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AN IRISH REGENCY LACQUERED-GILT-BRASS-MOUNTED AND EBONY-INLAID MAHOGANY DRUM TABLE Attributed to...

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:30,000.00 - 40,000.00 USD
AN IRISH REGENCY LACQUERED-GILT-BRASS-MOUNTED AND EBONY-INLAID MAHOGANY DRUM TABLE Attributed to...
AN IRISH REGENCY LACQUERED-GILT-BRASS-MOUNTED AND EBONY-INLAID MAHOGANY DRUM TABLE Attributed to Mack, Williams, & Gibton, circa 1815 The green leather-inset circular top inlaid with ebonized lines, above four frieze drawers and four simulated drawers, on a lotus leaf shaft and tripartite base with acanthus-sheathed lion legs with sunken brass castors 291/2 X 471/2 in. 74.5 X 121 cm - $30,000-40,000 Provenance Christie's London, 12 November 1998, lot 150 The firm of Mack, Williams and Gibton was formed around 1812 when John Mack, William Gibton (1789-1842), and his brother in law, Zachariah Williams joined forces. They enjoyed unparalleled success. In 1806 Mack and Gibton had received the ultimate accolade, being appointed 'Upholsterers & Cabinet Makers to his Majesty, His Excellency the Lord Lieutentant, and His Majesty's Board of Works'. Mack, Williams and Gibton retained its Royal Warrant for many years, supplying and restoring furniture for some of the most important public buildings in Ireland, including the Four Courts, the War Office, the Barracks Office, Dublin Castle, the Chapel Royal, and the Treasury and Viceregal Lodge. At the same time the firm undertook commissions for several major Irish country houses, such as Ballynegall, County Westmeath, Oakley Park, County Meath, and Strokestown, County Roscommon. Following the death of John Mack in 1829, the firm continued to trade under the names of the surviving partners, Williams and Gibton, and in 1844, two years after the death of William Gibton, it again changed its name to Williams and Sons, finally ceasing business in 1852.