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Tables in New Orleans

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Item Ships From: New Orleans
Antique Walnut Two-Tier Étagère Table
Located in New Orleans, LA
A nice two-tiered table that is suitable for many purposes.
Category

Late 19th Century English Antique Tables in New Orleans

Materials

Walnut

Antique Old Louisiana Rosewood Table, circa 1840
Located in New Orleans, LA
Antique Old Louisiana rosewood table, circa 1840.
Category

Mid-19th Century American Antique Tables in New Orleans

Materials

Wood

Antique English George III Mahogany Serpentine Side Table
Located in New Orleans, LA
This side table opens to a good size for intimate dining or card playing. It is nicely polished.
Category

Early 19th Century English Antique Tables in New Orleans

Materials

Mahogany

French 19th Century Two-Tiered Louis XV Marble Top Table with Bronze dOre Mounts
Located in New Orleans, LA
This beautiful two-tiered satinwood and marble table features bronze mounts designed in the Louis XV manner, and is supported by four cabriole shaped wooden legs. Dating back to the ...
Category

Late 19th Century French Antique Tables in New Orleans

Materials

Marble, Bronze, Gold Plate

Antique Portuguese Rosewood Drawleaf Table
Located in New Orleans, LA
Antique Portuguese Rosewood Drawleaf Table This table opens to 48.5 inches
Category

Mid-19th Century European Antique Tables in New Orleans

Materials

Rosewood

Antique French Gold Bronze Mounted Mahogany Table with Marble Top, Circa 1880
Located in New Orleans, LA
Antique French gold bronze mounted mahogany occasional table with marble top and wedgwood plaque, Circa 1880.
Category

19th Century French Antique Tables in New Orleans

Materials

Bronze

Grand Ducal Pietre Dure Console Tables
By Andrea Brustolon
Located in New Orleans, LA
Among the most beautiful examples of hardstone artistry that have ever entered our collection, these important Grand Ducal pietre dure console tables are in a class all their own. Their powerful architectural elegance, impressive size and rarity make them two of the finest hardstone masterpieces ever created and quite possibly the greatest pair of pietre dure tables in existence. With their naturalistically rendered flowers and birds, these tabletop panels showcase the particularly fine quality craftsmanship of the Grand Ducal workshops in Florence during the first quarter of the 17th century. Grand Duke Ferdinando I de Medici, one of the most important personages in the annals of art history, established the Grand Ducal Workshop in 1588. The workshop specialized in the art of pietre dure developed from the ancient art of opus sectile, giving rise to the most luxurious and detailed examples of hardstone artistry ever produced. Its patrons were the Popes and Royals of Europe, and the quality of the objects produced in the workshop is without equal. Typically, because of the high level of workmanship the art form requires, pietre dure plaques were crafted in small sizes. The great majority of known examples of pietre dure are a fraction of the size of our grand tables. The combination of pietre dure and extensive use of other rare decorative hardstones such as lapis lazuli and pietra paesina or “ruin marble” meant that these tabletops were surely produced for a wealthy collector. The tables are further distinguished by their superbly carved bases by Andrea Brustolon, known as the “Michelangelo of wood.” Brustolon was a Venetian wood sculptor known for his exuberant and intricate Baroque furniture. His high Baroque style was influenced by his years studying in Rome, where he was exposed to the sculpture of Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Crafted in the early 18th century, these bases display Brusolon’s unmatched talent for both figural and foliate work, combining cupids, masks and oversized scrolling vines for a grand, ornate effect. Similar furnishings by Brustolon are held in museums worldwide, including the Victoria & Albert Museum, the National Museum of Scotland and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, while the Ca' Rezzonico Museum in Venice features an entire room dedicated to the sculptor. For approximately 150 years, these tables were part of the famed Stoneleigh Abbey collection owned by the Lord Leigh family. This renowned English country estate inspired Jane Austen to write Mansfield Park. Lord Leigh eventually sold the tables at Christie’s London in 1962, and the pair have stayed in the collection of the same Florentine family who purchased them from Christie's until we recently acquired them. Our tables are prominently pictured in the important Saul Levy book Il Mobile Veneziano del Settencento. The pietre dure plaques date circa 1625-1650. The decorative tops likely would have originally been sold with a pair of plain stone columns to display them, and Lord Leigh would have commissioned the custom bases from Brustolon circa 1714 when he added the impressive four-story fifteen-bay Baroque West Wing to Stoneleigh Abbey. A similar single Grand Ducal tabletop is in the United Kingdom’s National Trust Collection, and a smaller tabletop resides in Buckingham Palace. The flower and bird panels in our examples relate to the famous Badminton Cabinet...
Category

17th Century Italian Baroque Antique Tables in New Orleans

Materials

Wood

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