19th Century Furniture

Page 1

furniture 1850-1900 1




Furniture ď •



A Fine Pair of Lacquered Etagere Tables

Ref: 2007/39

France Circa 1860 Height: 106 cm (41 3/4 in.); Width: 43 cm (17 in.); Depth: 26 cm (10 1/4 in.)

A very fine pair of Japanese style servant tables executed in dark red lacquer. Each made up of three rectangular trays joined by four moulded posts. Each tray tastefully ornated with a different Japanese style decor: A mountain-and-lake landscape, an eagle, cranes and further birds. The colours used for that very refined decor were on purpose limited to gold, silver and red.

Furniture

Provenance: Formely property of the Royal family of Hanover at Marienburg Castle. The romantic vision of a medieval castle was a birthday present of King George V of Hanover (1819-1878) to his wife Queen Marie (1818-1907). Marienburg Castle was built as a summer residence for the Queen, who had long wished for a place to escape to from the official life of the court. The building was designed in the neo-Gothic style that was highly popular at the time. The architect commissioned with building the castle was Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818-1902), one of Hanover’s most influential architects of the time. In 1864 he was succeeded by his former pupil Edwin Oppler (1831-1880), who fitted out the interior and made some changes to the design. In 1866, while the castle was still under construction, war broke out between Prussia and Hanover. After Hanover was annexed by Prussia, King George V left the country, and went into exile in Austria, Queen Marie joined her husband one year later. Because of the war, Marienburg Castle has never been finished and was left uninhabited. Marienburg Castle is still private property of the Royal House of Hanover.


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P. Sormani

Ref: 2106/14

Cabinet-maker (1817-1877) attributed to

A Very Fine Pair of Louis XVI Style Cabinets France Circa 1880 Height: 80 cm (31 1/2 in); Width: 57 cm (22 1/2 in.); Depth: 34 cm (13 1/3 in.)

Elegant pair of Louis XVI style serpentine shaped cabinets, opening with two sliding curtain doors made in "chevron" motif Tulipwood veneer. The sides veneered with "diamond" motif are framed with Kingwood. Each Surmounted by a Greek motif pierced gilt-bronze band and topped with "Fleur de Pêcher" marble. Raised on four top feet.

Furniture

Bibliography Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, D. Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l’amateur, 1984, p.583.

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G. Durand

Ref: 1307/87

Cabinet-maker (1839-1920)

A Fine Pair of Louis XV Style Encoignures Stamped G. Durand France Circa 1880 Height: 86 cm (33 3/4 in.); Front width: 47 cm (18 1/2 in.); Depth: 35 cm (13 3/4 in.)

Furniture

Inlaid corner cabinets with an exceptional "End-cut" floral marquetry within an amaranth border on a satinwood ground. Each serpentine-fronted encoignure is fitted with a door, and raised on cabriole legs. Richly decorated with gilt-bronzes comprising frame, scrolled shoes, corner mounts. Topped with "Brèche d'Alep" marble.

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P. Sormani

Cabinet-maker

Ref: 0702/58

(1817-1877) attributed to

Bibus France Circa 1880 Height: 110 cm (43 1/3 in.); Width: 107 cm (42 in.); Depth: 26 cm (10 1/4 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XV style two-shelves "Bibus" cabinet, made in king- and rosewood veneer. Topped with "Brèche" marble. Mounted with fine gilt-bronze ornaments. Standing on four cabriole feet.

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P. Sormani

Cabinet-maker (1817-1877)

Ref: 0702/59

attributed to

Meuble d'Appui France Circa 1880 Height: 118 cm (46 1/2 in.); Width: 136 cm (53 1/2 in.); Depth: 36 cm (14 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XVI style "Meuble d’appui" made in satinwood veneer, opening with four doors and a drawer surmounted by a pigeonhole. Topped with "Brèche" marble. Mounted with very fine gilt-bronze ornaments. Standing on four cabriole feet.

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P. Sormani

Ref: 0702/112

Cabinet-maker (1817-1877)

Rare Pair Of Bookcase-Cabinets Stamped Sormani à Paris and signed on the lockplates P. Sormani, 10 rue Charlot, Paris France Circa 1870 Height: 114 cm (44 3/4 in.); Width: 124 cm (48 3/4 in.); Depth: 40 cm (15 3/4 in.)

Rare pair of Louis XV style side bookcase-cabinets of exceptional quality made in kingwood and tulipwood veneer, topped with moulded and serpentine shaped "Brèche d’Alep" marbles. Each cabinet is made up of a centering open shelf above two sliding curtain doors ornated with "chevron" motif tulipwood veneer. Flanked on each side by a fine "end-cut" marquetry decorated frieze drawer above a wired mesh door opening onto three shelves. Mounted with fine chiselled bronze ornaments kept in their original gilding. Raised on four cabriole feet.

Furniture

Bibliography Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, D. Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l'amateur, 1984, p.583.

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A. Metgé Cabinet-maker (1883-1970)

Rare "Meuble d’Appui"



A. Metgé

Ref: 0210/12

Cabinet-maker (1883-1970)

Rare "Meuble d’Appui" Signed Metgé France Circa 1910 Height : 102 cm (40 in.) ; Width : 130 cm (51 in.) ; Depth : 50 cm (19 2/3 in.)

A beautiful cabinet made in waxed natural oakwood, whose structure and the door framing are entirely carved with tree and vine branche shaped motifs. The door façades are finely ornated with mild coloured local wood marquetry, presenting a pastoral landscape and a scene with a deer in the woods. Opening with two doors, onto two drawers. Topped with “Escalette” marble.

Furniture

Bibliography Archives manuscrites et photographiques de la famille Metgé. Revue du Tarn

Related Work : An inlaid table top designed and executed by Auguste Metgé.

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H.-A. Fourdinois Cabinet-maker (1830-1907) attributed to

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Exceptional Renaissance Style Carved Cabinet



H.-A. Fourdinois

Ref : 2007/37

Cabinet-maker (1830-1907) attributed to

Exceptional Renaissance Style Carved Cabinet France 1893 Height: 240 cm (94 1/2 in.); Width: 124 cm (48 3/4 in.); Depth: 56 cm (22 in.)

Furniture

A walnut cupboard, elaborately carved throughout, dated "1893" on the crest. The upper section with a pair of cherubs at the center of a balustrade ornamented with two-handled urns, two architectonic doors below, carved with lady and gentleman in niches surrounded by extensive carving with classical motifs. The lower section with two drawers above a standing female caryatid support at each front corner. The all reposing on four gadronned round feet.

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G. Grohé Cabinet-maker (1808-1885)

Collector’s Cabinet



G. Grohé

Ref: 1307/100

Cabinet-maker (1808-1885)

Collector’s Cabinet France Circa 1860 Height: 116 cm (45 2/3 in.); Length: 182 cm (71 2/3 in.); Depth: 58 cm (22 3/4 in.)

Ebonized and brass inlaid with loupe d’orme and kingwood parquetry. Three frieze drawers and six lateral drawers. Central panel door with flower marquetry and ivory inlaid on ebonized ground. White marble top. Bibliography

Furniture

Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Denise Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l’Amateur, 1984, p. 237.

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H. Dasson

Ref: 0702/63

Cabinet-maker (1825-1896)

Magnificent "Cabinet d’Apparat" Signed Henry Dasson and dated 1878 France Height: 111 cm (43 3/4 in.); Width: 85 cm (33 1/2 in.); Depth: 41 cm (16 in.)

Furniture

Opening with a central door and four drawers on each side. Ebony veneer inlaid with a tin and brass "Boulle" marquetry on red tortoise-shell, inspired by Jean Bérain’s ornamentation studies. Adorned with ormolu mounts, such as masks, medallion (portrait of King Louis XIV), lion claws and acanthuses. Standing on four swirl giltbronze feet. Topped with "Campan grand mélange" marble.

Executed after the famous model made in the beginning of the 18th century by AndréCharles Boulle (1642-1732) and now exhibited at the Louvre Museum (Inv. OA 5453). 36





C. Potheau

Ref: 1608/10

Cabinet-maker (Late 19th century)

A Regence Style Display-Cabinet Signed Constantin Potheau, ébéniste, Paris France Circa 1895 Height: 275 cm (9 feet); Width: 160 cm (63 in.); Upper part depth: 48 cm (18 3/4 in.) / inside: 42 cm (16 1/2 in.) Lower part depth: 60 cm (23 2/3 in.)

Furniture

A very fine Régence style two-part display-cabinet standing on a plinth, surmounted by an arched pediment. Executed in carved walnut, richly decorated with motifs, such as lambrequins, acanthuses, lattice and rosaces. Opening with four double opening system doors, fitted inside with shelves and drawers. This specific system makes easier and wider the opening; the doors can be folded along the sides. Bibliography Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l’amateur, 1989, p° 530. Exposition Universelle Internationale de 1889, Rapport du Jury international, Groupe III, Classe 17, Mobilier, p° 11.

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Susse Frères

Bronze-casters & Art objects Editors (2nd part of the 19th century) atributed to

ď •

Exceptional Marquetry Cabinet



Susse Frères

Ref: 1307/100b

Bronze-casters & Art objects Editors (2nd part of the 19th century) atributed to

Exceptional Marquetry Cabinet France Circa 1880 Height: 112 cm (44 in.); Length: 101 cm (39 3/4 in.); Depth: 46 cm (18 in.)

Furniture

Ebonized wood side-cabinet, opening with a central cupboard door underlined with gilt-bronze rods, flanked by two small onyx columns encircled with bronze. With a very fine and elaborate "Boulle" ornamentation inlaid with wood, copper, brass and lapis lazuli and ornated with arabesque, acanthus and palmet motifs. An ormolu molded base resting on six top feet. Topped with Brèche marble.

Related work : A « Meuble à hauteur d’appui » of similar design and ornamentation. This model however presenting single wooden posts on each side. Signed Susse Frères on the lock (Private collection, Paris).

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A Chinese Style Two-Part Cabinet

Ref: 1608/11

France Circa 1880 Height: 212 cm (83 1/2 in.); Width: 129 cm (50 3/4 in.); Depth: 55 cm (21 2/3 in.)

Furniture

A two-part cupboard made in the Chinese style. Each part opening with two doors, decorated with a lacquer background on the upper part and with a wooden background on the lower part. Richly ornated with inlaid wooden, mother of pearl and ivory motifs, such as birds on branches and two phoenix within a landscape. Further carved wood elephant heads and gilt-metal dragoons adorn the sides of the cabinet. Topped with a pediment decorated with pierced wooden entrelacs and a centering dragoon. The great influence of the Far-East, through China and Japan, in the second half of the 19th century French art could be found first in painting and soon after in decorative arts and furniture as well. Following the FrancoEnglish military campaign led in 1860 against the Imperial army in China, the French troops of Napoleon the IIIrd brought back from the Summer Palace, a part of the Chinese Imperial court treasure, which will make up the famous Chinese Museum of Empress EugÊnie at the Fontainebleau Palace. The French artists won't be long to take inspiration from those exotic and somptuous objects for their creations, as they used to do in the 18th century, when the best French cabinet-makers adapted the Chinese lacquers on the luxurious royal chests. With Manet and Impressionists generation, the passion for Japanese art, more than a simple taste for an exotic style, was still in fashion until the turn of the 19th century. It provoked not only a craze among the French aristocratic families as well as the wealthy Paris high society, wishing renew their mansion inner decoration, but turned also to a real revolutionary movement among the "avant-garde" artists. Those artists, whoever they were, painters, cabinet-makers or designers of ceramic, bronze and crystal objects, adapted then those techniques and naturalistic motifs unknown until this time. Another famous company to be mentioned, is "L'Escalier de Cristal", producing art objects and furniture, all of high standard quality and innovating much with their Japanese decor. Highly remarked during the Universal Exhibitions, "L'Escalier de Cristal" collaborated with the greatest artists, such GallÊ and Rousseau for glass and ceramic wares, and the cabinet-makers Lièvre and Viardot, whom made furniture including sometimes authentic Japanese elements.

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Millet

Cabinet-maker & Bronze-caster

Ref: 0702/56

(active from 1853 until 1918)

Louis XVI Style Armoire Signed Millet France Circa 1890 Height: 167,5 cm (66 in.); Width: 109 cm (43 in.); Depth: 50 cm (19 2/3 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XVI style vitrine veneered with Amaranth, King- and Rosewood. With two doors, decorated with a fine rhombus motif marquetry, opening onto four shelves. Very fine gilded bronze mounts made of pastoral and music instruments as well as wreaths of flowers. Standing on four top feet.

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P. Sormani

Ref: 0702/76

Cabinet-maker (1817-1877)

Beautiful Louis XVI Style Showcase Signed on the keylock P. Sormani France Circa 1870 Height: 119 cm (46 3/4 in.); Width: 102 cm (40 in.); Depth: 36 cm (14 in.)

Furniture

A very fine Louis XVI style vitrine made in Rose- and Kingwood veneer, topped with moulded shaped "Fleur de PĂŞcher" marble. Opening with a central glazed door and flanked with curved glazed sides. Mounted with fine chiselled bronze ornaments such cupids, water leaves friezes and acanthuses. Raised on four cabriole feet.

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H. Dasson

Ref: 0702/77

Bronze-caster and Cabinet-maker (1825-1896) attributed to

Louis XVI Style Vitrine France Circa 1880 Height: 147 cm (57 3/4 in.); Length: 72 cm (28 1/3 in.); Depth: 39 cm (15 1/3 in.)

Furniture

A very fine Louis XVI style vitrine oprening with a centering door, veneered with burl elm, finely decorated with chiselled and gilded bronze mounts and topped with "Brèche" marble. Standing on four legs joined by a streched shelf.

Vitrine inspired by the 18th century models executed by Adam Weisweiler and made by Henry Dasson in the 19th century. (in L’ameublement d’art français, 18501900, Camille Mestdagh, Les Ed. de l’Amateur, Paris, 2010, p°277) 52


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Dienst

Cabinet-maker

Ref: 0702/78

(19th century)

Louis XVI Style Vitrine Signed on the keylock Dienst Ameublement Paris France Circa 1870 Height: 216 cm (85 in.); Width: 140 cm (55 in.); Depth: 68 cm (26 3/4 in.)

Furniture

A large Louis XVI style vitrine veneered with Amaranth, Kingwood and Walnut, decorated with Rosewood and Ebony fillets. Sides and doors are fiited with bevelled glazes, opening onto a large mirror and four glass shelves. Mounted with gilded bronze motifs such as oak leaves garlands, ribbons, floral wreaths and large leafy casts at the angles. Standing on a wide veneered plinth base.

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Louis XVI Style Vitrine

Ref: 0702/57

France Circa 1880 Height: 204 cm (80 1/3 in.); Width: 115,5 cm (45 1/2 in.); Depth: 44 cm (17 1/3 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XVI style vitrine veneered with Palisander, Satin- and Rosewood. With two doors glazed at the upper part, opening onto four glass shelves and two drawers. Inner backside fitted with a large mirror. Nicely ornated with Rosewood rhombus motif veneer on the lower part of the doors as well as on the sides. Standing on four swirl top feet. Topped with a pierced gilt-bronze frieze.

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Semainier

Ref: 0702/74

France Circa 1880 Height: 151 cm (59 1/2 in.); Width: 101,5 cm (40 in.); Depth: 45 cm (17 3/4 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XVI style chest of seven drawers made in Mahogany veneer, standing on four top feet. Topped with "Brocatelle d’Espagne" marble.

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L.C. Sévin Ornemanist (1821-1888)

F. Barbedienne Bronze-caster (1810-1892)

Exceptional Display-Sideboard



L.C. Sévin

Ref: 0702/12

Ornemanist (1821-1888)

F. Barbedienne Bronze-caster (1810-1892)

Exceptional Display-Sideboard Exposed on the stand of Frager - maison Meynard at the salon des industries du mobilier of 1902 (reproduced in "la construction moderne", planche n° 38)

France Circa 1890 Height: 2,85 m (9 ft. 4 in.); Width: 2,15 m (7 ft.) Depth: 70 cm (27 1/2 in.)

