Description & Technical information

A virtually identical pedestal desk also attributable to the Hallett workshop was formerly in the collection of S. B. Joel, formed under the guidance of R. W. Symonds. The Joel desk is illustrated in the Dictionary of English Furniture. Further smaller examples with arched knee holes are known including one formerly with Partridge Fine Arts, now in a private collection in New York.



Note: One front of a pedestal has a one stage been converted to a filing drawer and has now been re-instated to drawers retaining the original drawer fronts. The desk retains all the original brass locks, ornate brass handles and concealed castors. The gold tooled leather insert is of later date.


Date:  1740
Period:  George II
Origin:  English
Medium: Mahogany
Dimensions: 79 x 160.5 x 100.5 cm (31¹/₈ x 63¹/₄ x 39⁵/₈ inches)
Provenance: Provenance:
Dingley Hall, Northamptonshire, England.
Private collection, England.
Literature: Literature:
Christie, Manson & Woods, ‘The Important Collection of French and English Furniture and Meissen Porcelain, formed by the late S. B. Joel’, 29 May 1935, pp. 34–5, lot 133.
Percy Macquoid and Ralph Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture, revised edition, vol. III, 1954, p. 246, fig. 15.
Illustrated:
‘Dingley Hall II, Northamptonshire, The Seat of Viscount Downe’, Country Life, 23 April 1921, p. 497; in situ in the Tapestry Room.
Categories: Furniture