An early-18th century, walnut, pole screen with a tapestry banner
10287
The rectangular banner with canted top corners and a tapestry panel depicting a glass vase filled with peonies, chrysantheums and other flowers with a bird perched on a baluster column within a triumphal, arched frame of Roman acanthus. The pole with an acorn finial, standing on three cabriole legs ending in pad feet. English, first half of the 18th century. 11111443
Reference : The Soho 'tapissier' William Bradshaw (d 1775) following his establishment in the Frith Street premises of Joshua Morris in 1729 with the flower artist Tobias Stranover (d 1756) supplied the 4th Earl of Dysart (d 1770) at Ham House Surrey with tapestries depicting French vignettes of parks and gardens. He is also likely to have provided its drawing room with a firescreen panel of this same pattern, but lacking the bird shown here beside a flower vase in a triumphal arched frame of Roman acanthus (J. Shurmer, Ham House, London 2002, pp 32 & 34). Similar panels, probably after Stranover, had featured in Morris's sale of stock.
18th Century
1725
England