Furniture

A two part, neo-Renaissance style, walnut sideboard; the lower part comprising four doors embellished with low reliefs in gilt bronze alternating with four detached columns of red marble with corinthian capitals. The upper part comprises two doors ornamented with gilt bronze low reliefs cast by Ferdinand Barbedienne, representing two nymphs after those sculpted by Jean Goujon in 1547 for the Fountain of the Innocents in Paris. On each side gilt bronze caryatids sheathed in Campan marble and recesses decorated with chains of fruit emphasize the structure of the piece. A pediment bearing the gilt bronze mask of a faun completes the ensemble. Bibliography L'univers des bronzes, Yves Devaux, Ed. Pygmalion, Paris, 1978. Exposition Universelle de 1878, Rapport sur les bronzes d'art, Groupe III, Classe 25, p° 26. Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l'amateur, Paris, 1989, p° 209 & 481. "Le salon des arts du mobilier", La Revue de l’art ancien et moderne, Paris, impr. Georges Petit, t. XII, juillet-décembre 1902, pp.185-186. Salon des industries du mobilier, Grand Palais des Champs Elysées, juillet-novembre 1902, organisé par la chambre syndicale de l’ameublement, Paris, impr. Wattier frères, 1902.

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Guillaume Grohé Cabinet-maker (1808-1885)

Michel Liénard Sculptor-Designer (1810-1870)

Console



G. Grohé Cabinet-maker (1810-1870)

Ref: 1307/81b

M. Liénard Sculptor-Designer (1808-1885)

Exceptional Console Signed Grohé à Paris France Circa 1844 Height: 103 cm (40 1/2 in.); Length:150cm (59 in.); Depth: 50 cm (19 2/3 in.)

Furniture

Napoleon III mahogany console ornamented with gilt bronze mounts and underlined by a copper thread. Red "griotte" marble top. Frieze ornamented with acorn and foliage motifs, centred by a cartouche forming a heart. Legs ornamented with putti and scrolling foliage. Center decorated with ribbons, feminine masks and naturalistic bouquets. Base ornamented with a twist with oves, acanthus leaves and flower heads motifs. Mirror backplate. Resting on toupie feet. This console, very illustrative of Second Empire style, can be related to a large ebony and rosewood w executed by Grohé for the Salon des Guise in Chantilly castle (Musée Condé, Chantilly). Bibliography Collection Maciet, vol. 344,6, Bibliothèque des Arts Décoratifs, Paris. Deuxième Album Liénard, dessin CD 4132-126, Bibliothèque des Arts Décoratifs, Paris. L’Ameublement moderne par MM. Prignot,Liénard, Coignet et plusieurs autres artistes spéciaux, 2 vol.,Charles Claesen, Paris, 1876. Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Denise Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l’Amateur, 1984, p. 237. P. Liénard, A. Doussamy, Portefeuille de Liénard: motifs inédits applicables aux arts industriels et somptuaires

Engraving published in Musée des familles, juillet 1844, p. 318.

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after

P. Thomire Bronze-caster (1751-1843)

ď •

Empire Style Console


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after

P. Thomire

Ref: 0702/64

Bronze-caster (1751-1843)

Empire Style Console France Circa 1860 Height: 107 cm (42 in.); Length: 190 cm (74 3/4 in.); Depth: 51 cm (20 in.)

Furniture

Rare Empire style side-board console made in mahogany, enriched with superb bronze ornaments kept with their original gilding. Topped with "Cipolin" marble.

This console is to be linked to the one made by Pierre Thomire around 1805 and now exhibited in the Louvre Museum (Inv. OA 9969).

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A Very Fine Console Table

Ref: 1307/81

France Circa 1880 Height: 90 cm (35 1/2 in.); Width: 144 cm (56 2/3 in.); Depth: 60 cm (23 2/3 in.)

Furniture

An exceptional Louis XIV style carved wood console with its original gilding. Serpentine frieze with shell, acanthus leaves and flower garlands. Four scrolling legs with toupie feet, joined by a stretcher centred by a shell. Campan marble top. The console term does not appear until the beginning of 18th century, although this piece of furniture is widely in use at the end of the previous century. It designates tables placed against a wall, usually under a mirror and between two windows or doors. Only the three visible sides are decorated. The table often rests on console feet, hence the name. Rigorous ornaments are applied in decorative arts under the Louis XIV period. That classicism can also be found in the mobilier d’argent created for the king at the end of 17th century. Unfortunately it was molten in order to finance the numerous and expensive wars of that period. Nevertheless, with its numerous curves, the console offers sculptors and cabinetmakers a great field to exercise their imagination and virtuosity. At the beginning of 18th century, sculpted furniture tends to lighten; the dimensions reduce, sculpted decoration stay symmetrical but become more smooth and exuberant. The RÊgence and the beginning of Louis XV period, with the rocaille style, are considered to be the golden age of consoles.

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N. Heurtaut

Cabinet-maker and Sculptor (1720-1771)

ď •

Important Louis XV Period Salon Set



Nicolas Heurtaut

Ref: 1307/83

Cabinet-maker and Sculptor (1720-1771)

Important Louis XV Period Salon Set Stamped N. Heurtaut France Circa 1760 Couch / Height: 113 cm (44 1/2 in.); Width: 188 cm (74 in.); Depth: 64 cm (25 1/4 in.) Armchairs / Height: 99 cm (39 in.); Width: 71 cm (28 in.); Depth: 55 cm (21 2/3 in.) Foot Stool (19th century) / Height: 50 cm (19 2/3 in.); Width: 57 cm (22 1/2 in.); Depth: 57 cm (22 1/2 in.)

Furniture

Important Louis XV Salon set comprising an important sofa, six "Ă la Reine" armchairs and a foot stool. Made of gilded wood, sculpted with acanthus leaves, hearts, flowers, scrolls and shells motifs. Resting on scrolled cabriole legs. The whole set is upholstered with a fine 18th century Aubusson tapestry, in perfect condition, displaying scenes from the tales of Jean de La Fontaine.

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Museology - Domaine de Villarceaux, in Chaussy, the castle built for the Marquis de la Buissière, displays beautiful pieces, among these a fine console by Nicolas Heurtaut - The Frick Collection: chairs and sofas dating from approximatively 1760, upholstered with Beauvais tapestry (woll and silk) acquired in 1918.. - Cleveland Museum of Art: 1755 chairs (104,7 x 73 x 79.35 cm), donated by Mrs. Severance A. Millikin in 1989. - Musée du Louvre: gilded beech wood armchairs(1755/1759) coming from the Martial-Louis de Beaupoil de Saint-Aulaire (bishop of Poitiers in 1759) collection, purchased by the museum in 1975. - Château de Versailles: "à la Reine"1758 armchairs, displayed in the Grand Cabinet of "la Dauphine"; donated by Ortiz-Patino in 1982

Furniture

Bibliography Bill G. B. Pallot, "Le menuisier Nicolas Heurtaut chez le Prince de Conti et le Comte d’Artois", L’Estampille/L’Objet d’Art, n° 371, 2002, pp. 68-74. Bill G. B. Pallot , "Un siège à succès de Nicolas Heurtaut", L’Estampille/L’Objet d’Art, 1994. Catalogues des Collections: Domaine de Villarceaux, The Frick Collection, Cleveland Museum of Art, Musée du Louvre et Château de Versailles.

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neo-Greek and neo-Egyptian Styles Orientalism





A. Levraux

Cabinet-maker

Ref: 0702/65

(19th century)

Set of Four Louis XVI Style Armchairs Stamped A. Levraux Paris France Circa 1860 Height: 75 cm (29 1/2 in.); Width: 63 cm (24 3/4 in.); Depth: 65 cm (25 2/3 in.)

Furniture

A very fine set of four Louis XVI style armchairs made in carved and gilded wood, upholstered with red velvet.

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Set of Three Louis XVI Style Armchairs With "à la Reine" Backseats

Ref: 1608/12

France Circa 1880 Height: 103 cm (40 1/2 in.); Width: 67 cm (26 1/3 in.); Depth: 70 cm (27 1/2 in.)

Furniture

Rare set of three Louis XVI style armchairs made in carved and gilded wood. With a medallion "à la Reine" upright backseat, adorned with musical trophies. A very fine decor made up of ribbons and foliage. Raised on four tapering, spiral fluted feet, ornated with water leaves and surmounted by laurel wreaths motifs.

Related work : This model is close to the model executed by the famous 18th century cabinet-maker JeanRené Nadal (1733-1783) for the inner cabinets of Comte d’Artois at Versailles (now preserved at the « Mobilier National », in Paris).

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Fine Pair of Louis XVI Style Armchairs "à la Reine"

Ref: 1307/98

France Circa 1880

Height: 104 cm (41 in.); Width: 70 cm (27 1/2 in.); Depth: 64 cm (25 in.) Provenance: Île-de-France Castle.

Carved and gilded wood pair of Louis XVI style armchairs "piastres", scrolls and acanthus leaves decoration. Made with "à la Reine" backrest, fluted and tapered feet. Upholstered with a Tassinari red silk ornamented with flowers and central medallions.

Furniture

This model is close to models executed by the famous 18th century cabinet-maker Jean-Baptiste II Lelarge (1711-1771).

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after

J.B.C. Séné

Ref: 0702/110

Cabinet-maker (1748-1803)

Rare Pair of Louis XVI Style Armchairs France Circa 1880 Height: 111 cm (43 3/4 in.); Width: 73 cm (28 3/4 in.); Depth: 60 cm (23 2/3 in.)

Furniture

Sumptuous pair of giltwood "à la Reine" armchairs, made after the model of the seats ordered for the large Inner Cabinet of Marie-Antoinette in Saint-Cloud Castle and delivered there in 1788 to the royal spouses. These armchairs of an entirely new design were due to the collaboration of JeanBaptiste-Claude Séné for carpentry, Nicolas-Francois Valois for sculpture and Chatard for gilding (now all exhibited between the Louvre Museum, the Compiègne and Fontainebleau palaces and the France Mobilier National). The design of these chairs completely new in 1787 reveals a great stylistic inventiveness. The architectured supports of the backseat are composed of detached fluted columns surmounted by a Ionic capital and a pine cone; the baluster armrest are based on a base supported by the connection cube; the spiral fluted legs are encircled by a crown of flowers and the seat is fully decorated with interlacing friezes. These seats are emblematic of the Louis XVI style with the architectural vocabulary inspired by antiquity but also with the patterns of interlacing and garlands of flowers. These solutions influenced the production of Séné in the 19th century and had a strong impact among the leading furniture manufacturers.

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G. Jacob (1739-1814) after

Cabinet-maker

Ref: 0702/111

Pair of Directoire Style Armchairs France Circa 1870 Height: 99 cm (39 in.); Width: 66 cm (26 in.); Depth: 63 cm (24 3/4 in.)

Furniture

A very fine pair of carved and tinted walnut armchairs, with carved sphinges for the armrest supports. The circumference of the seatback and the seat belt are delicately carved with beads, rosettes and links. Reposing on tapered and fluted legs topped with carved rings.

Those armchairs are close in design to the chair model made in 1790 by the cabinet-maker Georges Jacob (1739-1814), and now displayed at the Paris Decorative Arts Museum (Inv. Mob Nat Gme 1552).

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after

C. Cressent

Cabinet-maker (1685-1768)

ď •

A "Royal" Louis XV Style Commode



after

C. Cressent

Ref: 3110/22

Cabinet-maker (1685-1768)

A "Royal" Louis XV Style Commode France Circa 1880 Height: 88 cm (34 2/3 in.); Width: 151 cm (59 1/2 in.); Depth: 63 cm (24 3/4 in.)

Furniture

The serpentine brèche d'alep marble top above two drawers decorated with gilt-bronze hanging floral garlands, scrolling foliage and trellis parquetry, the curved sides similarly decorated and each set with a cupboard door, the angles clasped with scrolling acanthus, on tapering legs with pawcast sabots.

Related work :

The model of this commode was made by Charles Cressent in 1739 for King Louis XV’s bedroom, in the Château de La Muette (Paris).

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J.-E. Zwiener Cabinet-maker

(active from 1880 to 1895)

L. MessagĂŠ Designer (1842-1901)

ď •

Exceptional Pair of Commodes



J.-M. Zwiener Cabinet-maker

(active from 1880 to 1895)

Ref: 0702/19

L. Messagé Designer

(1842-1901)

Exceptional Pair of Commodes France Circa 1885 Height: 85 cm (33 1/2 in.); Width: 114 cm (44 3/4 in.); Depth: 58 cm (22 3/4 in.) An exceptional pair of Louis XV style bombé commodes, made in amaranth and tinted sycamore; each topped with "Brèche d’Alep" marble over two form drawers decorated with floral lemonwood marquetry within a scrolling gilt acanthus banded bronze cartouche form. Raised on four cabriole legs with foliate swag mounts, ending in ormolu scrolled foliate sabots. An apparently example of this model was sold at Bonhams, New York, 7 December 2010.

Furniture

Bibliography Catalogue de l'Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1889.

108





C.-G. Winckelsen Cabinet-maker (1812-1871)

ď •

"The Four Seasons"



C.-G. Winckelsen

Ref: 0702/34

Cabinet-maker (1812-1871)

"The Four Seasons" Signed Chles Winckelsen, 21 rue Saint-Louis (Au Marais) and dated 1864 France Height: 109 cm (43 in.); Width: 271 cm (107 in.); Depth: 79 cm (31 in.)

Exceptional large Louis XVI style "meuble d’appui", topped with moulded "Brèche" marble, made in ambony burl and ebony veneer. Opening with three frieze drawers decorated with ormolu foliage motifs, above four front doors alternated with gilded bronze figural busts representing the Four Seasons. Standing on six foliate cast feet.

Furniture

Bibliography Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Denise Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l’Amateur, 1984, p. 635.

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115




Krieger

Cabinet-maker & Interior designer (2nd half of the 19th century) attributed to

ď •

A Louis XVI Style Commode Ă Vantaux



Krieger

Ref: 0210/13

Cabinet-maker & Interior designer (2nd half of the 19th century) attributed to

A Louis XVI Style Commode à Vantaux France Circa 1880 Height: 101 cm (39 3/4 in.); Length: 139 cm (54 3/4 in.); Depth: 50 cm (19 2/3 in.)

Furniture

A fine gilt-bronze mounted mahogany "commode à vantaux", executed after a Model by Adam Weisweiler (1744-1820). Topped with a "Brocatelle d’Espagne" marble, which shape fits perfectly the commode shape, above a panelled frieze decorated with drapes and scrolls on "gun-barrel" plaques, concealing a large drawer opening with a hidden lock-system. With three foliate bordered panelled cupboards below and a gilded bronze flowery tied-ribbon medallion on the central door, showing a trophy with doves. Raised on six ormolu tapering toupie feet.

120





A.-E. Beurdeley Cabinet-maker and Bronze caster (1847-1919) attributed to

Sumptuous Louis XVI Style "Meuble d’Appui"



A.-E. Beurdeley

Cabinet-maker and Bronze caster

Ref: 0702/35

(1847-1919) attributed to

Sumptuous Louis Xvi Style "Meuble d’Appui" France Circa 1890 Height: 103 cm (40 1/2 in.); Width: 175 cm (68 3/4 in.); Depth: 61 cm (24 in.)

Furniture

Sumptuous Louis XVI style "meuble d’appui" made in mahogany and amaranth with a splendid decoration of floral motif precious woods marquetry. Topped with a moulded "Verde Antico" marble sourmounting a large centering drawer, above three doors alternated with fluted "Verde Antico" marble columns topped with corinthian capitals. A magnifiscent ornamentation made of finely chiselled and gilded bronze lion muzzles, foliage and fruits garlands. Resting on four gilt-bronze foliate cast feet.

Similar cabinet made by Alfred-Emmanuel Beurdeley and presented in: L’ameublement d’art français, 18501900, Camille Mestdagh, Les Ed. de l’Amateur, Paris, 2010, p°271.

126


127




Befort Jeune

Cabinet-maker

Ref: 0702/36

(1816-c.1880) attributed to

Important "Boulle" Cabinet France Circa 1870 Height: 130,5 cm (51 1/3 in.); Width: 171 cm (67 1/3 in.); Depth: 48 cm (18 3/4 in.)

Furniture

Opening with three front doors. Ebony veneer inlaid with a brass "Boulle" marquetry on tortoise-shell, inspired by Jean BÊrain’s ornamentation studies. Adorned with ormolu mounts, such as masks, leafy lion claws and figural casts reprensenting Spring and Winter. Standing on six feet.

