Sideboard thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Sideboard

1871 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The designer B.J. Talbert supplied designs for several furniture makers, including the firm of Gillow & Co, and his work included this sideboard, made for the International Exhibition held in London in 1871. Gillows displayed the sideboard with vases and dishes on the shelves and it was bought from the Exhibition for this Museum. From 1881 the sideboard was part of the collection of British furniture displayed at the Bethnal Green Museum in the East End of London for the benefit of the furniture making workshops that wer concentrated in that area. Talbert did not give his design a name but by 1881 it was known as the 'Pet' sideboard, possibly because of the rabbits carved on the centre of the back. Several other versions of the sideboard were made, both by Gillows and by other firms, showing the popularity of Talbert's design.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 10 parts.

  • Key
  • Shelf
  • Shelf
  • Shelf
  • Shelf
  • Shelf
  • Shelf
  • Drawer
  • Sideboard Superstructure
  • Sideboard Base
Materials and techniques
Oak, carved and inlaid, with boxwood and ebony; metal handles and hinges
Brief description
oak with boxwood panels and metal hinges; designed by B.J. Talbert and made by Gillow & Co for the London International Exhibition, 1871.
Physical description
The sideboard has a superstructure with shelves and a base. The superstructure is inscribed MELIUS EST VOCARI AS CLERA CV CHARITATE QUA AD VITVLV SAGINATV CV ODIO along the top. Below this are seven carved panels, three oblong in shape, the central one of two rabbits with on the left one of a swan and on the right one of a pike. These three panels are separated by four square carved panels of roundels on a checkered ground. Below is one long fixed shelf and five shorter adjustable shelves, separated by brackets, against a panelled back. The base has a flat top and under this a central drawer with two loop handles and three carved geometric panels above a frieze of stumpy columns and a arched niche with a shelf. On either side of the drawer is a cupboard with doors carved with geometric and naturalistic designs, fitted with circular handles and strap hinges. Below each cupboard is a frieze of stumpy columns set between each pair of front square section legs. There are also two pairs of back square section legs.
Dimensions
  • Approximately height: 166cm
  • Width: 205cm
  • Depth: 56cm
Styles
Production typeLimited edition
Marks and inscriptions
  • ...Navy Stores, Limited/...cleaning (?) dept./number/
  • Miss M Washingto...
  • Rem 39 HSR 3640 28/3/47 10M in blue crayon
  • MELIUS EST VOCARI AS CLERA CV CHARITATE QUA AD VITVLV SAGINATV CV ODIO
    Translation
    Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith, Proverbs XV xvii.
Gallery label
  • THE 'PET' SIDEBOARD ENGLISH Oak with carved boxwood panels and metal hinges Inscribed 'MELIUS EST VOCARI AS CLERA CV CHARITATE QUA AD VITVLV SAGINATV CV ODIO'. Designed by Bruce J. Talbert (1838-1881) and made by Messrs. Gillow and Co. Exhibited at the London International Exhibition of 1871.(pre July 2001)
  • SIDEBOARD ENGLISH: 1871 Designed by Bruce J. Talbert (1838-1881) Made by Gillow & Co. Oak with boxwood panels and metal hinges This was shown at the London International Exhibition of 1871 as the 'Pet Sideboard' because of the carved panels of birds, animals and fish. Gillow made a number of variations of this design, several of which are known to survive. It was also illustrated in Talbert's seminal book Examples of Ancient & Modern Furniture of 1876. The inscription reads MELIUS EST VOCARI AS CLERA CV CHARITATE QUA AD VITVLV SAGINATV CV ODIO (Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith) Proverbs XV xvii.(1993)
Credit line
Given by H. M. Commissioners for the Exhibition of 1851
Object history
The cabinet, lent by Gillows, was on display in Room IX of the West Gallery of the International Exhibition held in London in 1871. It is illustrated there in Scheme of Annual International Exhibitions of Selected Works of Fine Art (including Music) Industrial Art and Recent Scientific Inventions and Discoveries To be Held under the Direction of Her Majesty's Commissioners for the Exhibition of 1851 London n.d, Photograph VI. Ceramics were displayed on the shelves and a large vase was placed in front of the cabinet which stood on a plinth against a panelled wall with a curved top, also by Gillows.

