Rob Schipper
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
  • Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet
Toogkast, Arched Doors Cabinet

4500 €


An exceptionally beautifully executed Toogkast. The style is Renaissance, infuenced by the Italian Renaissance. This is one of the better ones and was made in the first half of the 17th century. Beautiful quarter-sawn panels in both doors. Beautiful blond oak, alternated in beautiful contrast with pieces of black ebony. High-quality furniture work down to the smallest detail.   Such a cabinet is made as a cultural statement and is much more than a utilitarian object. The Dutch were proud of their country because through good governance, greater spiritual, religious and social freedom where not only a small elite could remain rich as in the surrounding countries but especially the entrepreneurs from high to low. Where a middle class flourishes, the whole country ultimately flourishes. In the doors you see triumphal arches as they existed in classical architecture. Now these triumphal arches did not honor a monarch but were intended for these merchants to express their self-confidence.   Striking are the pilasters next to the doors. Usually these are real pilasters, so placed flat against the wall. Here the pilasters go around the corner so that they have much more volume and are much more powerful. In addition, the fluting is extra elaborately worked, filled in at the bottom, nicely interrupted with a profile and ebony, and hollow at the top.   The cabinet is also richly decorated inside. Two shelves, the top one has a wide drawer and a safe on the left. The fronts of the shelves are inlaid with small pieces of ebony.   The lock in the right door is original, no working key.  

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Rob Schipper
Address:
Den Dubbelen 3 ,
5466 RL Veghel
Region: Noord-Brabant
Country: The-Netherlands
Tel.: +31 (0)6 20 86 63 32
E-mail: info@robschipper.com
Website: www.robschipper.com
German 18th century wine jug

German 18th century wine jug

North German wine jug with original pewter lid.

Nice, smoothly painted image of a fisherman with manganese purple - indicates the end of the 18th century.

Nice large size. 28 cm. High.

The pewter is marked with a master's mark.

French cupboard

French cupboard

Inviting and elegant French cabinet to store china.

The upper part is separate from the base cabinet.

Beautiful oak with a lovely patina.

Beautifully finished country piece, hollow corners in the base cabinet and elegant carvings in the three panels of the doors.

The carvings are clearly in Louis XV line-height: 100%; margin-bottom: 0cm">Solidly made of heavy oak.

A small drawer in the middle of the base cabinet for cutlery.

This type of cabinet is not often found.

It undoubtedly once stood in a spacious French kitchen.

 

Utrecht Arched Cabinet

Utrecht Arched Cabinet

Beautiful Utrecht ‘Toogkast’, arched cabinet from the 17th century.

Stunning quarter-sawn oak panels with that characteristic pattern that occurs when the wood is sawn in this way. Right to the middle.

Then the food vanes become visable.

Also called the mirrors in the wood.

 

Beautiful arches in the doors and also in the sides.

What stands out are the pilasters next to the doors with those deep grooved cannelures.

Because they go around the corner against the sides, they no longer look like flat pilasters but

pillars. Beautiful detail.

 

The carving is very professionally and artistic done.

In the hood we see 'grunts' , drop-shaped ornaments that are characteristic of the Renaissance.

 

Original lock and working key.

Beautiful quarter-sawn panels on the shelves inside.

Early Dutch four doors cabinet

Early Dutch four doors cabinet

Beautiful early and interesting four-door cabinet, made from an earlier tradition than the Renaissance. 
The Dutch four-door cabinets from the Dutch Renaissance of the 17th century often have the same layout; two small doors above and two larger ones below. 

This piece of furniture, however, has nothing of the Renaissance, although it was made at the same time. 
In the countryside far from the city, old traditions continued to exist longer. 
And this piece of furniture was undoubtedly made in the countryside. 

Characteristic carving adorns the styles with a scale-like pattern. 
Also called 'counted money' because it looks like coins falling over each other. 
Very professionally and regularly done. 

Beautiful blond oak. 
Early 'short' hinges, in the detailed photo you can also see the hinges on the inside of the doors that come out of the wood and are then flattened in sight. 
This is also an old and typical Dutch method from the 16th and 17th centuries. 

The back is expertly made of rules and panels. 

