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A PAIR OF SOUTH ITALIAN rococo LACQUERED BRASS-MOUNTED AND PEWTER-INLAID SABICU, AMARANTH, AND TU...

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:100,000.00 - 150,000.00 USD
A PAIR OF SOUTH ITALIAN rococo LACQUERED BRASS-MOUNTED AND PEWTER-INLAID SABICU, AMARANTH, AND TU...
A PAIR OF SOUTH ITALIAN rococo LACQUERED BRASS-MOUNTED AND PEWTER-INLAID SABICU, AMARANTH, AND TULIPWOOD COMMODES Naples, circa 1750 Each serpentine Siena fossil-marble top with ogee edge above two long bombe-fronted drawers sans traverse inlaid with quatrefoil and rosette trellis within a foliate and crossbanded border mounted with foliate and lion-mask backplates and cartouche escutcheons, the bombe sides similarly inlaid, above a dished apron and on splayed canted legs with scrolled foliate sabots 381/2 X 543/4 X 26 in. 98 X 139 X 66 cm - $100,000-150,000 Provenance Almost certainly acquired by either William Jolliffe, later 1st Baron Hylton (1800-76) or Hedworth, 2nd Baron Hylton (1825-1899) for Hylton Castle, Co. Durham or Petersfield House Hampshire. Thence by descent at Ammerdown, Somerset (sold christie's london, 12 june 1997, lot 40). The exaggerated bombe form and distinctive shape of these commodes is characteristic of the production of Neapolitan workshops circa 1760-70, (Cottino and G. Massara, Mobili Italiani Del Settecento, 1990, p.69). What is so unusual about the Hylton commodes is the pewter-enriched rosettes which punctuate the parquetry. It is therefore interesting that both Pietro Piffetti and Gilles Joubert executed furniture at that same date (circa 1767-76) with similar lozenge inlay with rosettes of beaten copper at the interstices. This can be seen on both the Ashburton Cabinet by Piffetti (sold by the Executors of the late 6th Lord Ashburton, Christie's London, 11 June 1992, lot 166), as well as on the commode delivered by Joubert for Madame Louise's bedchamber at Versailles in 1769 (now in the J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu) and the secretaire he supplied in 1774 for the Garde-Meuble (now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London). While the pewter inlay and veneering sans traverse of the Hylton commodes is certainly more refined, the stylized foliate slip-frame can also be seen on the pair of Neopolitan commodes, reputedly formerly owned by the Savoia family, sold anonymously at Christie's New York, 4 November 1992, lot 135. another related commode was sold christie's new york, 6 march 1991, lot 123.