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A GEORGE III OAK AND MAHOGANY BANDED DRESSER BASE, fitted with an arrangement of seven drawers surrounding central double door cupboard which encloses three spice drawers and shelves, oval brass escutcheons and swan neck handles, bracket feet, together with a later associated plate rack, approximate size height 195cm x width 194cm x depth 53cm
Ω A Regency rosewood and brass inlaid side cabinet, circa 1815, the frieze drawer, above the brass trellis panelled door, 85cm high, 76cm wide, 33cm deep Cites Regulations Please note that this lot (lots marked with the symbol Ω in the printed catalogue) may be subject to CITES regulations whe n exported from the EU. The CITES regulations may be found at www.defra.gov.uk/ahvla-en/imports-exports/cites
ATTRIBUTED TO CHARLES RENNIE MACKINTOSH FOR GLASGOW SCHOOL OF ART STAINED PINE CABINET, CIRCA 1900 of reverse breakfront, the projecting cornice above a central section of four panelled doors above four drawers and with two further cupboards below, flanked to each side with a bank of ten drawers 213cm wide, 189cm high, 64.5cm deep Provenance: Glasgow School of Art Estate of the late Robin Hume Esq. Literature: Billcliffe, Roger, 'Charles Rennie Mackintosh: The Complete Furniture Drawings & Interior Designs', Moffatt 2009, p.43, 1897.2; p. 104, 1900/06.61; 1903.63; p. 237, 1906.23 Lyon & Turnbull 'Decorative Arts', Lots 344-346, 29th October 2014 and Lot 472, 6th November 2002. Note: This compelling cabinet, known to have been situated in the Cashiers Office of the art school from at least 1947, was then later moved to a General Office of the Art School in the 1970s. Red and blue ink stains on the interior shelving remain as signatures to the cabinet's original function in the School of Art's administration offices. Mackintosh had used the reverse breakfront form of this cabinet before in the stained oak cabinet made for William Davidson at Gladsmuir circa 1898. It also shares characteristics with pieces of furniture by Mackintosh and his office that served a more practical purpose or were not necessarily intended for public display, not least in the cheaper materials used for its manufacture. Other examples of these more practical pieces of furniture which have sold through these rooms are the stained pine cabinets for Scotland Street School of 1905 and the kitchen fittings for The Moss, Drymen of 1907, or the simple stained pine easels also made for the School of Art (see lot 232 in this sale). The same dark stained pine was used in a Display Cabinet designed by Mackintosh for the Ingram Street tearooms of 1900. This cabinet shares the same drawer type as the current lot, with simple cut-out handles backed with patinated metal, a recurring feature of Mackintosh furniture. The modest simplicity present in the use of fielded cupboard door panels, is complemented by the monumental banks of drawers which lend this piece of furniture an imposing presence, appropriate perhaps to its intended use as a Cashier's cabinet.
A 1950'S VESPER WALNUT AND BEECHWOOD THREE PIECE BEDROOM SUITE comprising a double door WARDROBE with internal shelves and tray, 37 ins wide a CHEST OF DRAWERS with two short and two long drawers on splay feet, 37 ins and a KNEEHOLE DRESSING TABLE with triple mirror back, three drawers raised on outsplayed legs, 45 ins wide, Rgd No 870590. (3) £60-£90
A 1920s Art Deco mahogany display cabinet with sun burst ribbed door, 70cm wide, 30cm deep, 124cm high, a stained pine double door glazed display cabinet 108cm wide, 23cm deep, 109cm high, a walnut veneered bowfront double door display cabinet 88cm wide, 36cm deep, 117cm high and an oak bowfront glazed ribbed display cabinet with two doors 72cm wide, 31cm deep, 125cm high
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