Gilty pleasures: gilded mirrors and mini marvels at Adam’s sale

Sunday auction includes rare doll’s house furniture and grown-up pieces to match

Lot 354, detail of bird carving on gilt mirror

Tiny things have a special appeal. And miniature houses, furnished with tiny furniture and even tinier accessories, tend to bring out the child in us; perhaps because, in order to see them properly, we need to bend down, look closely and pay attention.  Top-notch doll’s houses and their contents also bring out the collectors – which will surely be the case on September 9th, when a selection of exquisitely-detailed miniatures from a single collection comes under the hammer at Adam’s At Home sale on St Stephen’s Green in Dublin.

Lot 122 (€200-€300) provides the perfect ambience for the best-dressed salon, supplying a grand piano, side chair, two tables and a footstool. Lot 92 (€200-€300) is an adorable miniature fireplace set, with an iron-and-brass chimney piece and a brass and copper coal helmet and shovel. When teatime comes around, lot 114 (€100-€200), a five-piece silver tea service, comes into its own. And no darkness will ever fall on a doll’s house furnished with lot 138 (€40-€60), a miniature bronze model of a 17th-century Dutch ceiling light, its six scrolling branches just 10cm in diameter.

Lot 122, miniature silver salon furniture

Full-sized salon

Back in the full-sized salon, there’s also delight to be had by paying attention to details. Look under the armrests of a Regency mahogany armchair (lot 383, €500-€800) and you’ll find a pair of brass Egyptian sphinxes. There are more sphinxes on its legs, a design which is vaguely redolent of luxury car badges, giving it the look of a chair which might take off towards the horizon at any moment. The central panel of an Irish George IV pierced brass gallery fender (lot 233, €300-€500) boasts a central panel decorated with the triumph of the sea god Neptune – a handy chap to have around if the fire threatens to get out of hand.

399, William IV side table

The most expensive of the auction’s 500 lots is an elaborately-carved William IV mahogany and marble side table (lot 399, €4,000-€6,000), its frieze and legs a riot of acanthus leaves and masks. An Irish George III card table (lot 369, €1,000-€1,500) may appear to be of a much plainer form, but its frieze is embellished with the traditional Irish scallop shell – and the motif is repeated on each foot of its graceful cabriole legs.

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No salon – large or small – is complete without a splendid mirror, and this sale contains examples to suit all budgets and interior design styles.

Lot 388, Regency convex mirror

For exuberant rococo curlicues it would be hard to beat lot 354 (€800-€1,200), a large 19th-century giltwood overmantle mirror, its panels embellished with leaves, icicles and birds, though lot 388 (€1,500-€2,500), a Regency convex mirror in a lotus-wrapped frame surmounted by lavish acanthus cresting and an oak leaf and acorn apron, comes pretty close. Considerably more self-contained is lot 360 (€800-€1,200), a George IV circular giltwood mirror. Lot 415 (€500-€700) is a pair of arts and crafts carved wood mirrors, while a series of gilded lion masks brings a regal touch to lot 337 (€400-€600), an ebonised rectangular overmantle mirror.

Lot 238, dining chairs with lyre-shaped backs

Dining chairs at modest prices are another feature of this sale, with lot 264 (€2,000-€3,000) offering an unusual set of 14 open square-back chairs. The tablet backs of lot 223 (€1,500-€2,000) are inlaid with conch-shells. Anyone in search of a real bargain should check out lot 238 (€500-€800), a set of nine George IV inlaid mahogany rail-back chairs with lyre-shaped backs. Made in Cork around 1830, these chairs from a private collection were in a previous sale with an estimate of €3,000-€5,000.

There’s good value to be had at the moment, too, in traditional paintings. Lot 247 (€3,000-€5,000) comprises a pair of landscapes by the Scottish painter William Traies, who worked in Devon and captured its beauty through careful attention to the nitty-gritty details of sky and foliage. Lot 310 (€800-€1,200), a lively depiction of cellists by the Belgian painter Léon Marie Constant Dansaert, is presented in a luxurious gold frame.

Vintage trunks are one of the hottest items on the current interior decor scene, and lot 452 (€500-€700) is an early example from Louis Vuitton. Bearing a canvas-lined interior and its original travel label for Ellerman Lines shipping company, its brown-and-mustard pattern is still instantly recognisable.  For something more idiosyncratic – and considerably less expensive – lot 467 (€300-€500) is made up of three Edwardian metal-bound trunks, each with its own distinct character and well-travelled style.

Decorative objects 

The At Home catalogue contains a number of unusual decorative objects, including a pair of continental porcelain vases and covers (lot 258, €600-€800), their bottle-shaped bodies emblazoned with fruiting vines and birds against a ground of snowball flowerheads.

Lot 101 (€50-€100) is a piece of first World War propaganda: a bronze pig, its helmeted head that of the German kaiser. Lot 195 (€100-€200) is a rare Victorian carved brooch. Made from bog-oak, it has much in common with the Killarney ware furniture tradition, and features a harp surrounded by flower decorations.

Finally, if there’s a potential “sleeper” in the At Home sale, it might just be a bronze rabbit by the Swiss sculptor Edouard Marcel Sandoz (lot 495, €800-€1,200). It’s just 4cm high and 6cm long, but it manages to contain the essence of art nouveau shape and style – as well as suggest, somehow, an animal which is totally engaged in crouching and nibbling. There it is again: the appeal of tiny, perfect things.

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