Eight phone bidders, three of whom were Portuguese, competed for a 15in (39cm) wide marquetry table cabinet at Cheffins in Cambridge on September 13.
Probably made in either Gujarat or Sind for the export market c.1600, this cabinet belongs to a small but well-documented group of cabinets combining Mughal craftsmanship with Europeanising elements. Portuguese figures are represented – recognisable by their bouffant trousers, waisted shirts and hats with an upturned brim.
Although in need of much repair, it came for sale from a Northamptonshire vendor with a modest £300-500 estimate.
The successful Portuguese bid of £26,000 (plus 22.5% buyer’s premium) was the same as that achieved by a cabinet with similar figural decoration sold at Sotheby’s (25% buyer’s premium) as part of the estate of artist Howard Hodgkin in October 2017. Another took £32,000 at Sotheby’s in 2016.
![img_6-2.jpg](https://gazette-eu-west2.azureedge.net/media/33710/img_6-2.jpg?width=700&height=500&mode=max&updated=09%2f24%2f2018+12%3a21%3a11)
The European figure decoration to a £16,000 cabinet sold at Cheffins.
The Oak Sale held by Bonhams on September 18 included another early example of Indo-Portuguese furniture, a pair of ornately carved giltwood low chairs of a type associated with the Bay of Bengal in the late 16th century.
Assuming a sub-continental form, they are carved with motifs borrowed for the European Renaissance.
Two similar chairs at Loseley House, Surrey, were reputedly part of a set used by Queen Elizabeth I’s ladies-in-waiting while a related chair with lacquer decoration sold at Bonhams Chester for a surprise £13,500 in 2012. The present pair sold within expectations at £15,000 (plus 25% buyer’s premium).
Export art is also featured in ATG’s Asian Art supplement.