Arts & Culture

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Established in 1981 by Charles Wallrock. Previous suppliers of Harrods for over 22 years.

Not so Boring Brown!

 

Wick Antiques Ebony Amboyna Stained Boxwood and Burr Walnut Occasional Table by John C J Atkins London

Detail: An ebony, amboyna, stained boxwood and burr walnut occasional table,
John C J Atkins, Regent St, London, c1850. £2,450

Nowadays, with the latest interior design trends being 50 shades of white, shiny chrome, glass or brushed steel, antique furniture has earned the sad soubriquet ‘boring and brown’. While this may be true of the dusty old heirloom in the corner, stacked with yellowing back copies of ‘Country Life’ and scarred with rings from wet glasses, anyone who works with antiques, especially restorers like ours who spend literally days burnishing pieces to bring back their lustre, will tell you that wood is wonderful. Until the 18th century furniture was generally made from trusty oak or very expensive oyster veneered walnut. Imagine, then, the excitement when cargoes of exotic timbers appeared from the tropics and other far-flung shores. One of the strengths of Lancaster furniture makers Gillows was their uncompromising demand for absolutely top quality timber to the extent that they sourced and imported most of these woods themselves. In 1808 they made a box out of specimen woods for Miss Elizabeth Gifford of Nerquis Hall. The key lists 72 ‘rare and curious woods’. Coromandel, ebony, rosewood, tulipwood, satinwood, lacewood, zebra, partridge, kingwood, pear, purple heart, walnut, elm, yew, camphor, zitan, bamboo, cane, goncalo alves (tigerwood), huanghuali, sandalwood, apple, palm, teak, boxwood, cedar, linden, lime, amboyna and bird-eye’s maple are some of the woods we recognize and sell in our stock today.


Wick Antiques Decorative Inlaid Occasional Tables

 

A rosewood centre table, attrib. to Gillows, c1825. £13,500 A Hungarian ash table, attrib to Holland & Sons, c1860. £42,000 A radiating flame mahogany table c1825. SOLD

 

In many cases the wood speaks for itself. Decoration relies on veneers, these can be half, quarter, flame or book veneers where the timber has been sliced very thinly and the reciprocal patterns used to create dramatic designs, like the Regency tables above, or burr veneers where the timber has been cut across the grain or knurls.

Wick Antiques Details of Occasional Table Exotic Inlays

A Wm IV rosewood specimen table c1830. £8,800 A rosewood, ebony, boxwood parquetry table, c1880. £16,500 A Regency coromandel library table, c1820. £14,000 A marquetry side cabinet by Cremer English, c1880. £120,000

Very expensive or rare timbers, however, could not cover vast expanses of table top or cabinet front so craftsmen deployed them in myriad marquetry (floral, arabesque, figural) or parquetry (geometric) schemes as shown by the table top heading this newsletter and the images above.

 

Dates for your Diary
Palm Beach Show

Wick Antiques at Palm Beach Jewellery Art and Antiques Show at Palm Beach

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Having previously supplied Harrods antiques department for 22 years, Charles Wallrock of Wick Antiques offers his expertise and professional knowledge to help you buy and sell your antiques.

 

Monday, January 23rd, 2017