130


131




C.-G. Winckelsen Cabinet-maker (1812-1871)

ď •

Louis XVI Style Secretary



C.-G. Winckelsen

Ref: 0702/42

Cabinet-maker (1812-1871)

Louis XVI Style Secretary Signed Chles Winckelsen, 21 rue Saint-Louis (Au Marais) France Circa 1860 Height: 138 cm (54 1/3 in.); Width: 88 cm (34 2/3 in.); Depth: 41 cm (16 in.)

Exceptional Louis XVI style upright secretary, veneered with amaranth and ambony burl, ornated with centering Japanese lacquer panels and beautifully mounted with chiselled and gilded bronzes. The front panel opens onto a six drawers fitted interior made in sycomore with amaranth and ebony fillets. Topped with statuary Carrare marble.

Furniture

This work was inspired by a model made by Adam Weisweiler around 1790, now exhibited at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art.

136


137



139


A.-E. Beurdeley Cabinet-maker and bronze caster (1847-1919) attributed to

ď •

Sumptuous Louis XVI Style Secretary



A.-E. Beurdeley

Ref: 0702/71

Cabinet-maker and bronze caster (1847-1919) attributed to

Sumptuous Louis XVI Style Secretary France Circa 1890

Furniture

Height: 130 cm (51 in.); Width: 74 cm (29 in.); Depth: 40 cm (15 3/4 in.)

Exceptional Louis XVI style upright secretary, made in Mahogany and Elm burl veneer. The eared rectangular "Brocatelle d’Espagne" marble top above a fall-front panel opening onto an aventurine, mother of pearl and lacquer decorated ebony interior. The front and sides ornated with Japan lacquer panels decorated with landscape and figural scenes. The angles set with flower-filled basket caryatids, above a shaped apron fitted with a drawer, resting on tapering fluted legs joined by a pierced loop stretcher and four top feet. This upright secretary is characteristic of the late 19th century production of Beurdeley which specialized in producing furniture and objects inspired by the Louis XVI models in the Garde-meuble national. It borrows directly from the work of Adam Weisweiler, who made around 1790 a similar cabinet, now exhibited at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. Two apparently examples of this model, with different lacquer panels were sold at Christie's, London, in March 2008 and July 2011.

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143



145


H. Dasson Cabinet-maker (1847-1919)

ď •

Louis XVI Style Secretary



H. Dasson

Cabinet-maker

Ref: 0702/72

(1825-1896)

Louis XVI Style Secretary Signed Henry Dasson France Circa 1880 Height: 138 cm (54 1/3 in.); Length: 95 cm (37 1/2 in.); Depth: 40,5 cm (16 in.)

Furniture

A very fine Louis XVI style upright secretary, executed in ambony and palisander veneer, finely decorated with painted medallions presenting mythological scenes. Mahogany insider. Fine chiselled and gilded bronze mounts. "Brocatelle d’Espagne" marble stretcher and top. This work was inspired by the 18th century models executed by Adam Weisweiler.

148


149




P. Sormani Cabinet-maker (1817-1877) attributed to

ď •

Louis XVI Style Secretary



Vve P. Sormani

Ref: 0702/73

Cabinet-maker (1817-1877) attributed to

Louis XVI Style Secretary France Circa 1880 Height: 141 cm (55 1/2 in.); Width: 87 cm (34 1/4 in.); Depth: 38 cm (15 in.)

Furniture

Remarkable Louis XVI style upright secretary, made in mahogany and palissander veneer, beautifully mounted with chiselled and gilded bronzes. Ornated with a centering "Vernis Martin" painting on the frontdoor depicting Euterpe, the muse of Music. Opening onto a drawers fitted interior made in sycamore. Standing on four legs joined by a streched shelf.

Secretary inspired by the 18th century models executed by JeanHenri Riesener and made by Veuve Paul Sormani in the 19th century. (in L’ameublement d’art français, 18501900, Camille Mestdagh, Les Ed. de l’Amateur, Paris, 2010, p°298) 154


155




P. Sormani Cabinet-maker (1817-1877)

ď •

Jewels Cabinet


159


P. Sormani

Ref: 0702/43

Cabinet-maker (1817-1877)

Jewels Cabinet Signed on the keylock P. Sormani – 10 r. Charlot, Paris France Circa 1870 Height: 146 cm (57 1/2 in.); Width: 93 cm (36 2/3 in.); Depth: 41 cm (16 in.)

Furniture

Exquisite Louis XVI style jewels cabinet made in mahogany. Opening with a central door ornated with a polychrom painted porcelain plaque onto a sycomore wood interior. Flanked on each side by five leathered drawers. Mounted with fine gilt-bronze ornaments.

Cabinet inspired by the 18th C. models executed by Adam Weisweiler and made by Paul Sormani in the 19th C., who presented the model of this cabinet at the 1867 Paris Universal Exhibition (left picture: engraving published in The Art Journal of 1867). A similar cabinet (right picture) is reproduced in L’ameublement d’art français, 1850-1900, (book by Camille Mestdagh, Les Ed. de l’Amateur, Paris, 2010, p°61).

160


161


F. Linke

Cabinet-maker & Bronze-caster (1855-1946)

ď •

Bureau plat and

Bookcase



F. Linke

Ref: 1307/86

Cabinet-maker & Bronze-caster (1855-1946)

Bureau plat and Bookcase Signed on each Linke France Circa 1890 Flat Desk: Height: 76 cm (30 in.); Length: 141 cm (55 1/2 in.); Depth: 81 cm (31 3/4 in.) Bookcase: Height: 160 cm (63 in.); Length: 151 cm (60 in.); Depth: 49 cm (19 1/3 in.)

A Régence style bureau plat, in kingwood and satinwood veneer, opening with three frieze drawers. Chiseled ormolu mounts representing acanthus leaves and satyr masks. Assorted bookcase, kingwood veneered, opening with two glazed doors framed by a tulipwood ribbon. Bent sides with tulipwood cube motif parquetry.

Furniture

Bibliography Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Ledoux-Lebard, p. 439.

Related work :

This flat desk and its matching bookcase are very close to François Linke’s personal furniture presented in his personal office. (in François Linke (1855-1946), The Belle Epoque of French Furniture, Ch. Payne, back cover illustration)

164





A Rare Marquetry Louis XV Style Bureau Plat


169


A Rare Marquetry Louis XV Style Bureau Plat

Ref: 0702/113

France Circa 1880 Height: 81 cm (31 3/4 in.); Length: 183 cm (72 in.); Depth: 96 cm (37 3/4 in.)

A rare double-side Louis XV style flat desk, made of kingwood and satinwood veneer; opening with three drawers decorated with a beautiful flower motif end-cut wood marquetry. With fine chased and gilded bronze enrichments made of rococo motifs. Topped with a tooled red leather writing surface. Raised on four ormolu-mounted cabriole legs.

Furniture

After the famous 18th century model known as the "Choiseul desk" made by Jacques Dubois (1693-1763) – (Reproduced in "Le mobilier Français du XVIIIème siècle", par P. Kjellberg, Ed. de l’amateur, 1989, p°269).

The "Choiseul flat desk", stamped by Jacques Dubois, around 1750. Provenance: Château du Raincy. Now preserved at the Paris Louvre Museum (OA 6083).

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171




G. Durand Cabinet-maker (1839-1920) attributed to

ď •

Important Louis XV Style Bureau Plat



G. Durand

Ref: 1307/89

Cabinet-maker (1839-1920) attributed to

Important Louis XV Style Bureau Plat France Circa 1860 Height: 79 cm (31 in.); Length: 198 cm (78 in.); Depth: 101 cm (39 3/4 in.)

Furniture

Kingwood and satinwood veneer, opening with three frieze drawers. Mounted with Rocaille style chiseled ormolu representing shells, foliage and flower garlands. Raised on four cabriole legs ornamented with chiseled ormolu.

Related Work : This flat desk executed by the cabinet-maker Joseph Baumhauer, was offered by King Louis XV to Empress Elisabeth I of Russia in 1745. It is now exhibited in the Los Angeles Getty Center.

176





A Fine Louis XVI Style Flat Desk

Ref: 1608/14

France Circa 1880 Height: 76 cm (30 in.); Width: 140 cm (55 in.); Depth: 76,5 cm (30 in.)

Furniture

A Mahogany and Satinwood veneered flat desk. The fine brown leather-lined top above three frieze drawers, allover decorated with gilt-bronze ornaments such scrolls, acanthus leaves and flowers. Keylocks in shape of beaded medallions surmounted by ribbon-tied garlands. Raised on four tapering legs embellished with beaded mounts.

Related work: A mahogany flat desk executed by Emmanuel Alfred Beurdeley (1847-1919) aound 1880, after a model by Guillaume Benneman (1750-1811) delivered in 1787 to King Louis XVI’s library at the Fontainebleau Palace (now exhibited in the Louvre Museum, inv. OA5329). (Reproduced in «L’Ameublement d’art français – 1850-1900», Camille Mestdagh, Les Editions de l’Amateur, Paris, 2010, p°255).

180




183


H. Dasson

Ref: 0702/60

Bronze-caster and Cabinet-maker (1825-1896) attributed to

Louis XV Style Lady Desk France Circa 1880 Height: 74 cm (29 in.); Width: 100 cm (39 1/3 in.); Depth: 51 cm (20 in.)

Furniture

A very fine Louis XV style lady flat desk, executed in palisander. The curved shaped leather inset top above a frieze opening with three drawers decorated all sides with a losange motif marquetry. Raised on four cabriole five-sided legs. Beautiful gilded bronze ornamentation of acanthuses.

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185




G. Durand

Ref: 0702/61

Cabinet-maker (1839-1920) attributed to

Louis XV Style Lady Flat Desk France Circa 1880 Height: 75 cm (29 1/2 in.); Width: 91 cm (35 3/4 in.); Depth: 53 cm (20 3/4 in.) / 78 cm (30 3/4 in.) with opened flap

Furniture

A very elegant Louis XV style lady flat desk, made in amaranth and rosewood veneer. The curved shaped leather inset top above a front frieze opening with three drawers and a pull-out leather lined flap. Mounted with foliage and dolphin motif gilt-bronze ornaments. Raised on four cabriole legs.

This writing table is to be linked to the one made around 1745 par Bernard II Van Riesen Burgh (1696-1767) and now exhibited in the Louvre Museum (Inv. OA 6540). 188


189




C.-G. Winckelsen

Ref: 0702/62

Cabinet-maker (1812-1871)

Louis XVI Style Flat Desk Signed Chles Winckelsen, 21 rue Saint-Louis (Au Marais) and dated 1862 France : Height: 75 cm (29 1/2 in.); Width: 100 cm (39 1/3 in.); Depth: 57,5 cm (22 2/3 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XVI style double-sided flat desk, made in Amaranth and Thuja burl veneer, presenting a large centering drawer and two further sided drawers. With a rectangular ormolu-banded top inset with a leather surface and a three-sided pierced gilt-bronze frieze. This work was inspired by the 18th century models executed by Jean-Henri Riesener.

192


193




F. Barbedienne

Ref: 0702/70

Bronze-caster (1810-1892) attributed to

A Neo-Pompeian Gueridon France Circa 1880 Height: 71 cm (28 in.); Diameter: 39 cm (15 1/3 in.)

A very fine Pompeian style gilded bronze tripod gueridon,ornated with lion heads, scrolls and standing on three claw feet, joined by a stretcher. The polychrom enamelled metal top, painted with banded flowers on a pink background, surrounded by a pierced bronze palmet motif frieze.

Furniture

Bibliography "L'Exposition universelle de 1889: l'exemple de Barbedienne", Catherine Chevillot, in Revue de l'Art, 1992, n°95. Catalogue de l'exposition: "L'art en France sous le Second Empire", Grand-Palais, Paris 1979. Catalogue de l'Exposition Universelle, les Beaux-Arts et les Arts décoratifs, t. I: l'Art moderne, Paris, 1878. Catalogue de l'Exposition Universelle, les Beaux-Arts et les Arts décoratifs, Paris, 1889.

196


197


H. Dasson

Ref: 1001/3

Bronze-caster and Cabinet-maker (1825-1896) attributed to

A Luxurious Louis XVI Style Mahogany Center Table France Circa 1880 Height: 74 cm (28 in.); Width: 59 cm (34 2/3 in.); Depth: 43 cm (17 in.)

An exquisite oval Mahogany table, surmounted by a "fleur de pêcher" inset marble top above one ormolu mounted frieze drawer. Each tapering fluted support headed by beautiful jasperware medallions and joined by a concave shaped platform stretcher, fitted with a pierced lattice gallery. Raised on four spiral gilt-bronze feet.

Furniture

Bibliography D. Ledoux-Lebard. Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Paris, 1984, p.146. A. Pradère, French Fourniture Makers: The Art of the Ebéniste from Louis XIV to the Révolution, pp. 343-362.

Related work:

A similar gueridon enriched with Wedgwood porcelain medallions was executed by Henry Dasson around 1880 in the manner of the renowned 18th century cabinet-maker Adam Weisweiler (1744-1820).

198



Exceptional Byzantine Style Large Gueridon



Exceptional Byzantine Style Large Gueridon

Ref: 3110/23

Venice - Italy Circa 1860 Height: 78 cm (30 3/4 in.); Diameter: 145 cm (57 in.)

Furniture

Impressive Byzantine style Venitian center table made in local massive wood, entirely decorated with ivory inlay. The octogonal top decorated with Venitian geometrical motifs and sprirals stands on a central gadrooned carved foot and eight stylized ivory inlaid dolphins. The all reposing on a polylobed base and eight lion paws.

Related work:

The Byzantine and therefore Oriental style much present in Venice through the ages is due to the historical links between Venice and the East since its origins. These arabesques and further geometric patterns are characteristics of the "Cosmati" art, which originally is a decoration made of polychrome marble inlays, invented by Roman marble workers and widespread in Italy since the twelfth century. One of the most wonderful examples is to be seen in Basilica San Marco in Venice.

202





H. Dasson

Ref: 1001/12

Cabinet-maker (1825-1896)

A Very Refined "Boulle" Marquetry Center Table Signed Henry Dasson, 1879 France Height: 77 cm (30 1/3 in.); Length: 80 cm (31 1/2 in.); Depth: 53 cm (20 3/4 in.)

Furniture

A very high quality gilt-bronze mounted "Boulle" marquetry Louis XIV style center table, executed in oakwood with ebony veneer, finely decorated allover with a foliate motif marquetry made of brass and pewter on tortoiseshell ground. Topped with a rectangular dark green-red marble, which shape fits perfectly the table bronze frame ; above a panelled frieze concealing a large centering drawer opening with a hidden lock-system. Standing on four quadrangular tapering legs joined by a shaped stretcher and terminating on four gilded bronze foliate spiralled top feet. "Boulle" marquetry refers to the inlay techniques developed by the French craftsman André-Charles Boulle (1642-1732) in the late 17th century. The technique involved gluing one or more slender layers of tortoiseshell onto a similar number of brass and pewter layers. Boulle was employed by the Crown and most of his creations comprise the celebrated Boulle furniture which was all the rage during the reign of King Louis XIV. The craftsman usually chose oak for the parts he marqueted, and he often veneered the other parts with ebony. As a finishing touch, he mounted Boulle furniture with ormolu to protect the corners and other vulnerable parts of the inlay. Due to its high decorative effect, the "Boulle" technic was still used successfully under the Second Empire by the best cabinet-makers, such Henry Dasson. Bibliography D. Ledoux-Lebard. Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Paris, 1984, p.146. Christopher Payne, 19th century European Furrniture, p. 100, illus. 196. A. Pradère, French Fourniture Makers : The Art of the Ebéniste from Louis XIV to the Révolution, pp. 343-362

206





G. Durand

Ref: 1402/17

Cabinet-maker (1839-1920) attributed to

A Louis XV Style Table France Circa 1880 Height: 70 cm (27 1/2 in.); Width: 76 cm (30 in.); Depth: 47 cm (18 1/2 in.)

Furniture

A very fine Louis XV style rectangular table, made in Satinwood, Tulipwood and Kingwood. Raised on four cabriole legs, each surmounted by a gilt-bronze mount and ending on cast feet. Surmounted by a serpentine-shaped top inlaid with an elegant stylized flower and palmet motif marquetry. The frieze, containing a long drawer, allover decorated with a fine "end-cut" floral parquetry, characteristic of Durand’s work (in D. Ledoux-Lebard. Les ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Paris, 1984, p°183).

