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1951 items
  • Stock: 16730

    A fine and large cast iron Georgian fire basket. Very much in the Adam style, the basket has an arched back cast with swagged and beaded decoration, reminiscent of the fan lights the Adam brothers popularised in the 18th century. The fireback is mounted behind the generous four-bar grate, which in turn is mounted with urns. The front of the basket is cast with ornate floral detailing, and the apron is cast with ornate foliate Vitruvian scrolls. This is supported by tapered standards with urn finials.

    English, c.1800.

    A near pair with 16747. View our collection of: Antique fire grates and log baskets.

    Width Height Depth
    37"
    94 cms
    34 58"
    88 cms
    13 38"
    34 cms

    Listed Price: £6,200 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16727

    A very large and dramatic Victorian cast iron fire grate. The arched back is cast with a fan pattern and sits behind a very generous two barred grate, perfect for large log fires. This is supported by two very substantial baluster andirons on ornate, scrolling tripod bases.

    English, c.1870. View our collection of: Antique fire grates and log baskets.

    Width Height Depth
    40 1116"
    103.5 cms
    31 18"
    79 cms
    24 38"
    62 cms

    Listed Price: £3,400 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16483

    A fine Louis XV Pompadour fireplace in Belgian black marble. This pompadour fireplace is boldly carved with a serpentine shelf, over a panelled serpentine frieze flanked by scrolling endblocks over generous, canted console jambs. A dramatic fireplace with a beautiful finish.

    French, late 19th century. < br>
    View our collection of: Antique Rococo Chimneypieces inc Louis XV English Scottish Chippendale Rococo fireplace mantels.

    Width Height Depth
    External 61 38"
    156 cms
    48 1116"
    123.8 cms
    13 1116"
    34.8 cms
    Internal 40 78"
    104 cms
    40 38"
    102.5 cms

    Listed Price: £7,200 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 6625

    An exceptionally rare chimneypiece by Robert Adam.

    This chimneypiece is an exciting new discovery. Commissioned by General John Burgoyne (1722-1792) for the eating room of his London residence at 10 Hertford St, Mayfair, it was designed by Robert Adam to embrace the Italian Neoclassicism both patron and architect had enjoyed during their time in Italy.

    Burgoyne was a professional soldier, and despite being the son of a Baronet he relied on his military income. In 1743, he eloped with Lady Charlotte Stanley and as a result the pair were denied Lady Charlotte’s dowry, forcing them into and an extended trip to Europe to avoid their creditors in 1749.

    It was in Aix-en-Provence that the couple struck up a friendship with the young architect, meeting him again in Florence, and visiting him at his apartments in Rome on several occasions. When their fortune had been restored by the generosity of Lady Charlotte’s father, the couple sought an architect to design the interiors for their new home they had leased on Hertford St. Naturally they engaged their friend Robert Adam, who set about designing the interior mouldings, chimneypieces and furniture for the fourteen rooms. Many of the drawings for these interiors survive in the Sir John Soane archive. At this time, Robert Adam was still Architect of the King’s Works, so Burgoyne had employed the very best architect to finish his new home.

    Adam’s grand tour similarly started in France, and continued to Florence and Rome, where he met Giovanni Battista Piranesi, an established architect and printmaker known for his fantastical drawings of ancient ruins and precise interpretation of classicism. The pair enjoyed many drawing excursions together, the product of which became an essential marketing tool for the young architect, who sent these sketches back to England to win business, which it did. Within five years of his return to England, Adam was swamped with work.

    What makes this chimneypiece so interesting is undoubtedly its association and stylistic similarities with Piranesi, with whom Adam shared a close friendship. We know for certain that this chimneypiece was designed after Adam’s time in Rome, having been commissioned by Burgoynes in 1769. Interestingly, this is the date of publication for Piranesi’s volume of chimneypiece designs, his Diverse Manière Cammini, which comprises 62 fanciful designs designed to be a complete departure from the Italian neoclassicism which emerged in the Renaissance.