Locks and keys are complete and original.

early Dutch oak chest

early Dutch oak chest

Beautiful and early chest. Typically Dutch. This chest was 'discovered' 20 years ago in a completely authentic and unrestored state. 
The photos of the restoration process are included and are in the document tray on the inside. 
The chest stands on slippers, sled legs, the front of both slippers have been restored. See photo. Furthermore, this piece of furniture has been cleaned and waxed. 
Completely original. 
The lock is in it but the key is gone.

Early Dutch Chest with great carving

Early Dutch Chest with great carving

early Dutch chest.

This chest has panels that are beautifully carved in a Renaissance pattern.

The line-height: 100%; margin-bottom: 0cm">Deep dark panine on the oak.

Inside two document trays and a shelf.

This chest is made of heavy thick and very wide parts.

The back is almost in one piece.

monumental and rare Stollentruhe

monumental and rare Stollentruhe

Monumental Stollentruhe. with extensive wrought iron.

An iconic piece of furniture.

These were pieces of furniture expressed the prestige of the landed gentry.

The wide side posts are called stollen.

Hence the name.

In the front a spectacular Gothic lock plate.

Completely original.

 

Stylish Dutch four-door Kussenkast

Stylish Dutch four-door Kussenkast

Stylish Dutch four-door Kussenkast (cushion-cabinet) from the mid-17th century.

 

A great example of early 17th Dutch Classism. 1625-1640.

A very architecturally designed piece of furniture.

The whole is immediately reminiscent of a 17th-century Dutch canal house.

Due to the influence of Calvinism, the piece of furniture has a calm and balanced appearance.

Yet everything is very richly finished with refined profiles.

This piece of furniture has a great quality.

See detailed photos.

 

The entire cabinet, every part, even the back, is made of quarter-sawn oak.

In the drawing of the grain it is clearly visible that the oak is quarter-sawn.

This gives a very beautiful effect.

The sawing direction shows the food canals.

Technically speaking, this is of top quality.

An extra locker has been created behind the door at the top left - see photos.

the cabinet is made in two parts.

 

In the middle a wide drawer that clearly marks the boundary between the upper and lower cabinets.

With three small lion heads. See photo.

Beautiful deep cushions of which the breasts are veneered with rosewood.

 

 

Kelim Qashqai nomads

Kelim Qashqai nomads

This kelim is made by the woman of the Qashqai nomads. 

Authentc. 

For their omw purpose, wool of their ownd sheep and dyed with natural dye. 

In very good condition, about 80 years old. 

Dutch 17th century Toogkast.

Dutch 17th century Toogkast.

Nice little arched cabinet – ‘Toogkast’- with a beautiful patina.

Early type, because of the continuous side posts to the ground.

First half of the 17th century.

Refined with beautiful carving and here and there inlaid with pieces of Padoek wood.

Fine fluting in the posts.

Original lock.

Inside two shelves.

the posts. Original lock.

Inside two shelves.

The cabinet is so low, 136 cm. that you look at the top.

The top also has a very nice patina and is intact.

Rare size.

 

trumeau with marble top

trumeau with marble top

Elegant trumeau from the style period at the time of Napoleon - 1810 - 1830.
The Empire.
Beautiful Napoleon - Rouge marble. 
The gold ornaments are cast bronze and then 'fire gilded' with mercury and 14 carat gold.
Under the marble top a drawer.
And under that a mirror.
These trumeaus often have a mirror - this gives a nice playful and lively effect, almost an extra spatial dimension. 

A stylish piece of furniture. 

80 x 85x 40 cm.

SOLD
eatly Spanish cabinet

SOLD

eatly Spanish cabinet

Beautiful walnut cabinet from Spain.

The Moorish influence is clearly present in this piece of furniture, as in much early Spanish furniture.

Beautiful patina in the wood.

Inside you will also see a very beautiful, dark, shiny patina.

This cabinet has a completely medieval character in terms of line-height: 100%; orphans: 2; widows: 2; margin-bottom: 0cm">In the Spanish countryside and certainly in the Pyrenees, this medieval/Moorish character has continued to live for centuries, despite the fashion line-height: 100%; orphans: 2; widows: 2; margin-bottom: 0cm">That's an unyielding Spanish trait.

A high Wabi-Sabi content.

For lovers of Brutalism, this is a feast of recognition.

The construction is also interesting: the 3-centimeter thick planks form a structural component connected by wrought iron nails that remain visible with large, wide heads.

A readable construction.

Form and construction form a whole.

That is inspiration for architects.