Related work :

Tables after similar models by B.V.R.B. known and exhibited : Louvre Museum, Decorative Arts Museum (Paris) ; Victoria & Albert Museum (London) ; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York).

210





Cortina D’ampezzo

Ref: 0702/45

Applied Arts School (Founded in 1846)

Venetian Renaissance Style Center Table Label mentioning "I.R. Scuola…, Sezione Intarsio e Intaglio, Cortina d’Ampezzo, n°146"

=

Italy Circa 1890

Height: 77 cm (30 1/3 in.); Width: 102 cm (40 in.); Depth: 62 cm (24 1/2 in.)

Furniture

Exceptional Venetian Renaissance style center table. The top and the frieze opening with four drawers are fully ornated with a flat carved decoration and a floral and geometric inlay according to the technique of Tarkashi. It rests on four architected legs joined by a stretcher. Commantary Don Cipriano Pescosta (1815-1889) created in October 1846 in the small town of Cortina d'Ampezzo, Veneto, a school for the teaching of drawing. The institution was gradually gaining wide popularity for its courses in sculpture as well as in cabinet making. In 1874, the school became "State Industrial School" and in September 1876, they opened sections of wood inlay and mosaic. In 1881, John Coddington, President of the famous Oriental Club in London, which included British nobles and other gentlemen residing in Asia, made known to the Italian School a new technique, the Tarkashi, thanks to some objects brought from a trip to India. It was a technique of marquetry employing refined interlaced ribbons of various woods and sometimes decorated with ivory and mother of pearl. Artists and students of the Ampezzo Art School, already skilled at woodworking, adopted this technique, which was successfully developped and even brought the fame to Cortina d'Ampezzo. In 1889, the school was open to women with sections of sewing, embroidery and lace. Cortina d'Ampezzo School was awarded a silver medal in 1893 at the Regional Exhibition of Innsbruck in Austria. They then sold all of the exhibited pieces, including a large part to the German Darmstadt and Stuttgart museums.

214





A Neo-Renaissance Table

Ref: 1307/79

France Circa 1880 Height : 74 cm (29 in.) ; Width : 130 cm (51 1/4 in.) ; Depth : 66 cm (26 in.)

Walnut table carved with Renaissance style motifs. Raised on six legs joined by a stretcher, with architectural decoration of ionic columns and blind arches. Top with leather inset writing surface.

Furniture

The walnut becomes frenquently used as soon as the 15th Century. Suitable for sculpture, it takes a wonderful glistening patina which echoes the silks and tapestries of the Renaissance interiors.

218





A.-E. Beurdeley

Ref: 1307/94

Cabinet-maker and bronze caster (1847-1919) attributed to

A Rare Center Table France Circa 1880 Height: 75 cm (29 1/2 in.); Width: 95 cm (37 2/3 in.); Depth: 55 cm (21 2/3 in.)

Made exclusively in richly carved boxwood; with a fine pierced belt ornamented with laurel branches. Raised on four legs joined by a stretcher, centred by a carved boxwood vase. Topped with a red Griotte marble. Beurdeley liked to use boxwood because of its hardness. Beurdeley, this cabinet-maker and sculptor at the same time, could then making pieces of furniture presenting a very high quality of carving. He showed for instance a beautiful boxwood table at the 1878 Paris Universal Exhibition (in "Beaux-Arts et Arts décoratifs à l’Exposition Universelle de 1878", p.395).

Furniture

Bibliography L’univers des bronzes, Yves Devaux, Ed. Pygmalion, Paris, 1978, p. 261. "La saga Beurdeley (1814-1919)", Bernard Dorival, B.S.H.A.F., 1989, p° 191.

Related work :

Beurdeleys' table - Paris Universal Exhibition of 1878. (in «Les Beaux-Arts et les Arts Décoratifs de l’Exposition Universelle de 1878», p. 395)

222





F. Linke

Ref: 0702/75

Cabinet-maker & Bronze-caster (1855-1946)

Occasional Table Signed F. Linke France Circa 1890 Height: 70 cm (27 1/2 in.) / 98 cm (38 2/3 in.) with tray; Width: 96 cm (38 in.); Depth: 58 cm (23 in.)

Furniture

Exceptional centering Louis XV style kingwood veneered coffee table, sumptuously mounted with bronze ornaments, kept with their original gilding, such the foliates, shells and dolphins. The serpentine shaped top decorated with a rhombus motif marquetry, supports three removable glazed trays. Standing on four cabriole legs joined by a stretcher and a gilt-bronze cupid.

This occasional table by François Linke is listed under n°1477b (archive file, private collection) and reproduced in François Linke (18551946), The Belle Epoque of French Furniture, Ch. Payne, 2003, p° 239. 226


227




Pair of Columns

Ref: 1307/29b

Italy Circa 1880 Height: 111 cm (43 2/3 in.); Diam.: 31 cm (12 1/4 in.)

Furniture

Pair of ebonized wood columns with a very fine straw marquetry frieze ornamented with geometrical motifs.

230


231


Pair of Corinthian Columns

Ref: 0702/18

France Circa 1870 Height: 122 cm (48 in.); Diam.: 24,5 x 24,5 cm (9 2/3 x 9 2/3 in.)

Furniture

Pair of polychrom marble and ormolu display columns. Each composed of a "Brèche violette" marble square top above a gilded bronze Corinthian capital, surmounting a "Fleur de Pêcher" marble shaft ornated with a gilded bronze moulded ring. The set stands on a stepped green marble base.

232



A Pair of Neo-Renaissance Stands

Ref: 3110/ 27

France Circa 1880 Height: 122 cm (48 in.); Width: 43 x 43 cm (17 in.)

Pair of Renaissance style stands, made in natural walnutwood, then carved and engraved. Composed of two panels connected by a baluster shaped stretcher and terminated in lions paws. Ornated with Renaissance motifs, such beads, cartouches, "grotesques", lions masks and shells. Topped with red "Griotte" marble.

Furniture

Widely used since the 15th century. Walnut is propice to sculpture. His warming colour with its wonderful shimmering patina echoed very well the silks and tapestries in the Renaissance interiors.

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235


Pair of Palmtree Shaped Stands

Ref: 1307/28

England Circa 1880 Height: 157 cm (61 3/4 in.); Base: 40 cm (15 3/4 in.)

Furniture

Pair of mahogany stands, ornamented with palms sculpted in a naturalistic fashion. Surmounted with a small circular top. Foot ornamented with acanthus leaves, resting on a rectangular pierced base.

236


237


Pair of Neo-Gothic Stands

Ref: 2007/33

France Circa 1880 Height: 99 cm (39 in.); Diameter: 26 cm (10 1/4 in.)

A very fine pair of Gothic Revival natural walnut stands. Each composed of a hexagonal molded red Griotte marble top, resting on a hexagonal tapeting shaft. Adorned all over with carved and pierced walnut pinnacles and lambrequins.

Furniture

The somewhat architectural design evokes the creations of Eugène Viollet-le-Duc (1814-1879), who was not only a renowned theorician, but above all an accomplished architect, whose genius lay in his acute observation of medieval buildings in view of their restoration, as well as the continuation of the Gothic style in architecture and decorative arts.

238


239


Pair of Neo-Renaissance Stands

Ref: 2007/55

France Circa 1880 Height: 114 cm (39 in.); Width: 33 x 35,5 cm (13 x 14 in.)

Furniture

A very fine pair of Renaissance Revival natural oakwood stands. Each composed of a molded red Griotte marble top, resting on a fluted and tapering shaft. Adorned all over with carved piastres, garlands of fruits, a drapery and an ornamental strapwork cartouche on the front.

240


241


Important Set of Four Pedestals

Ref: 0702/27

France Circa 1880 Height: 115 cm (45 1/4 in.); Base: 34 x 30 cm (13 1/3 x 11 3/4 in.)

Furniture

Important set of four Classical style pedestals executed in red Griotte marble, with a tapering quadrangular shaft and moulded top and base.

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243


Louis XVI Style Wall-Side Pedestal

Ref: 0702/26

France Circa 1880 Height: 133,5 cm (52 1/2 in.); Width: 46 cm (18 in.); Depth: 29 cm (11 1/2 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XVI style wall-side Mahogany veneered pedestal, mounted with fine gilt-bronze ornaments. Topped with "Brèche" marble.

244



Millet

Cabinet-maker & Bronze-caster

Ref: 0702/25

(active from 1853 until 1918) attributed to

Louis XV Style Display Pedestal France Circa 1890 Height: 140 cm (55 in.); Width: 43 cm (17 in.); Depth: 35 cm (13 3/4 in.)

Furniture

A centering Louis XV style Rose- and Kingwood veneered exhibition pedestal, mounted with giltbronze ornaments framing the "end-cut" floral bouquet marquetry decor. Topped with a moulded "Brèche" marble.

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Befort Jeune Cabinet-maker

Ref: 0702/66

(1816-c.1880) attributed to

"Boulle" Wall-Side Pedestal France Circa 1870 Height: 125 cm (49 1/4 in.); Width: 49,5 cm (19 1/2 in.); Depth: 27,5 cm (10 3/4 in.)

Furniture

A Louis XIV style wall-side Ebony veneered pedestal, inlaid with a brass "Boulle" marquetry and mounted with gilt-bronze ornaments. Topped with "Brèche" marble.

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249


A Very Fine " Chinoiserie " Screen

Ref : 2007/59

France 19th century Height: 110 cm (39 in.); Width: 62 cm (24 in.); Feet depth : 35 cm (14 in.)

A very fine Louis XV style fire-screen beautifully carved in giltwood with acanthuses, flowers and scrolls, topped with birds, a quiver and a torch. A centered sliding panel made in Aubusson tapestry displays within a flowering frame a Chinese musician who makes dance a little dog to the sound of his triangle.

Furniture

The most ancient references to tapestry date from 15th century. After the landscapes and verdures that were often represented during 15th and 16th century, tapestries appeared displaying characters from History, religion, literature or mythology. In 1600, Henri IV forbad the import of foreign tapestries; in 1665, Colbert granted trading license to the Aubusson workshops, which from now on owned the prestigious title of Royal Manufacture. In 1685, the "Edit de Nantes" revocation had unfortunate consequences for French tapestry: numerous protestant craftsmen from Aubusson emigrated to Germany or Switzerland. However, French state supported the Aubusson and Felletin workshops by sending designs, a dyer and a painter. During 18th century, Louis XV established the Savonnerie manufacture to create carpets. With the rise of this new fashion, Aubusson also started producing carpets in 1743. Bibliography "Les tapisserie d’Aubusson et de Felletin", Solange Thierry Editeurs – La Bibliothèque des Arts. Aubusson, Beauvais, R. Fage, XIII, Paris, 1923, pp. 357-361.

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Artists and

Manufactures ď •


Artists and Manufactures Edouard Agneesens (1842-1885)

Edouard Joseph Alexandre Agneesens, as a portrait painter, Edouard Agneesens occupies an important place among the realistic movement, with important compositions carefully elaborated yet natural. As soon as 1875 the first signs of mental illness appear, and will persist untill his premature death, at 43 years old.

Désiré Attarge (c.1820-1878)

D. Attarge won also the Crozatier Prize in 1862 and 1864, which was awarding the France best chaser, and was once again awarded at the 1867 Universal Exhibition with a Silver medal as Barbedienne’s co-worker. Jury’s report was then very explicit: "It’s impossible to show more taste in composition and more maestria in the making of these leaves and elegant flowers, all chased with so extreme delicacy". The success of Barbedienne’s firm brought him many official commissions, such in about 1860, as Barbedienne supplied bronzes for furniture for the Pompeian Villa of Prince Napoleon, loc ated avenue Montaigne in Paris.

La Manufacture d’Aubusson

The most ancient references to tapestry date from 15th century. After the landscapes and verdures that were often represented during 15th and 16th century, tapestries appeared displaying characters from History, religion, literature or mythology. In 1600, Henri IV forbad the import of foreign tapestries; in 1665, Colbert granted trading license to the Aubusson workshops, which from now on owned the prestigious title of Royal Manufacture. In 1685, the "Edit de Nantes" revocation had unfortunate consequences for French tapestry: numerous protestant craftsmen from Aubusson emigrated to Germany or Switzerland. However, French state supported the Aubusson and Felletin workshops by sending designs, a dyer and a painter. During 18th century, Louis XV established the Savonnerie manufacture to create carpets. With the rise of this new fashion, Aubusson also started producing carpets in 1743.

Giuseppe Aureli (1858-1929)

Although Giuseppe Aureli owed his fame to his history paintings and portraits of the Italian royal family, he depicted a large number of harem scenes either with oil or watercolor. Giuseppe Aureli never traveled in the East, but like many of his Roman contemporaries of the late nineteenth century, he drew much his inspiration from the travelers reports, such as photographs, objects and prints. Aureli studied painting at the Academia di San Luca under the direction of Pietro Gabarini (1856-1926) and Cesare Maccari (18401919). He often exhibited his work in Rome, Turin and Bologna between 1883 and 1907, and in Paris at the 1889 Universal Exhibition and Salons of 1891, 1893 and 1897. He also presented historical paintings at the International Exhibition of 1888 in Munich and at the 1893 Chicago World Fair. Apart from exotic musical instruments, lion or leopard skin blankets and Moorish ceramics, the same greenhouse plants are to be seen in his paintings. They were probably permanently decorating his studio in Rome located 48 Via Margutta. Some of his works are now exhibited in the Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna and the Aula del Consiglio Provincial in Rome.

Baccarat (Since the 18th century)

The famous crystal manufacture of Baccarat, that dates back to the 18th century, was awarded its first medal in 1823, during the "Exposition des Produits de l’Industrie" for the "brilliance and the sharpness of its crystal" and became then the most renowned French "cristallerie". Baccarat was undoubtedly the only French manufacture, that exhibited steadily and magnificently its products at the various Universal Exhibitions, and especially between 1855 and 1867. In all reports one can read about the "perfection of the material and of its cut". To keep its wealthy clientele, among which the Royal family, Baccarat must discover new styles and decors as well as new material, as shows that beautiful Opaline crystal, which became one of Baccarat’s specialities in the 1850’s.

Ferdinand Barbedienne (1810-1892)

Born in 1810, Ferdinand Barbedienne started at n°30 boulevard Poissonnière in Paris one of the most famous 19th century artistic bronze casting companies. He died in 1892. In addition to his personal production, he worked for famous artists such as Auguste Clésinger (1814-1883), Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse (18241887) and Louis Barrias (1841-1905 At the London Universal Exhibition of 1862 Barbedienne exhibited some "opaque cloisonné" enamel works, which were for most of them designed by Constant Sévin (18211888), and won medals in three different categories: Furniture, Silversmith work and Artistic bronzes, combining for some pieces with enamels (Oriental style cup, Château de Compiègne, Inv. C 71-122). Barbedienne’s production was always highly esteemed and he was, himself admired by contemporary art critics who compared him during the 1878 Universal Exhibition to a "prince of industry and the king of bronze-casting". 253


Antoine-Henri Beau (1855-1937)

Antoine-Henri Beau, born in 1855 in Paris, studied at the École Polytechnique, where he graduated in electrical engineering in 1872. He became a manufacturer of lighting fixtures, and run his company Henri Beau, located 11 rue Francois-Millet at Auteuil. The art of lighting went through a considerable change with the industrialisation of gaz prior to the introduction of elecricity. French cities and salons alike were equiped with candelabras. But it was not until 1890 that apartements were supplied with electricity, yet to remain a great luxury for quite some time. Henri Beau made the first applications of electricity for lighting cities and interiors: he illuminated the Paris Opera Avenue and the Louvre Department Store in 1878, the Bellecour Theatre in Lyon in 1879, the Urbaine building on the Champs-Elysées as well as public festivals of Russian sailors in 1893. Celebrated by the public and the French state, Henri Beau was honored with the Chevalier of the Legion of Honor’ medal at the Paris Universal Exhibition in 1889. In 1901, Tsar Nicolas II and Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna, during a visit of several days in France, settled in the Compiègne imperial Palace. For the occasion, this sumptuous castle is renovated, refurbished and illuminated. "Electric lighting is perfect. This is a triumph for Henri Beau, who indeed, throughout the palace, completed in less than three weeks, a veritable tour de force". Le Figaro noted in its edition of September 21, 1901.

