English
circa 1840 - 1850
High Quality Breakfront Side Cabinet/ Dwarf Bookcase
The rounded and breakfront top and is made with amboyna veneers and book matched with the same figured amboyna to the top edges. The veneers are laid on a mahogany carcass which sits above a walnut 'egg and dart' beading below a walnut bevelled moulding.
The open cabinet is fitted with adjustable shelving through out with the rounded corner sections featuring burr walnut back boards and solid and laminated walnut shelves.
The four crisply carved decorative walnut upright supports or 'Barley Twist' columns are tightly carved and sit on a walnut plinth base. The front edged veneers to the breakfront rounded base are well figured and adds to the overall quality of the piece.
Holland and Sons (1803 – 1942) were extremely good cabinet makers and they specialised in fine quality furniture. Holland and Sons was founded in 1803 by William Holland.
Originally, they were cabinet makers and upholsterers called ‘Taprell and Holland’. In 1843 they changed their name to ‘Holland and Sons’ with William Holland in control, a relative of the well known Regency architect Henry Holland. They were based at 19 Marylebone Street, London.
Holland and Sons soon started to expand and by 1851 they employed over 350 cabinet makers. In 1852 they moved premises when they took on the prestigious firm of Thomas Dowbiggin of 23 Mount Street, who had previously made the throne for Victoria’s Coronation. Holland and Sons worked successfully not only as furniture makers but also as undertakers and became responsible for the Duke of Wellington’s funeral.
William Holland had the firm expanding at a rapid rate and became so well known, they became cabinetmakers and upholsters to the Queen. Their first commission was for Osborne House, Queen Victoria's house on the Isle of Wight, in 1845, supplying furniture in the Queen’s favourite design, ‘Louis XVI style’ from France. They continued to supply furniture for Osborne House and gained further commissions for Windsor Castle, Balmoral and Marlborough House. Holland and Sons also worked for many leading institutions such as the reform Club (we have also supplied the reform club with our antique furniture in the past), the British Museum and the new Houses of Parliament. They were part of many of the important international exhibitions including London in 1862, Vienna in 1873, Paris in 1867 and 1872. They gained worldwide fame for their magnificent designs and quality cabinet-making throughout the Victorian era. Holland and Sons stayed as a family run business, but sadly closed in 1942.
Excellent
Height 91.44cm (36 inches)
Width 170.18cm (67 inches)
Depth 45.72cm (18 inches)
Stock No: 11740
£7,800.00
In-stock