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A 1950/60s ebonised coffee table of rectangular form with tapered metal supports together with a set of three dining chairs of the same period with wicker seats (AF), a carved oak spinning chair and an ashwood stool of triangular form with sea grass seat raised on square cut chamfered and moulded supports
One lot of miscellaneous items to include a nest of Eastern hardwood occasional tables of rectangular form with simple carved detail, a camel stool with stitched pad seat, cabin trunk, reproduction cheval mirror, green painted tin trunk, wicker log basket, two divisional magazine rack, a Chinese carved hardwood framed table dinner gong with scrolling dragon and further detail complete with brass bell and striker
A pair of Scottish mahogany side chairs,each with a tapering back and pierced details, over a wedge-shaped drop-in seat, reupholstered, with turned front legs, labelled 'The pair of chairs were purchased at Lyon & Turnbull Saleroom George Street, Edinburgh, 1920',114cm highseat 52.5cm high (2)
Mark Brazier-Jones (b.1956),a ‘San Demas’ aluminium armchair, with a faux leopard print back and seat, signed, dated 2010 and numbered '88/100',73cm wide80cm highseat 50cm highMark Brazier-Jones is a master craftsman who was born in New Zealand and works near Buntingford in Hertfordshire. His work is collected worldwide and is found in many museum collections in London and New York.
An 'Egyptomania' gilt metal-mounted hardwood chair, after an 18th Dynasty model found in the tomb of Tutankhamun, c.1925, bone-inlaid and parcel gilt, with a carved panel of the god Heh above a double-curved seat with uraei styles and intertwined plants between tapestry lion paw feet,50cm wide52cm deep95cm highOn 5 November 1922, Howard Carter, leader of the Lord Carnarvon's archaeological expedition, discovered the location of the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh, Tutankhamun. Although some tomb robbing was evident, it remains the best preserved and most complete tomb in the Valley of the Kings.News of Carter's discoveries - which consisted not only of the mummified pharoah himself, but also a wealth of decorative objects and furniture that were kept with him for use in the afterlife - quickly spread, resulting in a resurgence in popularity for all things Egyptian.Harry Burton, the only photographer granted access to the tomb and whose archive is held by the Griffith Institute at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, made it possible to circulate images of what they found. This is a copy of models the team discovered, which are illustrated and discussed in Hollis S Baker, 'Furniture in the Ancient World', London, 1966, pp.75-84.
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