described pembroke tables as the most useful tables of their class and certainly this is borne out by the literature of the time. In Jane Austen's 'Emma' the heroine talks about her father taking his meals on one. Jane Austen also wrote to her sister when some new furniture was delivered to Steventon, that her mother kept all her papers in a pembroke table. Further sources mention ladies doing their embroidery at these tables.

Considering the popularity of the pembroke table it is not surprising that an ingenious variety termed 'harlequin pembroke table' appears towards the end of the century. The distinctive feature being a box-like structure, fitted with small drawers and pigeon holes which is concealed in the body of the table and by means of weights rises up above the top.

English, Circa 1785

Attribution
There are several tables by Kettle, many of which are labelled, that bear striking similarities to the one illustrated. Most notably the rectangular flaps with geometric inlay and the oval panel to the centre.
See Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture, 1700 - 1840, figs 543, 556.