Table Cabinet (Contador)
late 17th or early 18th century
1 of 2
Object Label
Colonial Spanish American rooms often contained two or three stacked cabinets and writing desks like the ones seen here. Bufetes, or side tables, sometimes draped with velvet covers with gold fringes and tassels, would serve as bases for these towers of luxury. A religious image or a precious object such as an ivory sculpture would crown the furniture.
The vertical arrangement of elite objects in Spanish and Spanish American reception rooms is documented in both Baroque prints and colonial American inventories. The 1710 Lima inventory of the estate of the wealthy Spanish viceroy of Peru, the marquis de Castelldosrius, lists “two desks covered with tortoise shell, ivory, and mother-of-pearl with two other similar, but smaller, desks and their two side tables with two borders of the same.”
The vertical arrangement of elite objects in Spanish and Spanish American reception rooms is documented in both Baroque prints and colonial American inventories. The 1710 Lima inventory of the estate of the wealthy Spanish viceroy of Peru, the marquis de Castelldosrius, lists “two desks covered with tortoise shell, ivory, and mother-of-pearl with two other similar, but smaller, desks and their two side tables with two borders of the same.”
Caption
Table Cabinet (Contador), late 17th or early 18th century. Wood, bone, ivory, and tortoiseshell, 12 5/16 x 14 9/16 x 10 1/4 in. (31.3 x 37 x 26 cm) Legs: 1 1/8 in. (2.9 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Ernestina Fleischman, 53.11.8.
Gallery
Not on view
Collection
Gallery
Not on view
Collection
Title
Table Cabinet (Contador)
Date
late 17th or early 18th century
Medium
Wood, bone, ivory, and tortoiseshell
Classification
Dimensions
12 5/16 x 14 9/16 x 10 1/4 in. (31.3 x 37 x 26 cm) Legs: 1 1/8 in. (2.9 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Ernestina Fleischman
Accession Number
53.11.8
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