    This chimneypiece is not only Italianate in design, it is also constructed very much in the Italian manner, utilising 4 large blocks of marble which were hewn into shape from the whole. In contrast, English chimneypiece construction of this period was more aligned with cabinetmaking, using sheets of marble that were joined together. Here, the tablet and endblocks have been let in, and it is perhaps the case that the chimneypiece was made in Italy under instruction from Robert Adam and was finished in England. The carving is exquisite and bears many similarities to a design Piranesi published in his volume. Simple in form, the shelf features a small egg and dart moulding above crisply carved dentil and leaf and dart mouldings. This is supported by a generous frieze, inset with panels of verde antico marble centred by an urnular tablet, and flanked by endblocks carved with candlestands, which also bear resemblance to Piranesi’s design. The verde antico is also inset on the jambs, and the opening is framed with more exquisitely carved leaf and dart, which continues around the footblocks. This chimneypiece is very substantial in size, and is a truly innovative piece of 18th century design, and a striking departure from other English chimneypieces of the same date.

    English, c.1769.

    Full provenance on request.

    View our section showing the full range of our neo-classical chimneypieces

    Width Height Depth
    External 79 14"
    201.5 cms
    56 18"
    142.5 cms
    8 78"
    22.5 cms
    Internal 50"
    127 cms
    40 58"
    103.2 cms
  • Stock: 16728

    A large Baroque cast iron fire basket with a broken pediment back ornately cast with scroll work, and the three barred grate mounted with urn finials in brass. The whole is supported by large brass andirons in the Dutch Baroque style, with pierced baluster finials and scrolling ornate feet.

    English, c.1870. View our collection of: Antique fire grates and log baskets.

    Width Height Depth
    39 38"
    100 cms
    34 14"
    87 cms
    24"
    61 cms

    Listed Price: £4,500 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16305

    A beautiful Pompadour chimneypiece in a boldly veined breche violette fireplace. The serpentine panelled frieze is supported by angled panelled jambs over plain footblocks. Small but perfectly formed!

    French, late 19th century.

    View our collection of: Antique Rococo Chimneypieces inc Louis XV English Scottish Chippendale Rococo fireplace mantels.

    Width Height Depth
    54 58"
    138.7 cms
    41 12"
    105.5 cms
    14 14"
    36.2 cms

    Listed Price: £7,800 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16758

    A pair of fine and large early 18th century blue and white Delft hand-painted baluster vases. The original covers are missing, and have been replaced with rather charming hand-painted toleware lids. These vases would make a beautiful pair of table lamps, so please enquire if you would like to explore this option.

    Dutch, c.1710.

    View our collection of: decorative antiques and furnishings

    Diameter Height
    9 18"
    23 cms
    13 78"
    35.3 cms

    Listed Price: £2,200 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16560

    An elegant Louis XVI fireplace in a boldly veined dove grey bardiglio fiorito. The breakfront shelf sits above a stop-fluted frieze, which is flanked by acanthus paterae endblocks. These are supported by scrolling console jambs.

    View our collection of: Antique French chimneypieces inc. Louis XVI, French Empire fireplace mantels.

    Width Height Depth
    External 57 18"
    145 cms
    44 316"
    112.2 cms
    16 58"
    42.2 cms
    Internal 40"
    101.5 cms
    34"
    86.3 cms
  • Stock: 16609

    Victorian twelve sided chess table in rosewood inlaid with satinwood on the playing surface, with two concealed drawers and a generous barley twist support and c-scroll carved tripod base. Perfect as a side or lamp table, with drawers for coasters or of course, chess pieces!

    English, c.1860.

