This tripod table is attributed to the German cabinet-maker, Frederick Hintz (d. 1772) who worked at the sign of 'The Porcupine' in Newport Street, Leicester Fields, London. The table is one of a small though distinct group of similarly shaped and inlaid tables, which have between 8 and 12 'lobes' and which are particularly associated with a community of émigré craftsmen resident in London. A number of these tables, including the present, featured in the 1993 exhibition, John Channon and brass-inlaid furniture 1730-1760 at the Victoria & Albert Museum, alongside other related pieces. While sharing certain common features, this table is notable for the use of exotic mother of pearl, a relatively uncommon material at the time. As noted in Christopher Gilbert's comprehensive study of brass-inlaid furniture, this table is 'one of the few tables of this type which has passed by family descent to the present owner.'
FREDERICK HINTZ
Hintz was born in 1711 in Settin, a town in former East Germany. By 1737 he was living in London and as a member of the Moravian Church, a protestant religious movement that grew in Germany and England during the mid-18th century comprising communities of craftsmen, he worked under the auspices of the church. He is known as a maker of stringed musical instruments and, records show that in 1748 he made a harpsichord for the Moravian Chapel in Fetter Lane. He was also, as recorded in a 1738 advertisement discovered by the furniture historian, R.W.Symonds, a maker of 'Desks and Book-Cases of mahogany, Tea-Tables, Tea-Chests, and Tea-Boards etc. all curiously made and inlaid with fine figures of brass and mother of pearl'. At the same time other German cabinet-makers working in London included Abraham Roentgen, with whom Hintz appears to have had a close professional relationship (they travelled to Germany together in June 1738), and the lesser-known maker, Gern.
Although labelled musical instruments by Hintz exist, until 2004 no documented pieces of furniture by him were recorded and attributions were based on stylistic analysis. However, research using the Moravian Church archives has revealed a bill to Charles Henry de Larisch for work completed by a John Frederick Hintz, dated 23 August 1753, detailing '2 mah. Card Tables, 6 mah. Chairs, 2 great Arm Chairs, 2 Great Looking Glasses' (Lanie E. Graf, 'Moravians in London: A case study in furniture-making, c.1735-1765, Furniture History, 2004, p. 15). Other tables that can be attributed to Hintz are in the Victoria & Albert Museum, museum no. W.3-1965, and another formerly in the collection of the Duchess of Roxburghe, illustrated in Ralph Edwards, Dictionary of English Furniture, vol. III, p. 207, fig. 15.
A closely related table also from a Symonds collection (which also included the celebrated Ashburnham lacquer commodes) was sold anonymously Christie's, London, 16 November 1995, lot 61 (£67,500 including premium), and another was sold Christie's, London, 3 November 2011, lot 67 (£79,250 including premium). Another was sold Phillips, London, 10 February 1998, lot 78 (£85,000 hammer), and another with an idiosyncratic base of anthropomorphic legs with brass-inlaid shoe feet sold Sotheby's, New York, 26 May 2000, lot 196 ($280,750 including premium). A further tripod table attributed to Hintz and formerly in the collection of Sir Alfred Chester Beatty (d. 1968) was sold Christie's, London, 22 September 2022, lot 33 (£100,800 including premium).
THE LECHMERE FAMILY
The Lechmeres are first recorded in the 11th century, settling in Hanley Castle Worcestershire, where they still reside today. Edmund Lechmere (1710-1805) who likely acquired this table, was a Member of Parliament from 1734-1747, during which time he would have been often in the capital where tea tables like the present lot were at the forefront of taste and fashion.
The baronetcy was created in 1818 for Anthony Lechmere. Prominent members of the family include the politician Nicholas Lechmere, 1st Baron Lechmere and Sir Edmund Lechmere, 3rd Baronet, pioneer of the Red Cross.