Federal Serpentine Bureau



EXTREMEMLY FINE FEDERAL SEPENTINE INLAID MAHOGANY BUREAU

New York c. 1800

 

The oblong top with exaggerated serpentine front edge and string edging above a conforming case with inlaid light-wood stringing at every edge, having four graduated drawers each with string inlay and original brass bale-handle pulls with oval stamped brass back plates, above a string-edged double cyma-shaped apron extending to tall flared French bracket feet.  Below the bottom drawer is a plain triple-string inlay strip with a wider dark mid section between light wood strings.  This inlay motif is identified by Charles Montgomery as no. 66, typical of New York and New Jersey.[1]  The word “String” is inscribed in period chalk on the bottom side of the top; presumably manufacturing instructions as no person of that name is listed in the New York directory of the period.  The drawers and case bottom share a distinctive blocking technique with small 1½ inch blocks spaced at about 2 inch intervals along the front edge where the bottoms meet the serpentine front of the case. Secondary wood: Northern White Pine and Tulip Poplar. 

 

H 38”  W: 44”  D: 20”

 

Condition: Very Good; Back boards replaced and restorations to some stringing on drawer edges and at the bottom of the apron..  Original brasses with restored matte and burnished lacquered surface. Two shrinkage cracks in the top have been filled with wax.

 

The design of this exceptional bureau was inspired by plate 76 b in George Hepplewhite’s The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer’s Guide (London, I. & J. Taylor, 1794), Third Edition.  This design, called “Dressing Drawers,” is distinguished from a “Chest of Drawers” by having a single long drawer across the top for “dressing equipage” instead of a pair of short drawers as shown in plate 52 c.  The American cabinet maker has combined the serpentine form of plate 76 b with the cyma apron of plates 76 c and 52 c.

 

According to the New York cabinetmaker’s price book of 1796, a serpentine chest cost fifty percent more to make than a bow-front and more than twice as much as a straight front;[2] indicating that this form was one of the most sophisticated and costly of the Federal period.  This chest is a superior example distinguished by a deeply curving façade, elaborate and extensive stringing and exceptionally tall, fine and graceful feet.

 

Originally published in 1788 and heavily influenced by the neo-classical work of Robert Adam, Hepplewhite’s Guide dominated American furniture design in the Federal period.  As a result, plate 76 was interpreted all along the East coast.  Joseph Rawson, Sr. of Providence made examples closely related to the present chest, now in the Museum of Art at the Rhode Island School of Design and in the Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.[3]  Langley Boardman of Portsmouth, New Hampshire made a related case with C bracket feet[4] and Michael Allison of New York City made related straight-front chests, examples of which are in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Boscobel Restoration.[5]  A labeled straight-front chest by Matthew Egerton, Sr. (1739-1802) of New Brunswick, New Jersey exhibits a very closely related apron, feet and extensive string inlay.[6] 

 

The design was also popular in the American South as evidenced by a closely related serpentine chest made in Norfolk, Virginia, now in the collection of MESDA,[7] a transitional serpentine chest with C bracket feet attributed to Charleston, S.C. at Yale,[8] a serpentine chest in cherry wood attributed to Frankfort, Kentucky[9]and a Baltimore chest with related stinging at the case corners, published in Baltimore Furniture (The Baltimore Museum of Art, 1947), p.137.

 

The most closely related published example to the present chest is a serpentine chest of very similar dimensions advertised by Berry Tracy in the Magazine ANTIQUES, April 1983, p. 727.  Described as “splendid,” Tracy states that the chest is in the manner of New York cabinetmaker Elbert Anderson, Sr. (active from 1786 to 1796 at No.5 Maiden Lane and from 1796 to 1803 on Duane Street).  Now in a New York City private collection, the bureau’s very similar blocking of the drawers and case indicate the same maker as the present example.

 

The secondary woods, the extreme refinement of the foot, the inlay pattern and lack of cock beading on the drawers suggest a New York origin. 

 

C-072111

 

[1] Charles Montgomery, American Furniture of the Federal Period (New York, Viking Press, 1966), p.31.

[2] Montgomery,  p.179.

[3] Christopher Monkhouse & Thomas Michie, American Furniture at Pendleton House (Providence, Rhode Island School of Design, 1986), p. 65-6.

[4] Collection of Yale University Art Gallery, #1962.32.22

[5] See Berry B. Tracy, Federal Furniture and Decorative Arts at Boscobel (New York, Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1981), pl. 62 & 63 and Celia Jackson Otto, American Furniture of the Nineteenth Century (New York, Viking Press, 1965), fig.14.

[6] Sotheby’s, sale 1650, 11 June 1999, lot 1627.

[7] Helen Comstock, American Furniture (New York, Viking Press, 1962),  fig. 468 and Arts of the Federal Period 1785-1825 (Heritage Plantation of Sandwich, 1989), fig. 108 and A. Sack, The New Fine Points of Furniture (New York, 1993), p.113.

[8] Yale University Art Gallery, #1953.50.3

[9] Olcott,  Kentucky Federal Furniture, Magazine ANTIQUES, May 1974, p. 876.



Dealer Carswell Rush Berlin, Inc.
Date: c. 1800
Origin New York
Artist/Maker
Measurements H 38� W: 44� D: 20�
Inventory View Dealer's Inventory
Website http://www.american-antiques.net
Price
Contact Carswell R. Berlin, 646-645-0404 or  CarswellBerlin@msn.com

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