Apter-Fredericks

Important 18th & 19th Century Antique Furniture



Satinwood

An Outstanding Sheraton Period Satinwood Wardrobe
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 Superb Pembroke Table by Henry Hill
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
A George III Sycamore, Tulipwood Rosewood and Marquetry Pembroke Table.

A George III Sycamore, Tulipwood Rosewood and Marquetry Pembroke Table

Height: 29" 75cm
Width: 41" 105.5cm
Depth: 33" 84cm

This elegant pembroke-table has its oval medallion top charged with the coat-of-arms of the Masterman family of Riccal, Yorkshire, as has been recorded on an oval tea-salver bearing the date letter for 1782 (sold Christie's, London, 30 October 1991, lot 209). The table frieze's central medallion displays the family's Moor's head crest tied in a flowered ribbon -guilloche, while laurels wreath the top's beribboned escutcheon and entwine its flowered ribbon border. The antique border pattern relates to those in Designs for Various Ornaments, London, 1777 issued by M. A. Pergolesi, who was one of the decorative artists employed by the architect Robert Adam (d. 1792). The black colouring of the table's reed-moulded border reflects the influence of the 'Etruscan' style popularised by Works in Architecture, 1773-7 published by Robert Adam and his brother James. The use of an ebonised border is associated with the documented work of the Golden Square firm of John Mayhew and William Ince. The guilloche band can be related in particular to those featured on satinwood 'commode' bookcases inventoried in 1786 at Broadlands, Hampshire, and likely to have been supplied by the firm (H. Roberts, 'Furniture at Broadlands, Hampshire', Country Life, 29 January 1981, p. 289, fig. 7). The flowered ribbon guilloche of the frieze also appears on a commode at Syon House, Middlesex, a documented house at which the firm was employed. Lucy Wood suggests this commode may be by Mayhew (L. Wood, Catalogue of Commodes, London, 1994, p. 24, fig. 18 and p. 22, note 111). Other furniture closely related with the same frieze design includes a commode table illustrated in E. T. Joy, 'A marquetry commode of c. 1775: An outstanding production of the English cabinet-makers' craft' The Connoisseur, January 1965, pp. 36-38, and a side table with wreath-embellished top sold from the Arthur Leidesdorf collection, Sotheby & Co., London, 27 June 1974, lot 43.

The arms are those of Masterman impaling Mildred, for William Masterman of Leyton (1759-1845) and his wife Lydia (1756-1819), daughter of Daniel Mildred, a London merchant. Their son, John Masterman (1781-1862) became a Member of Parliament for the City of London from 1841 until 1857. He was also a director of the East India Company and head of the bank Masterman, Peters, Mildred and Masterman and Co.

English, 1780

The Masterman Family of Riccal, Yorkshire
George D. Widener Jr.


GEORGE D. WIDENER, JR. (1889-1971)
The pembroke table was owned by the Philadelphia born George D. Widener, Jr., the son of the financier George D. Widener, who perished on the Titanic in 1912, and Eleanor Elkins. As heir to the family fortune amassed by his grandfather, P.A.B. Widener, George was successfully devoted to horse racing and breeding, largely through the influence of his uncle, Joseph Widener. Over the course of his career, Widener and his wife won over 1,243 races and $9 million in purses, and horses bred by the Wideners won over $16 million. Widener was also a great philanthropist, serving as trustee of museums, art centers, hospitals, universities and scientific institutions in Philadelphia, New York and Washington. A significant benefactor to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, he bequeathed numerous magnificent objects from his collection including the spectacular carved mahogany commode supplied by Thomas Chippendale to Raynham Park, Norfolk (C. Gilbert, The Life and Work of Thomas Chippendale, London, 1978, vol .l, p.289).

Art and philanthropy were of great interest to the Widener family. George's uncle, Joseph E. Widener (d. 1943), devoted his energies to expanding the family's art collection that was begun by his father, P.A.B. Widener, and which he displayed for the public in the galleries of Lynnewood, the family's vast estate designed by Horace Trumbauer. In 1939, Joseph Widener offered his family's collection to the National Gallery of Art in memory of his father. The Widener gift was announced by President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the Gallery's opening ceremony in 1941 and installed shortly thereafter.