Bookcase
Banting, France and Co.
Category
Furniture
Date
circa 1830
Materials
Rosewood, marble, brass, oak and deal construction, textile
Measurements
350 x 291 x 60 cm
Place of origin
St James's Street
Order this imageCollection
Ickworth, Suffolk
NT 850266.4
Summary
One from a suite of four rosewood marble and gilt brass fitted bookcases, by Banting, France and Co. circa 1830 Including a pair of single bookcases with an angled arcaded cornice with molded edge above a shaped frieze centered by an applied carved motif with central flower head medallion within a floral scrolling border. With six open shelves flanked by rounded and molded pilasters. The lower section with a Carrera marble top with outset square corners above a plain frieze and a pair of cupboard doors with gilt brass grills headed by ionic capitals and arcaded links top and bottom. The grills backed with red pleated silk and flanked by scroll carved lions paw monopodia with ionic capitals and leaf carving. The whole raised on a plinth base.The second pair of double bookcases with conforming decoration but with two sets of six open shelves and two pairs of brass grilled cupboard doors.
Full description
Banting and France & Co., 27 St.James' Street, London (1813-40) The furniture in the main entertaining rooms at Ickworth was almost exclusively supplied by the firm of Thomas Banting and William France. The invoices for this outstanding group of furnishings are in the Hervey papers (See Suffolk County Records office, Bury St. Edmunds: 941.81/17 and 941/81/11). Banting and France were Royal cabinetmakers and held Royal Warrants in the reigns of George III, George IV, William IV and Queen Victoria. The Hervey family of Ickworth also maintained property in London at 6 St James's Square, as well as Bristol House in Putney and a house at No.19 Sussex Square, Brighton to which Banting and France were to also supply furnishings. Most of the contents of the Brighton property was moved to Ickworth in 1936. Banting and France assisted with the organisation of the sale of furniture by auction at St James' Square in 1814, although the Hervey family kept and refurnished the property, moving the later contents to Ickworth in 1950. Ickworth and its contents passed to the National Trust in lieu of death duties in 1956 although the family leased back the East Wing and continued to live there until it was sold by the 7th Marquis of Bristol (1954-1999) who sold the lease to the National Trust in 1996. See: G Beard & C Gilbert, 'Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660–1840' 1986 – Furniture History Society Geoffrey Castle, 'The France Family of Upholsterers and Cabinet-Makers' – Furniture History Society Journal Vol XLI pp 25–43, Published 2005 Robert Huish, 'Memoirs of her Late Highness Charlotte Augusta, Princess of Wales – London: Thomas Kelly Geoffrey de Bellaigue & Pat Kirkham, 'George IV and the Furnishing of Windsor Castle' – Furniture History Society 8 (1972) Ralph Edwards & Margaret Jourdain, 'Georgian Cabinet Makers' 1944, 1946; revised 1951 (3rd edition 1955) (James Weedon 2017)
Provenance
Part of the Bristol Collection. Acquired by the National Trust in 1956 under the auspices of the National Land Fund, later the National Heritage Memorial Fund. These bookcases were supplied to Ickworth by Banting, France and Co. circa 1830
Makers and roles
Banting, France and Co., furniture supplier
References
Beard and Gilbert, 1986: Geoffrey Beard and Christopher Gilbert (ed), Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840, 1986, pg37 Castle, Geoffrey - 'The France Family of Upholsterers and Cabinet-Makers' – Furniture History Society Journal Vol XLI Published 2005, pp 25–43, De Bellaigue, G. & Kirkham, P. - 'George IV and the Furnishing of Windsor Castle' – Furniture History Society 8 (1972)