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  • Posts Tagged ‘THE BLESSINGTON COMMODE’

    IMPORTANT IRISH MID 18TH CENTURY COMMODE AT ADAMS

    Saturday, September 30th, 2023
    The Blessington Commode UPDATE: THIS WAS BOUGHT PRIOR TO THE SALE BY THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF IRELAND

    THE Blessington Commode – created by a refugee and asylum seeker and arguably the single most important piece of mid 18th century Irish furniture at auction in decades – comes up at the annual Country House Collections sale by James Adam at Townley Hall in Co. Louth on October 9 and 10.

    Attributed to John Kirkhoffer the commode has been linked directly to a signed 1732 piece dated 1732 by the same maker in the permanent collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. The Kirkhoffers were Protestant asylum seekers who arrived in Ireland as refugees from the Rhineland Palatinate area.  They were in counties Kerry and Limerick before settling in Dublin. The influx of asylum seekers then – including silversmiths, clock and furniture makers from Germany, Holland and France –  gave Irish craft and skill an enormous shot in the arm.  John Kirkhoffer is recorded in Dublin in the early 18th century and  founded a cabinet making business that lasted into the 19th century.  His father Franz Ludwig arrived in Ireland in 1709. The walnut and seaweed marquetry chest was originally made for William Stewart, 1st Earl of Blessington.  He had a house at Henrietta St. in Dublin and a mansion at Blessington, Co. Wicklow which was burned down in the 1798 Rebellion.  The attribution to Kirkhoffer was made by Desmond Fitzgerald, the late Knight of Glin and it is estimated at €100,000-€150,000.  Earlier this year a George I secretaire by Kirkhoffer was donated by benefactor David Boles to the Irish Museum of Time in Waterford.

    A  mid 19th century Killarney wood davenport  UPDATE: THIS MADE 13,000 AT HAMMER

    Adams 757 lot auction draws together period furniture, paintings, silverware anddecorative objects from some of Ireland’s finest country houses and more modest collections with an emphasis on quality and rarity. Among the main furniture lots are a pair of c1776 elliptical side tables to a design by architect James Wyatt (€60,000-€100,000), a pair of c1785 Irish side tables with inlaid marble tops attributed to Pietro Bossi  and a c 1740 Irish hall table each estimated at €50,000-€80,000.  An Irish giltwood rectangular mirror is estimated at €20,000-€30,000, as is a pair of Irish red walnut and parcel gilt mirrors attributed to John Booker once at Adare Manor.  They lead a large selection of elegant mirrors in the sale.

    A c1740 Irish hall table. UPDATE: THIS MADE 55,000 AT HAMMER

    There is a Killarney davenport (€8,000-€12,000), a George II chevron banded walnut bureau (€15,000-€20,000),  a pair of Irish marble topped side tables (€15,000-€20,000), a pair of c1790 torcheres (€20,000-€30,000) and a c1770 mahogany cased barometer by John Alment, Dublin set with a hydrometer and a thermometer. Other top lots include a portrait bust of Henry Grattan by Peter Turnerelli, a set of four silver entree dishes by James le Bas, Dublin, four Irish Georgian silver candlesticks and a Cork George III coffee pot by John Nicholson c1770.The Salmon Leap at Leixlip by Thomas Roberts and Lady Nugent’s Hunter by John Ferneley snr. are each estimated at €30,000-€50,000. The first 281 lots will be sold in a timed online sale on October 9.  There will be a live auction at Adam’s salerooms in Dublin on the following day.  The catalogue is online and there will be viewing at Townley Hall, Drogheda on October 7, 8 and 9.

    A c1770 Cork coffee pot by John Nicholson. UPDATE: THIS MADE 11,000 AT HAMMER