Bureau Bookcase thumbnail 1
Bureau Bookcase thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Not currently on display at the V&A
On display at Sewerby Hall and Gardens, Bridlington

This object consists of 2 parts, some of which may be located elsewhere.

Bureau Bookcase

1790-1810 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The cylinder-top desk was invented in France around 1760 and copied in Britain soon afterwards. In the first examples the roll top consisted of battens fixed next to each other on a canvas backing, allowing the panel to slide away flat when the top was opened. The rigid roll-top form seen in this piece was a later development, which again appears to have first appeared in France. It was adopted in Britain in the 1780s.

This form, combining a desk with a glazed superstructure containing shelves, was known as a 'bureau bookcase'. Pieces of this type were generally used in bedrooms, and some examples had a cupboard underneath the desk for storing clothes.

This object is on loan to Sewerby Hall, East Yorkshire


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Bureau Bookcase
  • Keys
Materials and techniques
Pine and mahogany veneered in satinwood with rosewood panels, tulipwood cross-banding, stringing of light and dark woods (possibly box or holly and ebonized pear); ebony (possibly); brass
Brief description
A bureau bookcase, veneered in satinwood inlaid with rosewood, tulipwood and other woods, the lower section in the form of a roll-top desk, supporting a two-doored bookcase, each door with nine panes of glass, the narrow, square-sectioned glazing bars forming an arch with concave sides at the top level.
Physical description
A bureau bookcase, veneered in satinwood inlaid with rosewood, the lower section in the form of a roll-top desk, supporting a two-doored bookcase, each door with nine panes of glass, the narrow, square-sectioned glazing bars forming an arch with concave sides at the top level. The bureau bookcase is made of pine and mahogany veneered in satinwood with rosewood panels, tulipwood cross-banding, stringing of light and dark woods (box or holly and ebonized pear?), and ebony(?) mouldings and interior handles; brass exterior handles
Dimensions
  • Height: 211cm
  • Of lower section height: 104.7cm
  • Of upper section height: 106.6cm
  • At top width: 97.7cm
  • Of lower section, at top width: 91.5cm
  • Including handles of frieze drawer depth: 57.5cm
  • Lower section depth: 57cm
  • At top depth: 36.9cm
  • Upper section below cornice depth: 33.5cm
Height measured with the two elements separated: upper section 106.6 cm; lower section at the sligghtly recessed top surface 104.4. cm
Style
Object history
Registered File 78/43
Summary
The cylinder-top desk was invented in France around 1760 and copied in Britain soon afterwards. In the first examples the roll top consisted of battens fixed next to each other on a canvas backing, allowing the panel to slide away flat when the top was opened. The rigid roll-top form seen in this piece was a later development, which again appears to have first appeared in France. It was adopted in Britain in the 1780s.

This form, combining a desk with a glazed superstructure containing shelves, was known as a 'bureau bookcase'. Pieces of this type were generally used in bedrooms, and some examples had a cupboard underneath the desk for storing clothes.

This object is on loan to Sewerby Hall, East Yorkshire
Bibliographic reference
Tomlin, Maurice, Catalogue of Adam Period Furniture (London: HMSO for the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1972), cat. no. U/14, p. 181
Collection
Accession number
W.84-1910

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Record createdSeptember 5, 2006
Record URL
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