    View our collection of: Antique furniture

    Width Height Depth
    22 1316"
    58 cms
    30 18"
    76.5 cms
    22 1316"
    58 cms

    Listed Price: £780 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16641

    A rare Scottish pine and composition chimneypiece by Richard Foster of Edinburgh. The chimneypiece was designed is profusely decorated in exquisite detail whilst maintaining the elegant restraint of a neoclassical chimneypiece. The reverse breakfront shelf with acanthine moulding rests above an undershelf studded with bellflowers which in turn is supported by tall endblocks, each decorated with an anchor on the sea bed. The coastal theme is echoed again on the extraordinary tablet, a celebration of the Scottish coast; profusely decorated with seaweeds and shells, all in high relief. The flutes on the frieze are studded with little pinecones, just an exquisite detail. The frieze is supported by three-quarter columned jambs, with acanthine capitals. Scottish, c.1805.

    Notes: Chimneypieces of this manufacture were a speciality of Richard Foster of Edinburgh and his son and examples survive not only in Scotland but also in the United States and Canada, where he seemed to create a strong market for them in the late 18th century. Richard Foster was born in Canonbie, the Scottish Borders, in 1755. At the age of fourteen, he was recorded as having a bank account in London, presumably as he was serving as an apprentice there, perhaps to the Adam Brothers as they too were in London at this time. In 1785 he returned to Edinburgh, working as a "joiner" and married to the daughter of a wealthy leather merchant. His chimneypieces were sold not only in Scotland, but in the USA, a bold move only a few years after American Independence was declared! This is perhaps why he avoided becoming a prominent figure in Scottish social and intellectual circles, as selling to Britain's former colonies would have been regarded as treachery in many cases. The pine and composition chimneypiece he perfected made the rational principles and beauty of classicism affordable to the growing mercantile and professional class emerging in the 18th century. These clients wished to express their cultural understanding through objects that conveyed the principles they admired, the chimneypiece was one such highly prized object. The Adam brothers (Robert and James) were well known for promoting their designs to the masses, and it is the pine and composition chimneypiece they made for the emerging middle class in Edinburgh that have become synonymous with the "Adam Style". However, Foster was a true master of the technique, and his designs are some of the most delicate and finely manufactured ever made. In the 1770s, the technique of applying a cast composition onto pine really took off in Scotland, especially with the construction of many new houses, such as those in Edinburgh's New Town. The process of cast composition can be described as essentially a thermo plastic mix of chalk, glue size, and other additives heated up to a precise temperature then pressed into wood or brimstone moulds. These could then be applied to a simple pine surround and painted if desired. Foster was commissioned to make designs unique to clients, so there may only be a single example of a particular design, but these usually incorporate existing decorative motifs.

    View our section showing full range of neo-classical chimneypieces

    Width Height Depth
    70 18"
    178 cms
    59 38"
    151 cms
    7 78"
    20 cms

    Listed Price: £16,000 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 14723

    A small Louis XIV chimneypiece in campan marble. This Baroque chimneypiece is carved from a beautifully veined campan marble, with a generous bolection moulding framing the rounded opening.
    The perfect fireplace if you love the bolection shape, but also want a fireplace with a shelf.

    View our collection of fireplaces: Antique Baroque Chimneypieces inc English, Italian, French, Flemish Bolection fireplace mantels.

    width height depth
    External 50"
    127 cms
    39 316"
    99.5 cms
    15 316"
    38.5 cms
    Internal 35 58"
    90.5 cms
    32 1116"
    83 cms

    Listed Price: £8,400 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 14250

    A very fine and delicately carved Louis XVI antique French chimneypiece. The slender shelf rests over a frieze carved in low relief with Vitruvian scrolls amongst foliage, and set with a tablet carved with a portrait cameo and ribboned floral garland. The frieze is supported on corbel jambs with floral garlands. The fireplace has its original ornate cast iron insert, decorated with a bead and reel border, with a torchere and quiver motif.

    French, mid 19th century.

    View our collection of: Antique French chimneypieces inc. Louis XVI, French Empire fireplace mantels.

    width height depth
    external 67 78"
    172.4 cms
    44 14"
    112.5 cms
    18 78"
    47.9 cms
    internal 47 38"
    120.5 cms
    34 14"
    87 cms
  • Stock: 16612

    An early Victorian gilt-brass and steel fender, mid-19th century, the standards cast with twin reclining lions on circular foliate supports.
    Diamond registration mark for 1863.