Mathieu Befort (1816-c.1880)

From 1844 to 1880, Mathieu Befort (1816-c.1880) also named Befort The Young worked as a “Boulle” style furniture craftsman at Neuve-Saint-Gilles Street in Paris.

Jean Bérain (1638-1711)

Jean Bérain, designer of the Chambre and of the Cabinet du Roi in 1674.

Alfred-Emmanuel Beurdeley (1847-1919)

Beurdeley is one of the most significant companies in art cabinet-making and decoration in the second half of the 19th century. Three generations succeed: Jean (1772-1853), who set up in Paris under the First Empire; his son Louis-Alfred-Auguste (1808-1882) who makes the renown of the family firm and is then considered as one of the greatest cabinet-maker under the Second Empire; finally the grandson Alfred-Emmanuel-Louis (1847-1919) who maintains the high fame of the firm thanks to his high standard quality furniture. In 1875, Alfred Beurdeley replaced his father Louis-Auguste as one of the main cabinet-makers of the Second Empire, specialising in 18th century furniture and particularly in the Louis XVI style. If Louis-Auguste was the star whenever he exhibited and was "most favored by the royal and imperial families", Alfred was a skilled bronze-caster as well as a well-known art collector. With Dasson, Grohé, Sauvresy and Fourdinois, the most famous artists of the period, he took part in the 1878 Paris Universal Exhibition where he won the gold medal. Crowned in glory he went so far as to open a shop in New York. His participation in the 1883 Amsterdam Universal Exhibition drew considerable attention to his work and "Alfred Beurdeley, Fabricant de bronzes d’art" was then awarded the Ordre National de la Légion d’Honneur, France’s hightest official mark of recognition. With this he won the respect of both the government and the contemporary art critics. His last presentation was during the 1889 Universal and International Exhibition, at this time the director of the Exhibition wrote in his report: "The talent of Mr Beurdeley is self evident when one inspects his furniture".

Fernand Blayn (1853-1892)

Blayn Fernand studied painting under Alexandre Cabanel (1823-1889). He specialized in portraits and genre paintings depicting everyday-life scenes. F. Blayn exhibited from 1878 at the Salon of French Artists. He obtained a third class medal at the 1886 Salon and a bronze medal at the Salon of 1889. Dedicated to the circus, the composition of this painting, painted the year of the death of the artist, of flawless execution, is distinguished by fine and delicate tones. The expression of faces as the care given to the quality and texture of fabrics reveal the brilliant art of the artist.

Jean de Bologne

Giambologna or Jean de Bologne was a French mannerist sculptor born in Douai in 1529 and dead in Florence in 1608. He studied his art in Antwerp with the architect and sculptor Jacques Du Broeucq before leaving for Rome from 1555 to 1557. He then settled in Florence under the protection of Francesco I de’ Medici, where he produced for the Piazza della Signoria the equestrian statue of Cosimo I de’ Medici, and statues in the Loggia dei Lanzi. In 1614, the equestrian statue of King Henri IV commissioned to Jean de Boulogne by Queen Marie de Medicis was inaugurated in Paris on the Ile de la Cité (statue destroyed during the Revolution).

Lucien Bonvallet (1861-1919)

Lucien Bonvallet was a designer. He exposed his works on Cardeilhac’s stand at the 1900 Paris Universal Exhibition, and at the Autumn Salon of 1919.

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André-Charles Boulle (1642-1732)

André-Charles Boulle (1642-1732) is considered to be the true inventor of 17th century French furniture. Soon after he was discovered by Colbert, Boulle became the “first cabinet-maker of the king”, his full title being “architect, painter, mosaic sculptor, engraver, marquetry craftsman, and inventor of figures”. Thus started for him the beginning of a period of great renown. With his royal privilege, Boulle was able to combine different activities usually restricted by corporations. Henceforth he worked as a master tortoiseshell and bronze marquetry craftsman, with such innovations as motifs both in the foreground and in the background. He also innovated by making a generous use of bronze, to decorate but also to protect the pieces of furniture. These innovations brought him fame throughout centuries.

Henry Cahieux (active since 1850)

Henry Cahieux, head decorator for the artistic bronze founder Ferdinand Barbedienne, was destined for a brilliant career, as testified by the works of art he sent to the Salons of 1850 and 1853. Most of these pieces were in the Grecian style, which was very fashionable at the time. Victor Champier’s article "Industrial Artists" , which appeared in the Decorative Arts Review (December 1888) echoed the genius of the artist: "Barbedienne had just lost (in 1854), taken by cholera in the prime of life, this young man with such a promising future, whose works, infused with graceful taste, showed him to be a master. At the 1855 Universal Exhibition in Paris, these lamps which figured as the last testimony of Henry Cahieux, won a medal of honour for Barbedienne’s stand. His succession in the firm was assured by Louis-Constant Sévin (1821-1888) with great success.

Joséphine Calamatta (1817-1893)

Joséphine Calamatta was born Joséphine Raoul-Rochette in Paris, the granddaughter of the sculptor Jean-Antoine Houdon (1741-1828) was a pupil of the painter Hippolyte Flandrin (1809-1864) and of her husband Luigi Calamatta (1801-1869), an engraver and professor at the Fine Arts Academy in Brussels, himself a student of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780-1867). So naturally Joséphine Calamatta, following the precepts of Ingres painted sentimental genre scenes, portraits and religious subjects, with a symbolistic aspect in her allegories. Married since 1840, Joséphine left Luigi her husband and Lina her daughter to stay in Paris in 1852 and live her life as an artist at No. 3 rue JJ Rousseau, then at No. 24 rue Ventimiglia. She was a friend of the writer George Sand (1804-1876) and attended her home in Nohant. She started to exhibit at the Salon of 1842, where she won a 3rd class medal for The Virgin and Child Jesus. A 2nd class medal confirmed her talent at the 1845 Salon for Woman at her toilet and Charles Baudelaire quoted her in his Critique of the 1846 Fair, writing that she was known for the severity of her style and her Pre-Raphaelites tendencies. Joséphine Calamatta exhibited “hors concours” at the Salon from 1875. She entered into religion at the end of her life.

Antoine-Vital Cardeilhac (19th century)

Antoine-Vital Cardeilhac founded in 1804 a company specialized in cutlery and flatware. Throughout the 19th century, the company had passed from father to son, with Armand-Edouard and Ernest then, and continued to successfully produce pieces highly inspired for most of them from ironwork models, richly ornamented with fine motifs. These works of varied forms and styles were all considered remarkable for their chiselling. The Cardeilhac firm was then inevitably noticed in national and international exhibitions for the high quality of products available to the public and received numerous awards, such as the bronze medal in 1823, silver medals in 1827 and 1834 as well as at the famous 1867 Paris Universal Exhibition. They were finally awarded a gold medal at the Universal Exhibition of 1878, giving the Cardeilhac company an unprecedented boom. After more than a century of proven success in the great universal exhibitions, the famous silversmith Christofle took over Cardeilhac business in 1951.

Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse (1824-1887)

Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse, nick-named the "Clodion of the 19th century"; was a very prolific sculptor, treating his decorative objects and his portraits with equal naturalistic rigor, full of charm and life. He entered the Paris Fine-Arts School in 1840, where he studied sculpture under David d’Angers. From the early 1860’s, he won success with his sculptures presented at the French Artists Salon and particularly during the 1867 Salon, where he was awarded a "médaille d’honneur" and the "Légion d’honneur" for his Messiah. The "new" Paris redesigned by the Baron Haussmann during Napoleon IIIrd’s reign, commissioned many of Carrier-Belleuse’s masterpieces: at the Louvre palace with the high-relief "L’Abondance" on the Flore Pavilion (1865), or the sumptuous decoration made for the most famous Parisian palace on the Champs-Elysées Avenue, owned by the Marchioness of Païva. But it is especially with the torcheres-statues of the large staircase of the Paris Opera house (1873), recently built by Charles Garnier, that Carrier-Belleuse meets a huge success with the Parisian public. In the catalogue of the 1878 Universal Exhibition an art critic praised Carrier-Belleuse and added: "Even the English come from London to ask him to work for them". His busts, nudes, group compositions as well as his candelabras, vases and clocks, all chased remarkably, had a considerable success during the Second Empire.

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Alexandre Chertier (active from 1855 until 1878)

Alexandre Chertier, active between 1855 and 1878, began in the 1850s as a silversmith to Louis Bachelet (active from 1844 to 1877), known as a great Parisian silversmith. He then founded his own company of silverware and decorative bronze pieces, located n.48 rue Mazarine in Paris. Honored by critics, Chertier was awarded medals at the Paris Universal Exhibitions of 1855 and 1878.

Charles Christofle (1805-1863)

Charles Christofle, began his career by managing a jewelry firm and a few years later he set up his own business: the Christofle silversmith company. His son Paul (1838-1907) and his nephew Henri Bouilhet (1830-1910) took over the business after his death. After his success at the Paris Products of Industry Exhibition of 1839, he bought the patents of gold and silver-plating by electrolysis from both Ruolz and Elkington, which enabled him again to win the gold medal at the 1844 Products of Industry Exhibition. He was named "silver-smith to the royal family" and his success was confirmed during the Second Empire when he was regularly awarded prizes at the Universal Exhibitions.

Emile Colin (2nd part of the 19th century)

Rrenowned founder installed since 1843, No. 29 Sévigné Street in Paris, cast as soon as 1855 for the most wellknow masters of France sculpture, such A.E. Carrier-Belleuse (Le Zouave), J. Pradier (Les Trois Grâces, Vénus consolant l’Amour) or J.B. Carpeaux since 1875 (L’Enfant au cor), as well as the famous Parisian silversmith Christofle. Colin used to stamp his bronzes of the mention "Emile Colin & Cie" from 1882 until 1898. That mark became later "M. Colin & Cie" from 1898 until 1906, then "Ancienne Maison Colin, ie Jollet & C " from 1906 until 1923. Worldwide renowned, Emile Colin sent to the Chicago Universal Exhibition of 1893 bronze works of art, with among them, ormolu mounted marble urns and clocks. The Colin Company counted then at the turn of the century among the greatest bronze-casters at the sides of Barbedienne, Susse and Siot-Decauville.

The «Compagnie des marbres Onyx d’Algérie» (19th century)

The «Compagnie des marbres Onyx d’Algérie», led by G. Viot and named also «The Algerian OnyxMarbles Co.», refering to the quarries of onyx the firm exploited near Oran, set up Boulevard des Italiens N.24, in Paris. Founded in the middle of the 19th century, that firm remained opened until the beginning of the 20th century. Onyx, although known since antiquity was not rediscovered until 1849 in Oran Province, Algeria, by Delmonte, a marble worker and fully exploited by Pallu in the late 1850’s. The firm G. Viot & Cie produced, after models created by the most well-known sculptors, such as Cordier, Cornu and Carrier-Belleuse, luxuous furniture and art objects, incorporating onyx marbles and bronze, which awarded Viot medals at the various exhibitions, such the Gold Medal at the 1867 Paris Universal Exhibition.

Charles Cordier (1827-1905)

Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier entered the Paris School of Fine Arts in 1846, and then left in order to study under the famous sculptor François Rude (1784-1855). His first success with the bust of a Sudanese at the 1848 Salon was explained by Cordier himself in the following manner: "My subject was new and fashionable; The revolt against slavery and anthropology... , I renovated the value of sculpture and innovated the study of different races, thus enlarging the circle of beauty". Two years later, encouraged by the reception given his work, he executed The African Venus. These two bronzes were bought by Queen Victoria at the 1851 Universal Exhibition in London. The French government commissioned replicas for the anthropological gallery of the Natural History Museum in Paris which wished to inaugurate an ethnographical gallery to present different racial types. Cordier therefor began to constitute a collection of sculptures and in 1856 he requested a mission to Algeria in order to reproduce the various morphologies: Kabyles, Jews, Moors, Arabs, Berbers and Negroes; some in marble and others in bronze. This voyage was of capital importance to his work, not only in the mixture of art and ethnology but also in that he discovered marble and onyx quarries exploited since ancient times. It should be noted that alongside these documentary and naturalistic expeditions, the imperial couple Napoleon III and Eugenie, aristocrats as well as the wealthy high society in search of exotism, look especially to see the picturesque, wealth and sensuality that emerg from these multi-ethnic cultures.

Eugène Cornu (1827-1899)

The sculptor Eugène Cornu worked closely with G. Viot and Cie, set up Boulevard des Italiens N. 24, in Paris. They produced luxurious furniture and art objects, incorporating onyx marble and bronze, with sometimes enamel, a combination then considered as a novelty and become quickly highly prized among wealthy collectors. They both showed at the 1867 Universal Exhibition held in Paris a fine pair of onyx, bronze and enamel vases (signed "G. Viot et Cie, Exposition de 1867, Eugène Cornu Inventeur"; Catalogue Officiel de l’Exposition, groupe III, classe XIV, "meubles de luxe", n°65) for which Cornu and Viot won the Gold Medal (Rapports du Jury International, Exposition Universelle de 1867 à Paris, 1868, t. III, groupe III, classe XV, chapître II, § 2, p°45 & 46).

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Joseph-Désiré Court (1797-1865)

Joseph-Desire Court, French painter of history and portraits, entered the local art school in Rouen, where he was noticed by rapid progress. He then passed into the studio of the famous painter Antoine-Jean Gros (1871-1835), from whom he learned the power of color. Wishing above all to visit Rome to complete his art education, Court won the Grand Prize in 1821 for his painting Samson handed over to the Philistines by Delilah (preserved at the Fine Arts School of Paris). From Rome he sent to the Paris Salons to be exhibited, Death of Caesar in 1824 (Fabre museum in Montpellier), what knew a considerable impact and was acquired by the French State, then The Flood in 1827 (Fine Arts museum in Lyon). In 1828, the Rouen Arts Academy commissioned him a large painting to decorate the newly built assembly hall: with Corneille welcomed at the theater by the Great Condé, Court was awarded a gold medal. The French government in 1830 ordered a decoration contest for the new hall of the Chamber of Deputies and Court there won for the second topic. This academic painter trained at neoclassical masters is characterized by its smooth and perfect technique, his mastery of drawing, as well as the harmony and balance color and composition. He had a special talent for portrait and the orders flooded in his studio, including those from sovereigns, such as King LouisPhilippe, his sister Madame Adelaïde, the King and Queen of Denmark, the Tsar Nicolas I of Russia and Pope Pius IX. Joseph-Desire Court got the Legion of Honour in 1838. Returning to his hometown, he in 1853 was appointed curator of the Fine Arts musuem in Rouen. He exhibited nevertheless regularly at the Paris Salon until 1863.

Manufacture of Creil Montereau (18th- 20th centuries)

In order to compete with the English production, the Creil (Oise) and Montereau (Seine-et-Marne) manufactures began producing "English style" white paste earthenware as soon as the 18th century. At Montereau, English potters refugees in France shared their skills with Louis Leboeuf (1792-1854). Under the Second Empire, technical innovations, added to the enthusiasm of the middle classes in the decorative arts, provided a production of fine standard, more accomplished and more diverse. The white clay was then relayed by the opaque porcelain, then whiter, harder and tougher. With the merger of Manufactures of Montereau and Creil in 1840, Lebeuf went into partnership with Milliet (marks "Lebeuf Milliet and Co." from 1840 to 1874, followed by "Lebeuf and Co." from 1875 to 1876). Both partners were constantly seeking to discover new and various techniques and patterns of decoration. This golden age lasted until the early 20th century as the economic crisis appeared. A restructuring process was started and Montereau was preferred to Creil. The takeover by the Choisy Manufacture in 1920 continued the mass production until 1955, when Montereau definitely closed down its workshops.

Charles Cressent (1685-1768)

Charles Cressent, famous French cabinet-maker and sculptor. He was taught by his father, François Cressent, a sculptor in Amiens, and became a maître ébéniste on 9 January 1708. He subsequently became a pupil of François Girardon and became a maître sculpteur in the Académie de Saint-Luc, Paris, on 14 August 1714. He obtained the title of Ebéniste du Régent in 1719, which allowed him to trade as a cabinet-maker free from guild restrictions. The richest French patrons, the Portuguese Court and many German princes bought furniture from him. His work is of exceptional quality and epitomizes the Régence and early Louis XV styles, to which he remained faithful throughout his career. The forms of his pieces were perfectly curved and rendered sumptuous by abundant, virtuoso bronze mounts and emphatically serrated agraffe ornaments and mouldings. His lavish mounts to some extent obscured the restrained veneering or geometric marquetry, for which he almost always used rose-wood, purplewood or satin-wood. Above all, however, he was a sculptor, and he contravened guild restrictions by modelling the bronzes that adorn his furniture himself.

