Parisian Walkways: Faubourg Saint-Antoine

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PA R I S I A N WA L K WAY S ❘ F A U B O U R G S A I N T- A N TO I N E

FAUBOURG SAINT-ANTOINE The historic heart of French cabinetmaking, Faubourg Saint-Antoine was also a hotbed of revolution. Jeffrey T Iverson uncovers a living history in its hidden passages

EBÉNISTERIE STRAURE

DISSIDI

ATELIERS MARCOTTE

95 rue du Faubourg Saint Antoine Tel. +33 (0)1 43 47 20 50

16 passage de la Bonne Graine Tel. +33 (0)1 47 00 47 95

15 passage de la Main d’Or Tel. +33 (0)1 47 00 25 72

Tucked away up a charming Faubourg SaintAntoine passageway, Straure is perhaps the neighbourhood’s most quintessential remaining ebénisterie or cabinetmaking workshop. Since 1984, Pierre Strack and Philippe Faure have earned a reputation for quality and craftsmanship, whether for contemporary furniture commissions or restorations of antique masterpieces.

To visit Dissidi’s showroom, with its stunning chests, cabinets, chairs, sofas and tables, is to stroll through French furniture history. For three generations, the Dissidi family has specialised in the restoration and reproduction of antique wood furniture and panelling, be it Louis XV, XVI, Empire or Art Deco in style. Desire a museum-quality copy of Marie Antoinette’s desk? Look no further.

Since 1996, Jean Pouliquen and Maurice Favard have perpetuated a tradition all but forgotten in France – bronze turning.These skilled artisans often work for palace hotels, restoring and creating chandeliers, bouillotte table lamps, candleholders, exquisite door knobs and drawer handles. Fortunately, they still sell to the public too, receiving clients at their 1934 workshop.

IMAGES © J T IVERSON

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very year, more than seven million people flock to the Palace of Versailles to behold the jaw-dropping luxury in which the French monarchy once resided. They stand wide-eyed before the towering frescoed ceilings; they marvel at the gilded wood panelling, the elaborately carved friezes and cornices; and perhaps above all, they gaze in wonder at the absolute extravagance of the furnishings. Take Marie Antoinette’s standing jewel coffer by Martin Carlin, veneered with numerous precious woods – amaranth, sycamore, tulipwood, holly, ebony – and inlaid with 13 masterfully painted Sèvres porcelain plaques. Or the Hameau de Trianon writing desk by Jean-Henri Riesener, with its exquisite ornamentation of delicate flowers and frolicking cherubs in gold, reinstalled at Versailles in 2011 after a 217-year absence – at the cost of €6.75 million. And finally, the Bureau du Roi by Jean-François Oeben, Louis XV’s richly ornamented cylinder bureau, boasting intricate marquetry with a roll top system and locking mechanism of stunning ingenuity. A masterpiece of

This sign in the Passage de l’Homme provides a clue as to the proprietor’s vocation

French cabinetmaking, requiring nine years to build, it’s considered one of the finest pieces of furniture ever made. But for all this artistry that the French monarchy fascinates us with, we forget that they never lifted a finger in the fabrication of such treasures. Their creators, men like Carlin, Riesener and Oeben, were not noblemen, but humble – if brilliant – craftsmen. And it certainly wasn’t in the stultifying and codified world of Versailles, with its rigid hierarchies and unremitting ceremony, that these craftsmen found the inspiration to create such works of art, to innovate so freely, to imagine chairs, commodes, clocks and desks the likes of which had never been seen before. In fact, these craftsmen lived and worked far from the palace, in an area then on the outskirts of Paris. An unconventional neighbourhood of such freedom and bustling vitality, it not only fostered revolutions in French cabinetmaking, it also gave birth to the actual Revolution: Faubourg Saint-Antoine. Today, rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine is a street beginning at Place de la Bastille, and continuing to Place de la Nation. But in the late 1700s, Faubourg

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Parisian Walkways: Faubourg Saint-Antoine by jeffreytiverson - Issuu