    Provenance: Property from the estate of the late David Cornwell, best known as the author John le Carré.

    View our collection of: Antique Fenders, Firescreens and Nursery Guards

    Width Height Depth
    External 65 58"
    166.5 cms
    7 78"
    20 cms
    14 14"
    36.3 cms
    Internal 40 12"
    102.9 cms

    Listed Price: £1,600 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16664

    A large and elegant ten branch crystal chandelier. The generous baluster stem is ornamented with cross hatched glass, which issue the swan necked arms, profusely hung with beads and drops and mounted with scalloped drip pans.

    English, circa 1950.

    Near pair with stock number 16662.

    View our collection of: Antique chandeliers.

    diameter drop
    27 316"
    69 cms
    37 38"
    95 cms

    Listed Price: £3,200 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16662

    An elegant five branch crystal chandelier. The generous baluster stem is ornamented with cross hatched glass, which issue the swan necked arms, profusely hung with beads and drops and mounted with scalloped drip pans.

    English, circa 1950.

    Near pair with a larger chandelier 16664

    English, circa 1950.

    View our collection of: Antique chandeliers.

    Diameter Drop
    22"
    56 cms
    27 58"
    70 cms

    Listed Price: £1,200 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 14955

    A pair of good quality Rococo twin-branch wall lights in gilt brass. The surface of these lights has acquired a beautiful patina across the organic form of the sconces, which organic foliate flourishes and c-scrolls, typical of the Rococo style.

    French, c.1900.

    View our collection of: Antique Wall Lights

    Width Height Depth
    9 38"
    24 cms
    16 12"
    42 cms
    5 12"
    14 cms

    Listed Price: £850 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16261

    A large and beautiful Régence style hanging lantern. The hexagonal glazed lantern is mounted with an ornate foliate corona, with traces of the original gilding. The hinged door has the charming feature of very small handle modelled as a hand.

    French, late 19th century.

    View our collection of: Antique lanterns and ceiling lights

    Diameter Height
    15 1116"
    40 cms
    24 38"
    62 cms

    Listed Price: £1,200 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 15455

    An early Regency twin pedestal sideboard attributed to Gillows of Lancaster, in flame mahogany with a bowed tablet frieze which is flanked by two dovetailed drawers and a lower cupboard to the left, and a single dovetailed drawer mounted with a wine holder and lower cupboard to the right. The central frieze is fitted with two long drawers, the upper mounted with a central bullseye very much in the Regency manner. All drawers are mounted with brass ringed lion mask pulls. The drawers and cupboard fronts are solid mahogany, the rest of the carcass being constructed from oak. This sideboard is very much in the manner of John Soane. English or Scottish, c.1800.

    Link to: Antique furniture

    width height depth
    72 38"
    184 cms
    42 18"
    107 cms
    22 38"
    57 cms

    Listed Price: £3,800 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16724

    A rare pair of very fine Louis XV Rococo marble fireplaces in a beautifully veined seravezza marble. On each, the serpentine shelf is mounted over the serpentine frieze, beautifully carved with a central rocaille cartouche and trailing flowers. The scrolled corners on the frieze meet the jambs where they elegantly taper to the base.

    It is extraordinarily rare to have an original pair of fireplaces of such quality.

    French, mid-19th century.

    Provenance: A fine house in Italy.

    View our collection of: Antique Rococo Chimneypieces inc Louis XV English Scottish Chippendale Rococo fireplace mantels.

    Width Height Depth
    External 61"
    155 cms
    43 1116"
    111 cms
    16 14"
    41.5 cms
    Internal 45 1116"
    116 cms
    35 58"
    90.5 cms

    Listed Price: £46,000 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16684

    A charming Baroque Dutch style chandelier, with a lobed baluster central stem and four elegant arms with ornately cast drip pans.
    With original ceiling hook.

    English, c.1900.

    View our collection of: Antique chandeliers.

