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Lot 152: - Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott (1865 - 1945) , A rare cradle

Est: £20,000 GBP - £30,000 GBPSold:
Sotheby'sLondon, United KingdomApril 02, 2008

Item Overview

Description

circa 1900 manufactured by John P. White, Pyghtle Works, Bedford, oak and ebony inlaid, of angular shape, both side panels inlaid with swallows in low relief, the front centred by a fruitwood and pewter inlaid stylised flower, thought to be an angel's trumpet, flanked by further swallows, on rocking supports, with two cushions covered in period fabric possibly designed by Liberty & Co.

Dimensions

measurements 70cm. high by 93cm. long by 43.5cm. wide; alternate measurements 2ft 3 1/2 in., 3ft ½in., 1ft 4 3/4 in.

Artist or Maker

Literature

A cradle of this design is illustrated:
W. Shaw Sparrow, Hints on House Furnishing, New York, 1919, n.p.
Wendy Kaplan, The Arts and Crafts Movement in Europe and America, New York, California, p. 63, fig. 2.48

For a comparable stylised floral motif see, 'The Studio' Yearbook of Decorative Art, 1906, p. 70

Notes

Born in Kent, Baillie Scott lived on the Isle of Man from 1889 until 1901, when he moved to Bedford, possibly to be within more convenient reach of John White, for whom he had been designing furniture since about 1895. The design for this cradle, reproduced here, is illustrated in a contemporary catalogue of Furniture Made at the Pyghtle Works Bedford by John P. White, Designed by M.H. Baillie Scott, issued in 1901. The cradle is noted as Number 65 and was 'inlaid with ebony, pewter, and coloured woods'. It was available in three woods; mahogany, enamelled white with painted decoration and in the oak seen in the current lot, which was priced at £6. 17. 6. Baillie Scott widely used the same swallow motif in his furniture and interior designs, including in stained glass windows and ceilings. Of particular note are the stained glass windows Baillie Scott designed in 1902 for the Music Room of the A. Wertheim commission in Berlin (illustrated The Studio, op.cit., fig. 156), and again in the design for the windows illustrated in Innen Dekoration (Darmstadt, 1902, p. 182) for a house in Mannheim, Germany. It has been suggested that the stylised flower to the front, with its hanging blossom, is an angel's trumpet, which has a pleasing resonance with the function of the lot, especially given that these flowers are also known as 'moon flowers', as they blossom at night. The furniture from the 1901 catalogue was sold through Liberty's and also probably through the showrooms at 134 New Bond Street, which White had opened in the early years of the twentieth century. For a further discussion of Baillie Scott's work see the following lot.

Auction Details

Fine 20th Century Design

by
Sotheby's
April 02, 2008, 12:00 PM EST

34-35 New Bond Street, London, LDN, W1A 2AA, UK