In his Report on the Present State of Design, Richard Redgrave wrote, ' Of furniture subordinate to its use, there are several objects in the Exhibition that deserve special attention. Look at the simple form of the piece designed by Mr. Talbert, and exhibited by Gillow & Co.; at the first glance we ascertain its use. The broad shelf, at a suitable height for dishes and other table requisites necessary to be ready at hand; the smaller nooks for condiments, the upper shelf for silver plate, the cupboards and drawers beneath, and the recessed shelf for less sightly objects, show it to be a sideboard, and not an ornament. Yet how agreeable are the decorative details-panels of boxwood, where in low relief are incised groups of fish, flesh, and fowl, alternating with geometical forms; the boxwood and the oak, of which the structural part consists, have just enough contrast to be agreeable without the slightest pretentiousness; it is a work of much merit.'
London International Exhibition, 1871 Official Reports of the Various Sections of the Exhibition edited by the Right Hon. Lord Houghton, Fine Arts Division Part IV, p. 40.

Acquired from the 1871 Exhibition by the Commissioners of the 1851 Exhibition, the sideboard was lent by them to the South Kensington Museum from lst January 1872. By 1881 it was on display at Bethnal Green Museum 'for the benefit of East End cabinet makers' The Cabinet Maker, 1st October 1881, p. 67. After display in the V&A's exhibition of Victorian and Edwardian Decorative Arts, 1952-3, the Museum asked the Commissioners to convert the loan into a gift.

Talbert illustrated the sideboard in his book, Examples of Ancient & Modern Furniture, 1876, pl. 31, but did not give it the 'Pet' title. This title may have been given to the sideboard as a result of public display at Bethnal Green Museum. The sideboard was illustrated in The Cabinet Maker on 1st October 1881, pp. 67-8, with a description, part of which reads 'The panels are the most attractive feature, being in the upper part charming renderings in boxwood of such pets as swans, rabbits, &C. It is from the presence of these studies that the sideboard obtained the name of the "pet" or "pets".'
Historical context
Several other examples of Talbert's 'Pet' sideboard were made by Gillows and by other firms. Gillows' Estimate Sketch Books for 1870-1874 (City of Westminster Archives Centre, No. 344/110-111) show that they were making versions of the sideboard, with different combinations of inscriptions, monograms, leather panels and carving, in March 1871.

In the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia there is an example of the sideboard stamped 'Gillow & Co.', accession no. D109-1976. This version has the same inscription as the Museum's sideboard but five carved panels of different design. The central and outer panels are of a sheaf of wheat within a lozenge surrounded by scrolling decoration. In between are two panel, the left hand one with a male head with a cap and the right hand one shows a female head with floral bandeau and hair plaited at the base of the neck.

Another exzample, with the inscription and the same panels as the Museum's sideboard, and stamped 'Jas. Shoolbred & Co.' on the frieze drawer, was sold Sothebys London, 13th June 2001, lot 134.
Subjects depicted
Summary
The designer B.J. Talbert supplied designs for several furniture makers, including the firm of Gillow & Co, and his work included this sideboard, made for the International Exhibition held in London in 1871. Gillows displayed the sideboard with vases and dishes on the shelves and it was bought from the Exhibition for this Museum. From 1881 the sideboard was part of the collection of British furniture displayed at the Bethnal Green Museum in the East End of London for the benefit of the furniture making workshops that wer concentrated in that area. Talbert did not give his design a name but by 1881 it was known as the 'Pet' sideboard, possibly because of the rabbits carved on the centre of the back. Several other versions of the sideboard were made, both by Gillows and by other firms, showing the popularity of Talbert's design.
Bibliographic references
  • Edward Joy, The Country Life Book of English Furniture. London: Country Life Ltd., 1964, illus. fig.111
  • Elizabeth Aslin, Nineteenth Century English Furniture (London, Faber, 1962), plate 61.
Other number
HMC.9 - H.M.C. Loan no.
Collection
Accession number
W.44:1-10-1953

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Record createdJuly 19, 2001
Record URL
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