    Width Height Depth
    17 18"
    43.5 cms
    25 38"
    64.5 cms
    17 18"
    43.5 cms

    Listed Price: £520 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16732

    A small Queen Anne period fire basket of excellent quality. This charming basket has a Dutch Baroque fireback with ornate scrollwork borders, centred by a heron. This is mounted on a three bar steel grate and supported by brass cabriole andirons and a brass apron. A wonderful survival!

    English, c.1705. View our collection of: Antique fire grates and log baskets.

    Width Height Depth
    External 25 316"
    64 cms
    26 38"
    67 cms
    12 316"
    31 cms
    Back width 13 38"
    34 cms

    Listed Price: £5,700 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16674

    A fine and large Belgian arched fireplace in a pure white statuary marble. The breakfront shelf rests on a deep and generously carved frieze, with a Greek key like low relief band of carving centred by a large and rather Baroque tablet with floral and foliate garlands framing an androgynous mask mounted on a cartouche. This cartouche is echoed on the endblocks, which sit above the boldly carved and substantial acanthus corbel, console jambs which are also embellished with rose garlands carved exquisitely in high relief. These frame the arched opening which is detailed with laurel spandrels and a plain keystone.

    Belgian, c.1860.

    View our collection of: Antique Victorian, William IV and Edwardian fireplaces and chimneypieces.

    Width Height Depth
    External 76 14"
    193.7 cms
    47 18"
    119.7 cms
    16 14"
    41.5 cms
    Internal 37"
    94 cms
    31 14"
    79.5 cms

    Listed Price: £22,000 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16611

    A pair of French gilt-bronze twin branch wall lights in the Régence style, each with ribbon-tied tapering backplate with foliate terminals, the down-swept branches with glass shades formed as flowerheads.

    French, c.1910.

    View our collection of: Antique Wall Lights

    Width Height Depth
    11 1316"
    30 cms
    16 14"
    41.5 cms
    7 18"
    18 cms

    Listed Price: £2,800 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 15910

    An exceptional pair of large alabaster lidded vases in the manner of Lorenzo Bartolini (1777-1850). The lidded urns of baluster form, are finely carved from translucent alabaster the body of the vase depicting classical scenes, the lids topped with a fruiting finial, resting on the slender everted necks with egg and dart rim.
    Italian, c.1820, with restorations.

    Notes: Lorenzo Bartolini was born in Tuscany and studied in Florence and at the Officina Inghirami in Volterra, a workshop established in 1791 which produced alabaster sculpture and objects in the neoclassical style for Grand Tourist and other wealthy patrons. In 1797 he moved to Paris, where he became a close friend of Ingres and the favoured sculptor of Napoléon, who sent him to Carrara in 1807 to direct the Academy of Sculpture. Later he settled in Florence, where his Grand Tour patrons included Thomas Hope and the 6th Duke of Devonshire.

    Lorenzo Bartolini began his career on high quality decorative urns and tazzi for visiting grand tourists. A series of 19 sketches with designs for such vases was published.

    Diameter Height
    14 1316"
    37.5 cms
    44 12"
    113 cms
    with wooden base 48 38"
    123 cms
  • Stock: 16573

    A very large and grand rouge royale marble Victorian fireplace. The warm, rusty red marble with bold white and grey veining is shown to its full potential with this design. The wide moulded shelf rests on boldly carved corbels mounted on wide and deep jambs. These frame the arched opening which is bordered by simply panelled spandrels.

    English, c.1880.

    View our collection of: Antique Victorian, William IV and Edwardian fireplaces and chimneypieces.

    Width Height Depth
    External 86 1316"
    220.5 cms
    50"
    127 cms
    13 316"
    33.5 cms
    Internal 37 78"
    96.3 cms
    37 78"
    96.3 cms

    Listed Price: £8,500 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16696

    An unusual Italian giltwood wall mirror in the Rococo style. The original mercury glass plate is enclosed by the frame, which is very organic in form, with rocaille c scrolls and trailing foliage forming an asymmetrical border. Possibly a more provincial piece from the Veneto, rather than the grand Venetian mirrors often associated with this style, and very charming for it.

