A small Victorian burr walnut serpentine side table, with…
click the photo to enlarge
A small Victorian burr walnut serpentine side table, with quartered top, ornately carved and pierced supports with a twin turned stretcher base. 71 cm x 45 cm x 71 cm.

You must be a subscriber, and be logged in to view price and dealer details.

Subscribe Now to view actual auction price for this item

When you subscribe, you have the option of setting the currency in which to display prices to $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

This item has been sold, and the description, image and price are for reference purposes only.
  • Stretcher - A horizontal rail which connects the legs of stools, chairs, tables and stands, to provide stabilisation of the legs. A stretcher table is any table with a stretcher base. The term is usually applied to substantial farmhouse tables, although many cabinetmaker's pieces, such as sofa tables, also have turned stretchers.
  • Victorian Period - The Victorian period of furniture and decorative arts design covers the reign of Queen Victoria from 1837 to 1901. There was not one dominant style of furniture in the Victorian period. Designers used and modified many historical styles such as Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, English Rococo, Neoclassical and others, although use of some styles, such as English Rococo and Gothic tended to dominate the furniture manufacture of the period.

    The Victorian period was preceded by the Regency and William IV periods, and followed by the Edwardian period, named for Edward VII (1841 ? 1910) who was King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions and Emperor of India for the brief period from 1901 until his death in 1910.
  • Turning - Any part of a piece of furniture that has been turned and shaped with chisels on a lathe. Turned sections include legs, columns, feet, finials, pedestals, stretchers, spindles etc. There have been many varieties and fashions over the centuries: baluster, melon, barley-sugar, bobbin, cotton-reel, rope-twist, and so on. Split turning implies a turned section that has been cut in half lengthwise and applied to a cabinet front as a false decorative support.
  • Pierced Decoration - Ornamental woodwork with part of the background cut through and removed to produce an open-work pattern.
  • Serpentine - Resembling a serpent, in the form of an elongated 'S'. A serpentine front is similar to a bow front, except that the curve is shallow at each end, swelling towards the middle. The term presumably derives from its similarity to a moving snake or serpent. Serpentine fronts are usually veneered, with the carcase either being cut and shaped from a solid piece of timber, or built in the 'brick' method.
  • Burr - Burr (or in the USA, burl) is the timber from the knotted roots or deformed branch of the tree, which when cut, displays the small circular knots in various gradations of colour. It is always cut into a decorative veneer, most commonly seen as burr walnut on 19th century furniture.

This item has been included into following indexes:

Visually similar items

An early 20th century European figured walnut bookcase bureau, similar to above, the back with two panelled doors enclosing a fitted interior, the forefront above a three-drawer configuration. 124 cm x 70 cm x 220 cm

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

A George II feather banded walnut bachelor's chest, circa 1745 and later, of smaII proportions, having a moulded rim to the rectangular top, brushing slide, three fuII width graduated drawers, with brass handles and escutcheons, supported on bracket feet,

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

A large flame mahogany twin pedestal mirror back sideboard, late 19th century, 192 cm high, 184 cm wide, 56 cm deep

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

A brass Corinthian column table lamp and a pair of alabaster column table lamps

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.