Charles Cumberworth (1811-1852)

Charles Cumberworth was the son of an English officer and a French mother, arriving in Paris at his early age. Student of the sculptor James Pradier (1790-1852), he joined the Fine Arts School in 1829 and won the Rome grand prize in 1842, but he was disqualified because of his no French nationality. Cumberworth exhibited at the Paris Salon of living artists from 1833 to 1848, mostly busts of women and children as well as allegorical statues of classical style.
 He made the statues of Queen Marie-Amélie (1842) and the Duke of Montpensier (1847). As many artists, Charles Cumberworth signed a contract as early as 1837 with the Susse brothers company, one of the greatest bronze editors-founders of the time.

Albert Louis Dammouse (1848-1926)

Albert Louis Dammouse was a French sculptor, designer and ceramist, who worked as his father sculptor Pierre-Adolphe Dammouse (1817-1880) at the Sèvres porcelain Manufacture. He first received training in the workshop of the sculptor François Jouffroy (1806-1882) where he made sculptures for the Louvre palace. From 1863 to 1868, he studied at the École Nationale des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, then studied at the École des Beaux-Arts. He began to expose at the Salon of 1869 with a plaster bust. In 1871, he founded a workshop in Sèvres and kept it until his death in 1926. There, he made and decorated porcelain pieces as well as stoneware and earthenware. He exhibited at the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1878, where he met a huge success and won a gold medal at the Universal Exhibition of 1889.

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Henry Dasson (1825-1896)

Henry Dasson, as a cabinet-maker and bronze-caster, executed in his Paris workshop sumptuous copies of royal 18th century models and some pieces of his own modified 18th century design. For his pieces of furniture, he used the very finest ormolu mounts with high quality mercurial gilding. He mainly produced in the Louis XV and Louis XVI style. His participation at the Paris 1878 Universal Exhibition was highly remarked with a Louis XVI style table, all made of bronze and considered as a "chasing masterpiece", and a copy of the famous King Louis XV desk (original piece exhibited at Versailles), which was also admired by critics. At the 1889 Universal Exhibition, he won a "grand Prix" for his outstanding furniture. Dasson closed down his business in 1894.

Théodore Deck (1823-1891)

The renowned ceramist Théodore Deck, born in Guebwiller in 1823, made his apprenticeship in the Hügelin earthenware factory in Strasbourg. After a European tour of initiation he arrived in Paris in 1847. He made his first public appearance in 1861 at the Parisian Arts and Industry Salon where he won a silver medal for the works he exhibited. His reputation thus assured, Deck became profoundly influenced by the Japanese style, which was very fashionable at the time. He adopted the naturalistic oriental motifs with great precision. Emile Reiber (1826-1893) chief designer for Christofle, also made sketches for Deck. The fame he merited through long hours of work was assured by his success at Universal Exhibitions in which he participated: Vienna in 1873 where all his rivals were left far behind; Paris in 1878 where he won the Grand Prize for his portraits on gold backgrounds. Showered with praise by the critics at the Central Union of Decorative Arts Exhibition in 1874, the "Gazette des Beaux Arts" (Paris,1874, vol. XXXV, p. 310) reported that "Mr. Deck, master of masters is the greatest glory of French ceramics". His life was devoted to the amelioration of earthenware technology by a succession of achievements. He thus improved the rending of colours, one of which, a new turquoise blue, became known as "Bleu de Deck". Theodore Deck had talent and he knew it. He did not keep it to himself however, but shared it with others and helped to promote young artists who lacked means. He thus became an example for the renaissance of ceramic art during the second half of the 19th century. All his techniques were made public and circulated in a book on earthenware. His Genius recognized and promoted to the grade of "Officier de la Légion d’honneur" he was nominated director of the Sèvres Porcelain Factory in 1887.

Eugène Delaplanche (1836-1891)

The sculptor Eugène Delaplanche was a pupil of Francisque Duret (1804-1865), gained the Prix de Rome in 1864 (spending 1864-67 at the Villa Medici in Rome). He was a very talented artist, much appreciated under the Second Empire. His best work is naturalistic, but at the same time classical, dignified and simple in line, and shows sound mastery of technique. With some of his colleagues, he was against the Realism artistic movement. Delaplanche exhibited several times at the Salon of the French artists in Paris, such in 1877, and obtained the Medal of honour in 1878.

Guillaume Denière (1815-1903)

The bronze-caster Guillaume Denière was the pupil of the famous ornementalist Aimé Chenavard (17981838) and of the architect Henri Labrouste (1801-1875). In 1844, Denière succeeded his father in the family workshop, established in 1804, at 15, rue Vivienne in Paris. The business was at this time prosperous and four hundred workers worked to satisfy the numerous commissions from King Louis-Philippe and the upper classes. He made bronze furnishings, candelabras and centrepieces. He collaborated with a number of artists, amongst whom Carrier-Belleuse (1848-1913) and Constant Sévin (1821-1888). He turned out several clocks for the Tuileries Palace in 1852, as well as a ‘globe’ clock with rotating dials for the Grand Salon of the Château of Bagatelle. Denière’s work was very often remarked upon at the Universal Exhibitions, so much so in fact that the Emporer Napoleon III bought, at the Paris Exhibition of 1867, a clock set. His renown was by this point international. Amongst his most prestigious commissions, Denière produced 1854 a spectacular bronze centrepiece for the Russian ambassador, Kisselef, and decorative bronzes for the Viceroy of Egypt, Saïd Pacha, as well as railings for the Throne Room for the King of Cambodia, Norodom I, in 1862. At the 1889 Universal Exhibition G. Denière won a gold medal.

Charles-Guillaume Diehl (1811-1885)

Arriving in Paris in about 1840 Charles-Guillaume Dieh founded his cabinet making and decoration firm at 19 rue Michel-le-Comte in 1885. His workshops produced elegant little pieces of furniture in rosewood and thuja and novelties with bronze and porcelain embellishments (see "Les ébénistes du XIXème siècle",D. Ledoux-Lebard, Ed. de l’amateur, 1982, p.164). It was his luxury boxes, however (liqueur cellarettes, cigar cabinets, games boxes, cashmere cases, jewelry cases) which assured Diehl’s renown (see "l’Art en France sous le Second Empire", Exposition Grand-Palais, Paris, 1979, p.133). Already rewarded with a bronze medal at the Universal Exhibition of 1855 in Paris, he exhibited a jardinière with china columns and a liqueur cabinet at the Industrial Arts Exhibition in 1861.In collaboration with the designer Jean Brandely (active from 1867 until 1873), Diehl renovated his decorative repertory and created astonishing pieces of furniture in the Grecian style which had a dazzling success at the Universal Exhibition in Paris in 1867, where his cabinets also won a silver medal. Certain motifs were so typical of Diehl’s work that they received extensive commentary by the art critic J. Mesnard in his book "Les Merveilles de l’Exposition Universal de 1867" (vol. II, pp. 133 & 149). He writes of a table of which "the pendant bearing hooks and the fan shaped radiating motif which ornaments the entablature are engraved with love " (p. 133) and a jewelry case where "The head in fine Grecian style makes up the essential part of the fine gilt bronze ornementation" (p. 149). For this Universal Exhibition Diehl also formed a partnership with two famous sculptors: Emile Guillemin (1841-1907) who carved the relief for a mahogany sideboard with galvanic gilt bronzes (Orsay 258


Museum, Paris, Inv. O.A.O. 992) and Emmanuel Frémiet (1824-1910) who executed the low relief for a cedar medal cabinet with marquetry and silver plated bronzes (Orsay Museum, Paris, Inv. O.A. 10440). Diehl was again rewarded with a medal of honour at the Union Central Exhibition of 1869 and a progress medal at the Universal Exhibition in Vienna in 1873 (Sideboard in blackened pear wood and lemon wood with galvanic bronzes, designed by J. Brandely with a low relief by E. Guillemin, Orsay Museum, Paris, Inv. O.A.O. 336). Showered with praise by the critics, Diehl is considered as one of the most innovating artists of the 19th century. His final appearance was at the 1878 Universal Exhibition in Paris where he presented outside the competition, his most recent creations, including a work table in marquetry which with its naturalistic grasshopper motif anticipated "Art Nouveau" (Musée de l’École de Nancy, Nancy).

maison Dienst (19th century)

The Dienst company practiced in Paris, No.58 rue du Faubourg-Saint-Antoine from 1836 and subsequently to No.38, 29 and 86 until 1871. Eugène Dienst took over in 1871 his father’s furnishing firm, then with the sign «To the King of Siam» and executed there complete furnishings of various styles until the late 19th century. As a talented interior designer, he participated in the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1889 where he won a gold medal. He presented there among other furniture, «A Louis XV bed, of a very distinguished and charming design, a Renaissance fireplace and some nice seats». The jury of the exhibition honoured Eugène Dienst and reported that they regretted that «Mr Dienst doesn’t have recalled us that he was a talented cabinet-maker as well as a sculptor».

Gustave Doré (1832-1883)

Gustave Doré was a French illustrator, engraver, painter and sculptor, born in Strasbourg in 1832 and dead in Paris in 1883. He was internationally recognized during his lifetime especially through his many book illustrations like the Works by Rabelais or The Divine Comedy by Dante. Gustave Doré also excelled in sculpture, as evidenced by his bronze mirror with cherubs made in 1877 (now in the museum of the Royal Monastery of Brou in Bourg-en-Bresse, France), The Fates and Love presented at the Salon of 1871, or Glory introduced in 1878 which had received a laudatory article by Paul de Saint-Victor. At the Paris Universal Exhibition held in 1878, Gustave Doré showed a huge vase of 2.90 meters, named Le Poème de la Vigne on which a cascade of putti makes a stunning work. Cast in bronze by Thiébault Frères in 1882, this vase dedicated to winemakers was presented at the Universal Exposition in Chicago in 1893 and San Francisco in 1894 where it was bought by businessman Michael Henry de Young (still exposed in the de Young Museum in San Francisco). The achievement of Doré’s short career as a sculptor is undoubtedly the monument to the memory of his friend Alexandre Dumas (located Place du Général Catroux, Paris). Gustave Doré said of this work that it was the greatest effort of his life and did not accept any money for it. Gustave Doré has left a considerable number of works. Henri Leblanc has identified in his catalog 9850 illustrations, 526 drawings, 283 watercolors, 133 paintings and 45 sculptures.

Edouard Drouot (1859-1945)

Edouard Drouot began his career as a painter, and soon devoted himself to sculpture. He studied in Paris in the studio of Emile Thomas (1817-1882) and then Mathurin Moreau (1822-1912), who taught him how to sculpt in a very academic style corresponding to the taste of the time. Exhibiting at the 1889 Paris Salon, Edouard Drouot asserted his style and his skill in sculptures mainly cast in bronze. He sculpted only one large sculpture, The Amateur, a marble work presented at the 1893 Salon, and then at the Universal Exhibition of 1900 where he received an honorable mention. Drouot focused in his work on movement and expression through his figures posing with precarious balance, giving them much grace. He found his subjects in a wide repertoire plenty of genre, sport and Orientalist scenes. But the theme in which the artist excelled was the representation of mythological figures making him a leading figure of the sculpture of the late 19th and early 20th century.

Paul Dubois (1827-1905)

Paul Dubois entered the Paris Beaux-Arts School in 1858. He exhibited at the 1865 Salon the Chanteur Florentin, illustrating Florentine sculpture, observed after his journey in Italy. This work, cast that time in silvered bronze, was exhibited at the 1867 Paris Universal Exhibition (now preserved at the Orsay museum). Dubois’ success brought him many commissions, both private (Portrait of Duc d’Aumale) and public (Jeanne d’Arc, in Reims). Appointed curator at the Luxembourg museum in 1873, Dubois became also a member of the Institute and finally headmaster at the Beaux-Arts School in 1878.

Gervais Durand (1839-1920)

The cabinet-maker Gervais Durand participated in the 1889 Universal Exhibition where he was awarded a silver medal. A. Picard’s exhibition report stated that, "Mr Durand, cabinet-maker, as skilful as modest, displays for the first time very fine furniture, which has been designed and made by him. He is walking in the footsteps of giants such as Beurdeley and Dasson". Durand made almost exclusively reproductions of 18th century masterpieces.

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Ferdinand Duvinage (1823-1876)

As early as 1863, Ferdinand Duvinage was a dealer of paintings and fans. In 1867, he teamed up with Alphonse Giroux for running the company installed Boulevard des Capucines. This partnership allowed him to label "Maison Giroux Paris" and then "Ancienne Maison Giroux" on his works mounts. On 6 May 1874, Ferdinand Duvinage filed a first patent for "a kind of mosaic inlaying made of partitioned metal to be used on furniture and art objects". This patent filed by Duvinage is really original. The process he invented is "the combined meeting of ivory as background, stained or exotic woods used for ornaments, and copper or other metal to partition ivory". The ivory is intended to form the bottom and is hollowed to "insert the wooden mosaic" and the son of copper. These, in most cases, represent the branches and stems of plants. The first patent is complemented by two additions. Indeed, in February 1876, Duvinage imagined replacing ivory by imitating wood, such as boxwood. A few months later, in November 1876, he offered further to enrich the decoration of ivory partitioned furniture and objects by adding "applied metal or other material depicting birds, animals, shrubs, flowers, foliage, fruit, etc.., inlaid with pearls and precious stones". This type of ornamentation was however little used by Duvinage, most of the time, his productions were confined to the technique described in the first patent. The Japanese style decors were always associated with nature, with birds and plants. In 1876, Rosalie Duvinage named "the Duvinage widow" took over the business after the death of her husband and took a patent in 1877 for a marquetry of Japanese inspiration, adding pearl decoration to the previous patent. We do not until now know any furniture, object or panel with pearl decoration. Signed works embellished with these designs were first exhibited to great acclaim at the 1878 Paris Universal Exhibition (D. Kisluk-Grosheid, "Maison Giroux and its 'Oriental' Marquetry Technique", Furniture History: The Journal of The Furniture History Society, 1998, Vol. 34). Directed then by A. Philippe and E. Arnut from 1883 until 1884, the Giroux company closed definitively down in 1885.

George Richards Elkington (1800-1865)

The great Birmingham firm of Elkingtons, was largely the creation of George Richards Elkington (18001865), who worked from 1824 in Birmingham as a manufacturer of silver-mounted scent bottles. By 1829 the business had expanded sufficiently for a branch to have been established in London. In the late 1830’s the Elkingtons began making experiments to apply the principles of electro-metallurgy to gilding and plating with silver and in 1840 the patent was at last taken out. Elkingtons owed their rise to a position amongst the most important silversmiths of the country to their exploitation of this new process and the two of the most famous designers then emloyed, both of them French, Albert Wilms (1827-1899) and Morel-Ladeuil (1820-1888), who helped to make Elkingtons’ reputation with their elaborate exhibition pieces.

L’Escalier de Cristal (19th century)

L’Escalier de Cristal, Parisian firm created about 1800 by Mme veuve Desarnaud, famous under the French "Restoration" for its decorative objects combining crystal and bronze. She was awarded a gold medal at the 1819 Paris Exposition des Produits de l’Industrie for an outstanding gilt-bronze mounted crystal dressing table. Located in Paris, at the Palais-Royal, Galerie de Valois, L’Escalier de Cristal was bought out around 1830 by Boin, and then by Lahoche in 1840. The company owed its rise to a position amongst the most important Paris decorative wares shops to Lahoche, who expanded considerably the business and entered later in partnership with his son-in-law to set up in 1852 Lahoche et Pannier. In 1872 Emile Pannier led alone the firm, and then his sons from 1885 to 1923, whom gave the name of Pannier Frères to the company, located at the corner of Scribe and Auber streets, next to the new built Paris Opera house. L’Escalier de Cristal suggesting also since the 1880’s furniture and art bronze pieces, was several times awarded medals at the various International Exhibitions held in Paris, London and New York, and for instance a gold medal at the 1900 Paris Universal Exhibition. Numerous artists, such Emile Gallé, Louis Majorelle and Gabriel Viardot worked for the L’Escalier de Cristal’s woldwide renown, and introduced then some of their greatest Japanese style creations (adorned with "cloisonné" enamels, Japanese motifs,…).

