Robert Blake (cabinetmaker)

Robert Blake (active 1826–39) was the first of the Blake family of London cabinetmakers.[1][2][3][4] Robert Blake is particularly known for his marquetry and for the ormolu-mounted commodes in tortoiseshell and ebony that he made in 1708–09, after a pair that André-Charles Boulle made for Louis XIV's Chamber at the Grand Trianon, on display in the New York Frick Collection.[5] A pair of Blake commodes, completing the two in the Frick Collection was sold at Sotheby's for $658,000 on October 15, 2015.[6]

Pieces in public collections include a piano in the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[7][8] a writing desk in Goodwood House,[9] a centre table in Syon House,[10] a circular table in Alnwick Castle,[11] and an octagonal table in the Leeds City Art Gallery at Temple Newsam House.[12]

His works often imitated the important pieces of 18th-century French furniture that francophile collectors including George, Prince of Wales, later George IV, William Beckford, Francis Seymour-Conway, 3rd Marquess of Hertford and George Watson-Taylor collected at the beginning of the 19th century.

Blake often worked for Edward Holmes Baldock, who was a dealer in china, glass and, later, furniture to the Royal Family.[13][14][15] He is also known to have been associated with the well-known Old Bond Street dealer John Webb.[16]

Relatively little is known of the family. They are listed at 8 Stephen Street, off Tottenham Court Road, between 1826 and 1881. Robert Blake is listed in Robson's 1823 Commercial Directory as a "buhl cutter", at 8 Stephen Street, Tottenham Court Road, and subsequently in the 1826 Post Office Directory, as a "cabinet inlayer and buhl manufacturer". Robert Blake had four sons, George, Charles, James and Henry, who continued the firm of Robert Blake & Co. In 1840, it took the name of R. Blake & Sons, and in 1841 Blake; Geo & Brothers; and later George Blake & Co., cabinetmaker of 130 Mount Street, London, and also still in Stephen Street in 1844; George Blake in 1846-50 at 53 Mount Street; and in 1851 to around 1853 George Blake at 53 Mortimer Street. The premises on Stephen Street remained in use by various family members, listed as 'Blake, J. & H', and by 1853 'Blake, Chas. & H.,' until 1880.

References

  1. C. Gilbert, The Pictorial Dictionary of Marked London Furniture 1700-1840, Leeds, 1996
  2. F. Collard, Regency Furniture, London, 2007
  3. Christopher Payne, Nineteenth Century European Furniture, Antique Collectors’ Club, 1981
  4. The Furniture History Society Newsletter, Martin Levy, May 2005
  5. Théodore Dell, Furniture in The Frick Collection, New York, 1992
  6. http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2015/19th-century-furniture-decorative-arts-n09410/lot.30.html
  7. Barbara Burn, Masterpieces of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1993
  8. Kisluk-Grosheide D.O., Koeppe W. and Rieder W., European Furniture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2006
  9. Illustrated in M. Levy, ‘E.H, Baldock and the Blake Family’, Furniture History Society Newsletter, May 2005
  10. Frederick Litchfield, Illustrated History of Furniture, 1893
  11. Richard Bridgens, Design from Furniture and Candelabra, 1838
  12. C. Gilbert, Furniture at Temple Newsam House and Lotherton Hall, vol. II, London, 1978
  13. M. Levy, 'E.H, Baldock and the Blake Family', Furniture History Society Newsletter, May 2005
  14. G. de Bellaigue, 'Edward Holmes Baldock: Part II', Connoisseur, August 1975
  15. M. P. Levy, 'E. H. Baldock and the Blake Family: Further Evidence,' The Furniture History Society Newsletter, May 2005, no. 158
  16. Mark Westgarth, A Biographical Dictionary of Nineteenth Century Antique and Curiosity Dealers, Regional Furniture Society, Glasgow, 2009
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