    Italian, Veneto, c.1760.

    Awaiting restoration to some small losses.

    View our collection of: Antique mirrors and console tables

    Width Height Depth
    42 12"
    108 cms
    56 12"
    143.5 cms
    2 38"
    6 cms

    Listed Price: £2,800 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16512

    A large and rare chinoiserie 8 branch chandelier in mahogany, the whole lacquered with a black ground and decorated with chinoiserie panels in gold. The form is reminiscent of a pagoda, complete with fretwork, a sloping roof and a crowned with a small cupola. A fabulous piece!

    English, c.1900.

    View our collection of: Antique chandeliers.

    diameter drop
    31 12"
    80 cms
    35"
    89 cms
  • Stock: 16737

    A fine Wellington chest with seven graduated drawers with original brass drop handles, ebonised and ormolu mounted with Arabesque satin birch inlay on a harewood ground, in the French taste. With a locking stile with original lock and key, allowing all draws to be locked / unlocked at the same time.

    English, circa 1870.

    View our collection of: Antique furniture

    Width Height Depth
    23 58"
    60 cms
    46 14"
    117.5 cms
    16 78"
    43 cms
  • Stock: 16733

    A pair of black painted cast iron garden urns on stands, attributed to the Handyside Foundry. This set of campana urns with flared lobed rims, have lovely acanthine foliate embellishments to the body, over gadrooned socles. They are mounted with mask and loop handles. The plinths are simply decorated with bound laurel wreaths.

    English, mid 19th century.

    Notes: The renowned American landscape gardener, writer and horticulturalist Andrew Jackson Downing (October 31, 1815 – July 28, 1852) speaks fondly of the garden urn stating,“There are few objects that may, with so much good effect, be introduced into the scenery of pleasure grounds, surrounding a tasteful villa, as the vase in its many varied forms.”

    View our collection of: Antique, old vintage fountains, sculptures, garden furniture and statuary

    Width Height Depth
    Urn & Base 17 14"
    44 cms
    44"
    111.8 cms
    17 14"
    44 cms
    Base 13 58"
    34.5 cms
    19 1316"
    50.3 cms

    Listed Price: £2,250 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16702

    A set of four English gilt-bronze twin-light wall lights, each surmounted with flambeau urn above tapering stem with central lion mask flanked by scrolling foliate branches. Provenance: The Property of the Late R. Olaf Hambro.

    View our collection of: Antique Wall Lights

    Width Height Depth
    11 316"
    28.5 cms
    20 18"
    51 cms
    7 12"
    19 cms
  • Stock: 16275

    A large and fine William IV round tilt-top breakfast table in rosewood. The central column is carved with a stylised tulip design with a turned and moulded collar below above the tri-form base.
    Perfect as a small dining table, or a centre table, the tilt-top the perfect mechanism should the table not be used on a daily basis.

    English, circa 1830.

    View our collection of: Antique furniture

    diameter height
    47 58"
    121 cms
    28 14"
    72 cms

    Listed Price: £4,500 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 6627

    It is hard to overstate the importance of this chimneypiece. Carved in a fine-grained limestone around 1750 by the most successful architect of 18th century Britain, it is a rare relic of a body of work that has otherwise been lost to time. The research undertaken suggests this grand chimneypiece was once in the dining room of 36 Lincoln’s Inn, one of two grand houses designed by the architect on this street. This building was demolished in 1859, whilst number 35 was lost in the blitz.

    The design of this chimneypiece would have perfectly suited a dining room, impressive in scale, with Bacchus at the centre and grapevines carved in high relief along the frieze and jambs. In the Survey of London in 1912 there is a record for a remarkably similar stone chimneypiece of this style in the basement of 35 Lincoln’s Inn, having been moved from the principal room when the building was reconfigured for office use. As the properties were designed as a pair, it is conceivable, and indeed extremely likely that these chimneypieces were too.