Gilbert Fabre (active around 1900)

Gilbert Fabre is listed at the turn of the 20th century among manufacturers of quality bronzes. They also produced many clocks and mantle decorations, whose works were manufactured by the wellknown Samuel Marti, installed Rue Charlot in Paris in 1860. Gilbert Fabre in 1919 sold his business to Chardon company, an art foundry from Belgium in 1878 then.

Alexandre Falguière (1831-1900)

Alexandre Falguière studied sculpture under Jouffroy at the Paris École des Beaux-Arts, began his career at the Paris Salon in 1857 and won as soon as 1859 the "Prix de Rome". Falguière became very quickly successful and was several times awarded medals at the Salon, such in 1868 with his marble sculpture Tarcisius the Christian Boy-Martyr, or at the 1867 Paris Universal Exhibition, where he won the first medal in his category. Thanks to that success, he was immediately commissioned by private collectors as well as by the French State, whom asked him in 1878 to realize the Triomphe de la République, placed in 1881 at the summit of the Paris Arch of Triumph (taken down in 1886). After having created in the conventional classical mould, Falguière turned his art to Realism, as shows this bust of Diana, very close in style to portraits of Parisian ladies. Falguière was considered as one of the inventors of Realism in sculpture, in the 19th century French school and was then awarded 1870 the Ordre national de la Légion d’honneur, France’s hightest official mark of recognition. 260


maison Fourdinois (founded in 1835)

The Fourdinois company was founded in 1835 by the cabinet-maker Alexandre-Georges Fourdinois (17991871). The Universal Exhibition held in London in 1851 was undoubtedly their first great artistic and public success. Winning the Great medal for a neo-Renaissance buffet triggered a competition among other cabinetmakers, as the press was unanimously greeting their success. His son Henri-Auguste (18301907) was taught design by the architect Duban, then by the silversmith Morel in London, before working with the bronze founder Paillard. He joined the firm in 1860. His talent and the high quality of his designs drew attention at the 1862 World Exhibition in London, where the jury awarded him two medals for "Excellence in Composition and Execution". Henri-Auguste, now sole in charge, brought the firm to the summit of its achievements at the 1867 Universal Exhibition in Paris by winning the Grand Prix (classes 14 and 15) as well as at the 1878 Exhibition. The 1862-1880 period marks truly the peak for the Fourdinois house, which remains for many cabinet-makers, whether French, English or American, an example to follow.

Charles-Auguste Fraikin (1817-1893)

Charles-Auguste Fraikin, the son of a notary, attended the Academy in Antwerp from 1829 to 1831 before receiving his diploma as a pharmacist in 1835. In 1836 he discovered the work of Guillaume Geefs (18051883), one of the greatest Belgian sculptors in the early 19th century, and decided to abandon pharmacy for sculpture. Pierre Puyenbroeck (1804-1884) noticed his talent and took him on in his studio. Fraikin was encouraged by the famous painter François-Joseph Navez (1787-1869), the director of the Brussels Royal Fine arts Academy, and studied there under Louis Jéhotte (1803-1884). He exhibited for the first time in 1839 in Brussels where, six years later, his Cupid held Captive won a gold medal and considerable success. Two versions in marble were ordered by King Leopold I for the Royal Fine arts Museums in Brussels, and by Grand Duchess of Russia for the Hermitage in Saint Petersburg. Fraikin was then during all his life honoured for his delicate and seductive classicism, awarding him much success and many private and official commands.

Gagneau (19th century)

Famous lighting manufacture established in Paris, participated in many exhibitions, such the Industry Products expositions since 1819, and received numerous awards throughout the 19th century. Appreciated by his contemporary fellows, G. Gagneau became part of the jury, in the category of art bronzes (Class 25) at the 1889 Paris Universal Exhibition.

François Gautier (19th century)

Francois Gautier founded his bronze workshop in 1850 and settled at 3, rue des Fosses-Montmartre in Paris. He was awarded a first-class medal in 1855 with table centrepieces, figure groups, statues, art and bronze furniture mounts. He exhibited again in 1862 and soon after sold his company to J. Albinet and G. Coulon, then installed at 4, rue de Choiseul in Paris, and specialized in bronze clocks and chimney clock sets. In 1874 they both exhibited bronze artworks, clocks and candelabras of various styles.

Adolphe-Victor Geoffroy-Dechaume (1810-1892)

French sculptor and silversmith, studies at the drawing free-program school before joining, in 1831, the Paris "École des Beaux-Arts". He will be David d’Angers’ and James Pradier’ pupil.

P. Girola (2nd part of the 19th century)

P. Girola is a worthy descendant of Stefano Girola, born in Milano in 1795. He was a student of Camillo Pacetti at the Academy of Fine Arts of Brera in Milan and was regarded in the 19th century as one of the best representatives of Neoclassicism in Lombardy. He participated in the sculptural decoration of the Dome from 1811 to 1861. P. Girola developed then his business in Milan, Viale Umbria 93.

Alphonse Giroux (active from 1799 until 1885)

Alphonse Giroux and Company, famous curiosity and luxury goods shop was situated at No. 7 rue du Coq-Saint-Honoré and in business from the time of the Consulate until the end of the Second Empire. The company was founded by Francois-Simon-Alphonse and continued in 1838 by his two sons, AlphonseGustave (1810-1886) and André (1801-1879). The father became a close associate of the royal family and specialized in the manufacture of refined items for gifts, winning a silver medal at the in 1834. Kings Louis XVIII and then Charles X were both supplied with gifts for "The Children of France" by Giroux. Making progressively small furniture, they were mentionned for the first time in 1837 in the class "cabinet-makers" in the Paris Almanach. It was Alphonse-Gustave, however, who really expanded the activities of the firm as is testified by the report of the jury at the 1839 Products of Industry Exhibition awarding him another silver medal. Alphonse was also quick to participate in the famous and soon figured among the best in the luxury goods business. After buying a writing desk at the 1855 Universal Exhibition Napoleon IIIrd bought several other pieces of furniture, candelabras and clocks from Giroux for the Compiègne Palace. In 1857 Alphonse Giroux transferred his shop to No. 43, boulevard des Capucines where he continued to do business until 1867, when he ceded the company to Duvinage and Harinkouck. 261


Oscar Gladenbeck (1850-1921)

Gladenbeck Hermann (1827-1918) was a bronze founder from Berlin, of international reputation in the 1850s. He led his company in 1880 with his four sons, Oscar (1850-1921), Alfred (1858-1912), Walter (1866-1945) and Paul (1869-1947) as the Gladenbeck & Son. Their bronze foundry produced many large pieces ordered by the State, as the monument to the memory of Emmanuel Kant and the Victory of the Victory Column in Berlin, modeled by Friedrich Drake. Gladenbeck is considered as the most important German foundry that produced monumental sculptures as well as small bronze pieces. The company ceased to be led by the family Gladenbeck in 1892, then ceased activity in 1911 following a bankruptcy.

Pierre Philippe Gouthière (1732-1813)

Pierre Philippe Gouthière is one of the masters of bronze crafting under the reign of Louis XVI. He was the master of Pierre Philippe Thomire.

Michele Grandville (1758-1836)

Few crafts have experienced the span of one century - the 19th - the splendor, recognition, and international diffusion that Tarsia Sorentia (Sorrento Inlay) enjoyed. The beginning of this enchanting art can be dated to the 1827 with the work of the Sorrentine Antonio Damora, who was summoned by Francis I of Bourbon to restore and furnish Naples Palazzo Reale (The Royal Court at Naples). Returning to Sorrento, Damora learned the wood inlaying techniques along with other artists, such as Michele Grandville, Luigi Gargiulo (1806-1883) and Guiseppe Maggiolini (1738-1814). They led the way for the production of inlay objects that won awards and medals, and reached half the world’s market in the mid-19th century. Important patrons of the arts such as Ferdinand of Bourbon and Pope Pius IX contributed to the growth of the Sorrentine inlay industry. The main subject of decoration used in Michele Grandville’s production, is the Neapolitan customs represented during the various scenes of everyday life, drawn from the prints by Gaetano Dura (1805-1878), as well as genre scenes inspired by antique Pompeian paintings. Unlike other inlay works in its use of different colored woods, Sorrentine inlay based its chromatic effects on the play of the tonal contrasts of two local woods: walnut and orange at first, and then olive and some other imported woods. But the reason for the high artistic value of Sorrentine inlay is its absolute independence from contemporary forms of inlay work. The initial technique of mosaic-like inlay evolved into painting with watercolors on the wood design, known as "enamel on wood", although the inlay work was still performed with gouges and saws.

Jean-Louis Grégoire (1840-1890)

Jean-Louis Grégoire studied sculpture with Jean-Jules Salmson (1823-1902). Since 1867, he exhibited portraits of contemporaries as well as mythological works at the Salon of Paris, where he won a honorable mention, and later at the Salon of the French Artists. After the 1870 war, Grégoire was several times commissioned for patriotic subjects, such L'Alsace (1874), La Lorraine or La Défense du drapeau (1888).

Guillaume Grohé (1808-1885)

Guillaume Grohé settled down as a cabinet-maker in Paris in 1827 with his brother Jean-Michel and started a company making and selling furniture and art objects, which became famous very quickly. They took part in the 1834 "Exposition des Produits de l’Industrie Française". In 1849 he was awarded the "Légion d’honneur" and later officer. His reputation is mainly based on a style furniture specialisation. He was one of the most well-known cabinet-makers at his time, providing King Louis-Philippe, Emperor Napoleon the IIIrd and Empress Eugénie, princes and princesses, even Queen Victoria in Great-Britain after 1862. He naturally participated in many different exhibitions and was jury member in Universal Exhibitions.

Emile Guillemin (1841-1907)

A leading Parisian sculptor of the period, Emile Guillemin began his career at the 1870 Salon of French Artists. He participated in various Exhibitions where he was awarded honors and medals. The quality of his chasing was highly acclaimed because of its realistic effects: accurate costuming, minute detailing and expressive faces. Most of his works, made in bronze and cast in different sizes were inspired by exotic subjects, such as biblical heroes, conquistadors and above all life-like Oriental figures.

Eugène Hazart (19th century)

Eugène Hazart entered the "Réunion des Fabricants de Bronze" in 1839. Well-known since 1843 in the making of ancient style reproductions, not only with his Gothic and Renaissance style bronzes but also very at ease in the 18th century style. He was definitely well apreciated because his presence in 1884 in the Pannier brothers’s bronze-casters booklet. The Pannier brothers managed beautifully the so-famous house "A l’Escalier de Cristal", which took place at the Palais-Royal in Paris and was selling porcelain and cristal objects as well as furniture. This company drew attention to his work during its participations in the 19th century "Expositions des Produits de l’Industrie".

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Emile Hébert (1828-1893)

Emile Hébert studied sculpture with his father and the renowned artist Feuchère. He participated in all major exhibits, such the Salon of the French Artists from 1846 to 1893 with busts and mythological subjects, or the Paris Universal Exhibitions. At the 1867 Universal Exhibition, Hébert was awarded a gold medal for having collaborated on the clock described above (Exposition Universelle 1867, Groupe III, Classe 25, catégorie des bronzes d’art) with Georges Servant (1828-c.1890), whom had a foundry, rue Vieille-duTemple, in Paris, specialized in neo-Greek and neo-Egyptian style clocks. Hébert participated with equal success at the 1878 Universal Exhibition, where he won once again a gold medal for some other Egyptian style objects. The report of the jury (Exposition Universelle de 1878, Rapport sur les bronzes d’art, Groupe III, Classe 25, p.26) noticed, that "the chasing by Hébert is under perfect control and always appreciated by artists". His antique style figures, Greek, Roman or Egyptian, are some of his most popular works following the tradition of ethnographic decorative sculpture in late 19th century France. Hébert became also renowned for having sculpted two allegories, La Comédie and Le Drame, for the façade of the Paris "Vaudeville" Theater.

Nicolas Heurtaut (1720-1771)

Nicolas Heurtaut learnt woodcarving in his father’s carpentry workshop. In 1742 he became a "maître sculpteur", and in 1753 "maître menuisier" for chairs. Nicolas Heurtaut worked within different styles, between the Louis XV and the Louis XVI period. He realized many pieces of furniture, but specialized mainly in sittings. Among the 18th century chairs production, his works showing great technical mastery, are considered to be unsurpassed.

Henri Houdebine (active since 1845)

The bronze-caster Henri Houdebine founded his company in 1845. He gained a great reputation in the making of clocks and decorative bronze pieces. His works, appreciated for their high artistic quality, took inspiration from various styles, including the neo-Greek style, very fashionable with artists in the 1860s. His work was immediatedly successful with the public, and one can say from 1862, that 50% of his production was exported. Houdebine set up his workshops at number 64, rue de Turenne, in Paris during the period 1865-1880. He participated magnificently in several Universal Exhibitions, such those held in Paris in 1855, where he was awarded a 2nd class medal for his statuettes and display cups, in London in 1862, and again in Paris in 1878 and 1889, where he won a Gold medal for his all the works he exhibited. Houdebine participated finally in the Chicago Universal Exhibition of 1893, where he presented splendid cressets, clocks and some sculptures.

Henry Paul Hudelet (1849-1878)

Born in Langres in 1849, Henry Paul Hudelet entered the drawing school of his town in 1864 and continued his training at the Paris Fine Arts School in 1866, where he studied under the direction of the sculptor Augustin Dumont (1801-1884). Hudelet presented in the Fine Arts contest of 1867 a Mercury and an academy made after the antique, then two further works in the contest of 1869 with Achilles and a Bacchante playing with a panther. Hudelet exhibited at the Salon of the French artists in 1876 and 1877. That same year, he competed for the Grand Prix de Rome with a bas-relief of Fishermen finding the head of Orpheus on the banks of the Hebrus, molded to expense of the State (now in the Museum of Art and History of Langres) and the statue of The dice player. This talented artist died prematurely as he was about to compete once again for the Prix de Rome in 1878.

Pierre Nicolas Huilliot (1674-1751) Coming from a famous family of painters, he learns from his father, Claude Huilliot, a very well known still-life painter. In 1722 he is elected at the "Académie Royale de Peinture". During his prestigious career, he works for the royal entourage in Versailles, Fontainebleau and Compiègne. This fecund artist paints with great taste the most simple subjects, such as animals, flowers, fruits or decorative landscapes. From 1737 to 1750, his still-life paintings, allegories and decorations are exhibited at the "Salon". Georges Jacob (1739-1814)

After having been received Master in 1765, Georges Jacob worked from 1773 to the French Revolution for the Crown Furniture Repository. Its clientele was the most brilliant with Louis XVI and Queen MarieAntoinette, the royal family, especially the Count of Provence, future Louis XVIII, the Count of Artois, future Charles X, the Prince of Condé, the Duke of Penthièvre as well as foreign courts. In 1785 he created the first mahogany chairs, called «British chairs», for the Count of Provence. He launched the Etruscan style in 1788 by delivering «Etruscan» carved mahogany furniture for the dairy of the castle of Rambouillet. He also participated in the furnishings of the Petit Trianon at Versailles. Georges Jacob spent the revolutionary period without being harassed thanks to the famous painter David. He retired in 1796, leaving his workshop to his sons Georges Jr. and François-Honoré, who created the company Jacob Brothers at Meslée Street, making Directoire and Consulate style furniture and seating. Because of their success, George interrupted retirement to help his sons to supply the imperial residences of Napoleon I. François-Honoré added the name of Desmalter, after the death of his father, in memory of the family estate in Burgundy.

