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Home > Secretaire Abattant by Blake, London.

Secretaire Abattant by Blake, London.

SKU : 62845

£32,000.00

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30 kilos
1880
144 x 120 x 36 cm (56 ³/₄ x 47 ¹/₄ x 14 ¹/₈ inches)
Kingwood porcelain Ormolu
England
Late 19th Century
Blake

DIMENSIONS 144 x 120 x 36 cm (56 ³/₄ x 47 ¹/₄ x 14 ¹/₈ inches)

Signed; Blake, 1826-1880. Mount Street, London. Renown cabinet maker and inlayer. Pieces in the V&A and the Metropolitan Museum New York,
Robert Blake (cabinetmaker)
 
 (active 1826–39) was the first of the Blake family of London cabinetmakers.[1] Blake is particularly known for his marquetry and for the ormolu-mounted commodes in tortoiseshell and ebony that he made in 1708–09, after a pair that André-Charles Boulle made for Louis XIV's Chamber at the Grand Trianon, on display in the New York Frick Collection.[2] A pair of Blake commodes, completing the two in the Frick Collection, was sold at Sotheby's on October 15, 2015,[3] for $658,000.[citation needed]
Pieces in public collections include a piano in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York,[4] a writing desk in Goodwood House,[5] a circular table in Alnwick Castle,[6] and an octagonal table in the Leeds City Art Gallery at Temple Newsam House.[7]
His works often imitated the important pieces of 18th-century French furniture that francophile collectors, including the Prince of Wales (later George IV), William Beckford, Francis Seymour-Conway, 3rd Marquess of Hertford and George Watson-Taylorcollected at the beginning of the 19th century.
Blake often worked for Edward Holmes Baldock, who was a dealer in china, glass and, later, furniture to the Royal Family.[8]He is also known to have been associated with the well-known Old Bond Street dealer John Webb.[9]
Relatively little is known of the family. They are listed at 8 Stephen Street, off Tottenham Court Road, between 1826 and 1881. Robert Blake is listed in Robson's 1823 Commercial Directory as a "buhl cutter", at 8 Stephen Street, Tottenham Court Road, and subsequently in the 1826 Post Office Directory as a "cabinet inlayer and buhl manufacturer". Robert Blake had four sons, George, Charles, James and Henry, who continued the firm of Robert Blake & Co. In 1840, it took the name of R. Blake & Sons and, in 1841, Blake; Geo & Brothers; and later George Blake & Co., cabinetmaker of 130 Mount Street, London, and also still in Stephen Street in 1844; George Blake in 1846-50 at 53 Mount Street; and in 1851 to around 1853 George Blake at 53 Mortimer Street.
Batch 86 
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Secretaire Abattant by Blake, London.

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30 kilos
1880
144 x 120 x 36 cm (56 ³/₄ x 47 ¹/₄ x 14 ¹/₈ inches)
Kingwood porcelain Ormolu
England
Late 19th Century
Blake

DIMENSIONS 144 x 120 x 36 cm (56 <span>³/₄</span> x 47 <span>¹/₄</span> x 14 <span>¹/₈</span> inches)

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