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b. c. 1710
d. 1778
English cabinetmaker of unexcelled craftsmanship, whose work was once
overshadowed by that of Thomas Chippendale but who is now regarded as
being among England's greatest furniture makers. He was in partnership
(c. 1750-65) with William Vile, their firm becoming one of the most important
among London's cabinetmakers. While Vile created works in an Anglicized
Rococo style, Cobb's furniture of the 1770s was executed in an elegant
Neoclassical style. Vile retired in 1765, and Cobb continued alone until
his death. Up to 1765 the firm supplied furniture to King George III of
England, but after Vile's retirement Cobb apparently ceased work for royalty.
The firm's records are rare, but a ledger from Edgcote House, Northamptonshire,
notes payment to them of more than £1,000 in 1758, and Cobb supplied,
in 1770, furniture to the English connoisseur and man of letters Horace
Walpole. Work certified as Cobb's is Neoclassical after the style of the
great English designer Robert Adam. A bill dated 1772 shows that he supplied
the marquetried commode with gilt bronze mounts and pair of vase stands
at Corsham Court, Wiltshire; a similar commode in the Victoria and Albert
Museum, London, may also be his. A colourful and proud individual, he
was admired by King George. Among the masterpieces he and Vile created
for the crown are the superb mahogany jewel cabinet (1761) inlaid with
ivory for Queen Charlotte and a secretaire (1761), now at Buckingham Palace,
London. Affluent as well as artistically successful, Cobb owned houses
in St. Martin's Lane (then London's cabinetmaking centre) and in fashionable
Highgate and Islington. His last will (1776) revealed a personal fortune
in his company's stock of £22,000.
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