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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: THE MACQUOID-EDWARDS MIRROR, English, circa 1720
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: THE MACQUOID-EDWARDS MIRROR, English, circa 1720
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: THE MACQUOID-EDWARDS MIRROR, English, circa 1720

The mirror featured in Godfrey Giles & Co., Antique Furniture, circa 1900

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: THE MACQUOID-EDWARDS MIRROR, English, circa 1720

Book cover

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: THE MACQUOID-EDWARDS MIRROR, English, circa 1720

Ralph Edwards and his wife in their London home, circa 1975. A corner of the mirror is visible at top left

THE MACQUOID-EDWARDS MIRROR, English, circa 1720

Height: 49¾ in; 126.5 cm
Width: 30¼ in; 77 cm
Depth: 8 in; 20.5 cm
4429051
£50,000 - £100,000
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View on a Wall
Note: The mirror retains virtually all the original gilding and the original bevelled mirror plate. The brass candle arms and sockets are replacements. Percy Macquoid and Ralph Edwards were two...
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Note: The mirror retains virtually all the original gilding and the original bevelled mirror plate. The brass candle arms and sockets are replacements.

Percy Macquoid and Ralph Edwards were two of the most influential furniture historians of the last century. Macquoid’s seminal work, A History of English Furniture, published between 1904 and 1908, set a new standard for furniture research. Twenty years later, Macquoid and Edwards (Macquoid’s junior by some 42 years) together compiled the ground-breaking Dictionary of English Furniture.

Originally this mirror belonged to Percy Macquoid. Following his death in 1925, two years before publication of volume III of the Dictionary, his widow sold some pieces from the collection, including this mirror. Ralph Edwards purchased it and added the previously lost candle arms and sockets. It remained on display at the Edwards home in London as a token of the two men’s working partnership and friendship.

A rare pamphlet, circa 1900, by Godfrey Giles in the author’s archive includes an early illustration of the mirror without candle arms. The central London dealership of Godfrey Giles has long gone, and on its former site at the south end of Cavendish Square now stands the John Lewis department store.

The illustration of the mirror in the first edition of the Dictionary shows the mirror, again without candle arms, and in the Macquoid collection, while the revised edition of 1954 features the mirror with replaced candle arms and belonging to Ralph Edwards.

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Provenance

Godfrey Giles & Co., London, England;
Private collection of Percy Macquoid, London, England;
Ralph Edwards, Suffolk House, London, England.

Literature

Christie’s, ‘Old English Furniture - Silver Plate and Tapestry, The Property of Mrs. Percy Macquoid’, sale catalogue, London, 30 June 1925, lot 107.
Nicholas Goodison, ‘Obituary, Ralph Edwards’, Burlington magazine, May 1978, vol. 120, no. 902, ‘Special Issue Devoted to the Victoria and Albert Museum’, pp. 316 & 319.

Illustrated:
Godfrey Giles & Co., Antique Furniture, pamphlet, circa 1900, p. 5.
Percy Macquoid and Ralph Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture, 1st edition, vol. II, 1924, p. 325, fig. 45.
Percy Macquoid and Ralph Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture, revised edition, 1954, vol. III, p. 332, fig. 51.

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Contact

advice@ronaldphillips.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7493 2341

Location

26 Bruton Street,
London, W1J 6QL

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