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Attributed to GEORGE OAKLEY OF LONDON (1786-c.1819)

Regency secretaire cabinet (c. 1810 England)

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Item Medium Description

Goncalo Alves

European Dimensions

78.00 cm wide   170.00 cm high   42.00 cm deep

UK/USA Converted Dimensions

30.71 inches wide  66.93 inches high  16.54 inches deep

Item Literature

The present secretaire belongs to a a distinctive group of cabinets sharing characteristics suggestive of a common source of manufacture. In particular two examples which bears the same configuration of pediment are recorded in the M.H. de Young Museum and the Grosvenor House Antiques Fair Handbook, 1986, p.83. Further closely related cabinets in the group include an example of almost identical form with the exception of the pediment in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum (w.15-1930), illustrated in Ralph Edward (ed.) Victoria and Albert Museum, Georgian Furniture, 1958, pl. 150 and another illustrated in H. Blairman & Sons Ltd., exhibition catalogue, 1995, No. 4.
The basis of the association of the above group with the leading Regency cabinet-maker George Oakley stems from close stylistic parallels with a bookcase and a wardrobe supplied by him to Charles Madryll Cheere for Papworth Hall, Cambridgeshire in 1810 (see Margaret Jourdain, English Empire Furniture made by George Oakley, Architectural Review, 1920, vol. 48).

Current Item Condition

Fine original condition, very good colour and patination.

Item Description / Dealer Expertise

Regency period Goncalo Alves secretaire cabinet, the pair of mirror backed lancet astragal doors enclosing adjustable shelves, the base with a fall-front secretaire drawer enclosing satinwood fitted drawers and pigeon holes.
Inlaid throughout with boxwood stringing, and with ebonised applied carving.

OAKLEY OF LONDON
Type Artist/Maker
Country of origin England
Started working 1786
Stopped working Circa 1819

George Oakley was a highly ambitious and successful businessman. Oakley became one of the most famous cabinet-makers and upholsterers in Regency London, even managing to attract Royal patronage.
Although numerous aristocratic clients are recorded in the Dictionary of English Furniture Makers, little documented furniture has been identified other than his work at Papworth Hall, Cambridgeshire, in 1810.

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Purchase this item

Please email or call +44 (0)20-7221 3967 for more information or to purchase this item.

Status

FOR SALE



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Eddy Bardawil Antiques

Eddy Bardawil Antiques
106 Kensington Church Street
London
W8 4BH
England

Open: Open Monday-Friday 10-1, 2-5.30; Saturday 10-1

Contacts: Eddy Bardawil
Telephone: +44 (0)20-7221 3967
Fax: +44 (0)20-7221 5124
Website: www.eddybardawil.com
We are members of:
BRITISH ANTIQUE DEALERS' ASSOCIATION
BRITISH ANTIQUE DEALERS' ASSOCIATION
Established: 1980
We deal in:

18th- and early 19th-century English furniture; glass pictures; metalwork

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