    Few recognise the name of this great architect despite the fame and wealth he enjoyed during his lifetime - which surpassed that of his peers we so revere today - figures such as Robert Adam, Sir John Soane and William Kent. With the recent scholarship of architectural historians such as Marcus Binney and Christopher Hussey, Robert Taylor and his work has come into focus once more.

    Robert Taylor came to architecture from sculpture. This is evident in his work which was so full of life, and a departure from the stark Palladianism which had gripped Britain in the decades before him. An apprentice of Henry Cheere, who held positions such as the Sculptor of Oxford University and Carver for Westminster Abbey during his long career, his understanding of the Rococo would have been learnt from his master, who had embraced the lightness of the style in a number of funerary monuments and indeed chimneypieces commissioned across England.

    Taylor was born into his career, as his father was a stonemason who sponsored his son from a young age. His father funded his apprenticeship to Cheere, and also a trip to Rome, but sadly died soon after, forcing his son to return to London, penniless and seeking a career in stone carving. He did just that, and flourished within not only monumental masonry, but as an architect, working on projects such as the Bank of England and stately homes; he was also appointed architect of the King’s Works in 1769. His style developed from his sculpture into architecture, where he introduced a light, organic quality that he had learnt from Cheere during his education in stone.

    The English Rococo style was merely a fleeting moment in Georgian England, perhaps due to the great marketing prowess of the Adam Brothers, who built and filled homes of varying status with their interpretation of neo-classicism. This popular new style proliferated through their design treatise, entitled, ‘Works in Architecture’, published over three volumes, cementing the brothers as the tastemakers of Georgian Britain. Taylor published no such volume, and instead sought commissions that were financially rewarding. This was starkly opposed to the Adam brother’s enthusiasm for grand redevelopment projects and large bank loans, which would ultimately lead to their demise.

    Ultimately, Taylor’s practice was so successful that on his death, he left an estate of £180,000 — in contrast, William Kent left £10,000, James Gibbs £25,000, and Christopher Wren £50,000. Sadly, much of his architectural output is now lost, destroyed as a result of WWII bombings, demolition and redevelopment. As a result, his name faded into relative obscurity in the years following his death, and his legacy and reputation has only come to light in recent years.

    If you wish to read more about this spectacular chimneypiece and its designer, please send us an email and we would be delighted to send you the relevant publication.

    View our section showing full range of neo-classical chimneypieces

    Width Height Depth
    External 88 58"
    225 cms
    67 1116"
    172 cms
    11 1316"
    30 cms
    Internal 61 58"
    156.5 cms
    50"
    127 cms
  • Stock: 3442

    A superb cast bronze plaque depicting gambolling putti, signed, "Fondera Artistica Veraldi, Napoli".

    Mid-19th century.

    View our collection of: decorative antiques and furnishings

    WIDTH HEIGHT DEPTH
    MAXIMUM 18"
    45.7 cms
    9"
    22.9 cms
    1"
    2.5 cms

    Listed Price: £1,500 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16605

    A Victorian tiled Aesthetic Movement cast iron register grate. The tiles were designed by Christopher Dresser for Minton with the centre tiles designed by John Moyr Smith, each depicting spring and summer also by Minton.

    English, circa 1875.

    View our collection of: Antique Fire grates and Register grates.

    Width Height Depth
    38"
    96.5 cms
    38"
    96.5 cms
    13 316"
    33.5 cms

    Listed Price: £1,800 (+VAT where applicable)

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  • Stock: 16686

    A fine and large 18th century Dutch flame Mahogany press cupboard of architectural form. The broken pediment with a dentil moulding, is supported by Corinthian pilasters with gilt brass capitals. These frame the double doors with elegant beaded mouldings, which enclose shelves and two short drawers. The base comprises three long drawers, with canted corbel returns.

    Dutch, mid-18th century.

    A very useful piece of bedroom furniture, could also be converted to provide hanging space.

    View our collection of: Antique furniture

    Width Height Depth
    67 1116"
    172 cms
    97 316"
    247 cms
    24"
    61 cms

    Listed Price: £2,400 (+VAT where applicable)

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1951 items