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Jean-Baptiste-Jules Klagmann (1810-1867)

The sculptor Jean-Baptiste-Jules Klagmann worked throughout his career in both a monumental scale, in marble and bronze sculpture, and on a smaller scale for goldsmiths. In 1828 he entered the École des BeauxArts (France’s leading, national fine arts academy), where he was taught by Jean-Jacques Feuchère (18071852). Feuchère introduced Klagmann to the art of the Renaissance with his decorative repertory. Klagmann made his debut at the Salon of 1831 and the French state as soon as 1841 commissioned him to execute the decoration of the doors of the Salle de Séances at the Senate. At the same time Klagmann was involved, alongside Feuchère, in the commission for a centrepiece from the Duc d’Orléans in 1834 and then cast by Jean-François Denière (1774-1866), now preserved at the Paris Decorative arts Museum (Inv. 18273). Klagman thus realised large decorative figures for a variety of Parisian buildings, theatres and the Louvre palace, recently enlarged by the Emporer Napoleon III, and continued to provide models for goldsmiths such as François-Désiré Froment-Meurice (sword of the Comte de Paris), François Durand (vase given by the Duc d’Orléans to the Goodwood races) and of course Charles Christofle (Isaac Pereire’s centerpiece, 1862). However, J.-B. Klagmann also produced first-rate works in collaboration with bronze-casters such as Guillaume Denière. In 1848, Klagmann was nominated for the council of the Gobelins, Beauvais and Sèvres manufactories and was also one of the founders of the Central Union of the Arts Applied to Industry.

maison Krieger (2nd half of the 19th century)

The Krieger firm began with Antoine Krieger (1804-1869) the cabinet-making activity in the middle of the 19th century, before setting an important inner decoration department which provided much success and prestige to the company until about 1945. The Krieger firm made all sketches and designs in all kind of styles, ancient or contemporary. About one thousand workers were employed at n°74-76 Faubourg-Saint-Antoine Street in Paris, producing luxurious as well as standard furniture. But the making was always of very high quality with oakwood or selected mahogany cabinets decorated with finely chosen veneers. The Krieger firm won several medals among which a second-class medal at the 1851 Universal Exhibition of London and took part in further international exhibitions, such as the one held in Paris in 1855.

Lacarrière - Delatour (19th century)

It was at 3 bis rue Ste-Elisabeth that Lacarrière, a simple craftsman opened a workshop that was soon to specialise and to excell in the production of bronze lighting equipment. From 1834 to 1844 he was awarded several prizes. Lacarrière, Delatour & Cie after 1870 cast and carved the great majority of the lamps, candelabras and chandeliers of the Paris Opera Garnier, among which the chandelier in the concert hall, designed by Garnier himself and modeled by Corboz. At the 1878 Universal Exhibition, there was a special note in the catalogue declaring that: "their exhibition proves their craft to be very pure and precise, their taste very sure in bronzes used for interior lighting". Lacarrière, Delatour & Cie participated in the creation of the chandelier at the Queen’s Theatre in London. They also produced fourteen monumental candelabras for the Paris Alexandre III Bridge, which was an amazing feat at the time considering some of the pieces weighed up to 1470 pounds, and measured 14 ft. 9 in. with a diametre of 15 ft. 5 in.

Eugène-Armand Lachaise (1857-1925)

Born 1857 in New York, Eugène-Armand Lachaise went to Paris to study painting. Installed at N°84 Avenue des Champs-Elysées, he became the pupil of some renowned artists such as Gustave Boulanger (1824-1888) and Jules Lefebvre (1836-1911). Both of them taught painting at the famous Julian Academy, located on Dragon Street in Paris. That art school was founded in 1868 in reaction to the established "École des Beaux-Arts". The reference books mention a remarked participation of E.-A. Lachaise in the 1888 "Salon", at the Paris Industry Palace on the Champs-Elysées, with a painted portrait of M. Le Commandant G... Lachaise became later a prized member of the "Paris Society of American Painters", whose goal was to promote American artists not only in Paris but through worldwide exhibitions. In the 1880’s, the Japanese subjects by Lachaise take place in the general artistic movement much in fashion in France: Japonism (named also Aesthetic Movement), whose the French leader was indoubtedly Edouard Manet (1832-1883). Having learned painting under the direction of French artists and leading his successful career in Paris, E.-A. Lachaise was naturally considered as a French artist. He was even awarded Knight of the Légion d’honneur, and Officer in that national Order during World War I. Lachaise died in Paris in 1925.

Jules-Isidore Lafrance (1841-1881)

Jules-Isidore Lafrance was a sculptor, himself the son of a sculptor ornamentalist. He studied sculpture under the direction of Francisque Duret (1804-1865) and Jules Cavelier (1814-1894). He began to exhibit his work at the Salon of 1861 (Repentant Magdalene) and won the Prix de Rome in 1870 (Samson breaking ties). Back from Rome, where he was seriously ill, he sculpted Mathieu Molé, Portrait of Puget, St. John, Achilles. For the Pavillon de Flore, at the Louvre palace, he received a commission in 1876 to sculpt two allegorical figures, Law and Prudence. He obtained a first class medal in 1874 and won a medal at the Universal Exhibition of 1878.

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Lerolle Frères

Alphonse Lerolle was a well-known bronze-caster based in Paris. Succeeding his father, he worked in partnership with his brother as Lerolle Frères, and specialised in Antiquarian bronzes in the Renaissance, Louis XIII and Louis XIV taste. Besides their bronze cast production, they also as soon as 1850 produced electrotyped pieces and participated in the Exhibitions of Fine Arts applied to Industry. Lerolle Frères exposed mainly furnishing objects and few art bronze casts, but they were much applauded during the 1878 Paris Universal Exhibition for having presented among clocks and chandeliers those superb Indian figures sculpted by Charles Cordier.

Adolphe-Alexandre Lesrel (1839-1929)

Adolphe-Alexandre Lesrel entered 1861 the Paris fine Arts School, in the Jean-Léon Gérôme’s (18241904) studio, one of the greatest artists of the second half of the 19th century, then in the Jean-LouisErnest Meissonier’s (1815-1891) studio, an artist whose popularity extended throughout Europe and the United States. Adolphe-Alexandre Lesrel painted historical genre scenes with a romanticized view of the past, in the highly detailed and finished style of his master, adopting then his meticulous academic style characterized by adhering to a strict manner of painting, following narrow compositional rules and delicacy of color. The atmospheric effects are then sumptuously luminescent. Lesrel was known for historical accuracy with a highly detailed and polished style. His most often used realistic indoors subjects, much appreciated among his contemporaries, were jovial musketeers, courtly love and the frivolity of the upper classes mainly dressed in Louis XIII period costumes. Fabrics, gowns, objets d’art, furniture, all were researched to ensure the historical accuracy of his work. His subject matter and technical virtuosity of his brushwork ensures his continuing popularity. Lesrel exposed during many years one or two paintings at the famous Paris Salon of the Society of French Artists as soon as 1885 and of the National Fine Arts Society from 1890. Throughout his career, Lesrel won prices, medals as well as official awards. At the 1889 Paris Universal Exhibition, he was awarded a honorable mention. In 1907, Lesrel left Paris for Genêts, his native town. He died there in 1929.

Ferdinand Levillain (1837-1905)

Ferdinand Levillain tudied under the sculptor Jouffroy (1806-1882), before making his debut in 1861 at the French Artists Salon where he continued to exhibit until 1903. At the 1867 Universal Exhibition in Paris, he was praised for a Neo-Greek style bronze cup he made for the firm of Blot et Drouard. He was not to become really famous, however, until 1871 thanks to his association with the great bronze founder Ferdinand Barbedienne, who began to exhibit Neo-Greek style lamps, cups, vases and candelabras on his stands. Levillain was averwhelmingly triumphant at the 1878 Universal Exhibition in Paris, where he was unanimously awarded the gold medal for his creations in the Classical style. The famous bronze-caster Servant (1828-c.1890) declared in the report of the jury for Artistic Bronzes that the work of Levillain "chased like the finest jewels" and "so diverse and pure of form (…) are of the highest degree of perfection". After receiving a first class medal at the 1884 Salon for a cup entitled "The Elements, the Months and the Seasons", he went on to win a silver medal at the 1889 Universal Exhibition in Paris.

Michel Liénard (1810-1870)

Sculptor and designer. He worked among others for Cavaillé-Coll (1811-1899), famous organ maker (organs in Saint Vincent de Paul in Paris and in the Bayeux cathedral), for the silversmith F. D. Froment-Meurice (Madeleine church in Paris), as well as cabinet-makers Ringuet-Leprince (1801-1886) and Guillaume Grohé.

Edouard Lièvre (1829-1886)

Edouard Lièvre studied under the painter Thomas Couture (1815-1879), one of the more conspicuous artists in the circle of the Empress Eugenie. E. Lièvre soon devoted himself, however, to the art of furniture design. A talented ornamentalist, marked by the eclecticism typical of the Second Empire, Lièvre knew how to avail himself of skillful collaborators in order to create pieces in various styles: Renaissance, Louis 16th or Oriental, which last were part of the great artistic movement in fashion since the 1860’s: the Japanese style named also Aesthetic Movement. they recreated an imaginary Far East adapted to decorate Western reception rooms. As an Interior decorator Lièvre also matched his luxurious and refined furniture with bronzes, ceramics and even fabrics. This Oriental exoticism, which only the richest could afford, appealed to bankers, judges, artists and famous courtesans as well as the Royal and Princely families. After the death of Edouard Lièvre, the greater part of his models, sketches and cabinet designs were bought by art publishers such as "l’Escalier de Cristal" or by Ferdinand Barbedienne, thus giving them the right to reproduce Lièvre’s furniture with their own stamp (see "Ventes de la succession Lièvre", Hotel Drouot, 27 fevrier 1890).

François Linke (1855-1946)

François Linke, born in 1855 in Bohemia (Czechoslovakia), worked as a cabinet-maker in Paris from about 1882 until his death in 1946. In 1900, at the apex of his career, he opened a new shop at the famous Parisian place Vendôme. He specialized in Louis XV and Louis XVI style furniture: all pieces were beautifully mounted with gilt-bronze ornaments, and he received numerous commissions. Later Linke decided to collaborate with the well-known sculptor Léon Messagé and integrated new lines and shapes announcing the "Art Nouveau" style. His great success is definitely the 1900 Universal Exhibition where he was awarded the gold 265


medal for his extraordinary kingwood desk, designed by Messagé. At this occasion, the "Revue artistique et industrielle" commented that "Linke’s stand is the biggest show in the history of art furniture".

Jan Lopienski (1838–1907)

Jan Lopienski created a bronze workshop in Warsaw in 1862. He studied in Warsaw, Cracow, Vienna and Paris. He established his reputation with the Louis XVI style bronze balustrade commissioned for the palace of Count Jan Zawisza in Warsaw, which awarded him a silver medal at the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1878. Lopienski also executed numerous of great decorative pieces of great quality. Jan Lopienski had two sons, Grzegorz (1863-1939) and Felix (1866-1941), who took over their father’s business. They’ve been commissioned by the Polish State for many monuments, such in 1898, with the bronze cast of Adam Mickiewicz’ one.

Paul Louchet (1854 -1936)

Louchet Paul, born 1854, dead 1936, a French complete and gifted artist, worked at the beginning at chiselling bronze pieces, as shows the beautiful mount of this oriental vase. Much talented, he was then complimented by his contemporaries and became even President of the Bronze Manufacturers Society, located in Paris. Afterwards, he dedicated himself entirely to painting, studying under the direction of the academic painter Jules Lefebvre (1836-1911) and the landscape painter Henri Harpignies (1819-1916). Louchet exhibited his paintings, mostly landscapes, at the famous Paris "Salon". Critics admired his paintings: "Louchet’s works are delicate and secret, simply composed without glare nor emphasis". He was awarded 1896 member of the Paris Beaux-Arts Society. As a multi-talented artist (He was also a culptor and engraver), he was a close friend to the cabinetmaker Louis Majorelle (1859-1926), the glassmaker and jeweler René Lalique (1860-1945) and the Daum brothers. Man and his time, Paul Louchet was also the mayor of the town of Herblay (Seine et Oise) in 1887.

Lajos Markos (1917-1993)

The painter Lajos Markos was born 1917 in Marosvásárhely (Hungary). He was student at Fine Arts School of Budapest, where he was awarded the prestigious National Zrinyi Prix. During World War II he went to Italy, opened a workshop in Rome, then in Milano. He came in 1952 to the United States and quickly established himself in New York City as a major portraitist, with many of his subjects being celebrities such as John Wayne, Robert Kennedy, The Royal Family of King Hassan II and Pablo Casals. In his lifetime, Lajos Markos completed over 2,000 portraits. In the 1960s, he moved to Houston, Texas, where he expanded his interest to art of the American west.

Marnyhac et Cie (19th- 20th century)

Marnyhac et Cie was used as the commercial name for the Société des Marbres et Bronzes Artistiques de Paris (the Paris Marbles and Artistic Bronzes Society) which was established since the middle of 19th century in Paris, on the Opera avenue and then at N.1, rue de la Paix. Managed by Charles de Marnyhac, the bronzefoundry company specialized production of luxurious pieces as well as casts from models made by the greatest sculptors of the time, such as Jean-Baptiste Clésinger (1814-1883), Amédée Charron (1847-1937) and Eugène Despléchin (1852-1926). The Marnyhac firm was awarded a medal at the 1878 Universal Exhibition, and showed again their works at the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1900. The company closed down around 1910.

Emilio Marsili (1841-1926)

Emilio Marsili, a Venitian sculptor who was the pupil of the renowned artist Ettore Ferrari (1844-1929) at the Fine Arts Academy in Venice. As many Italian artists of his time, he spent a while in Paris and Brussels. Marsili knew then increasing success with his portraits as well as his sculpted memorials. He participated in the 1880 Turin Fine Arts Exhibition, then in the 1881 Milano Exhibition, where he exposed his famous Vocazione, which was awarded a medal. Marsili also showed his beautiful work at the various art fairs of Vienna in 1882 and again in Turin in 1884, where he presented low-relief plaques (Music, Architecture, Sculpture) among further sculpted busts (Snow, Do ré mi fa). He drew much consideration with the busts of Victor Emmanuel II (1879) and Garibaldi (1885), made for the town of Pordenone, as well as with the monument dedicated to Paolo Sarpi (1892) at Campo Santa Fosca, in Venice. In his native city of Venice, he executed the low-reliefs set in the Piétà Church and also decorated the Franchetti Palace. In Paris, Marsili participated in the 1889 Universal Exhibition, where he won a bronze medal. He exposed at the famous Venice Biennale as soon as 1895. Acclaimed by critics and awarded by jurys, Marsili is wellknown all over the world, from Paris to San Francisco. The greatest Italian modern art museums now show some of his works, such in Turin (The Pinafore dress, 1882), in Venice (Thought, Swallows), or at the Rome National Gallery of Modern Art with a bronze figural group (Maternity), exhibited first in Venice in 1887 with very much success.

Charles Stanislas Matifat (active since 1840)

Charles Stanislas Matifat studied under the direction of the silversmith Antoine Vechte. He then succeeded his father in 1840 at the head of the family business founded in 1820, whose workshops were located No. 9 rue de la Perle in Paris. Charles Matifat exhibited for the first time in his own name at the Paris Exhibition of Industrial Products in 1849, where the jury awarded him a silver medal. At the Universal Exhibition of 1851, taking place in the stunning Crystal Palace in London, Charles Matifat (No. 923 of the French section) presented among many pieces, this table entirely made of gilded bronze and a large Louis XIV style chandelier 266


commissioned by the king of Holland, William III, to his palace in The Hague. His show widely commented by critics earned him a second class medal. In 1853, Matifat who already had premises in London, participated in the Exhibition of Industrial Arts in Dublin. He worked a lot for the English nobility, such as Lord Londesborough who commissioned bronze candelabra. At the London Universal Exhibition of 1862, Matifat presented a chandelier made for the Duchess of Sutherland. In addition to his small scale art production, Charles Matifat also produced monumental bronze works after the great French sculptors models. He cast in 1860 the statue of the Marquis Dupleix, sculpted by Theodore Gruyère, then in 1873 the statue of General Daumesnil, sculpted by Louis Rochet. The same year, he made two important casts: The Abruzzo Child after the plaster sent from Rome by André-Joseph Allar and the Fountain of the Four Parts of the World created by JeanBaptiste Carpeaux and Emmanuel Frémiet in the Observatory gardens in Paris. During this period, Charles Matifat made several lampposts in the Grand Staircase of the new Opera recently built by Charles Garnier.

Léon Messagé (1842-1901)

Léon Messagé is ornemanist and designer. When drawing his ornaments, he related to the Rocaille asymmetry found in the sketchbooks of Nicolas Pineau or J. A. Meissonier, famous ornemanists of the first part of the 18th century. But even though Messagé found inspiration with these artists, he didn’t simply copy their work and showed great originality, even extravagance, with some designs contained in "Cahier des dessins et croquis style Louis XV". He realized numerous sketches on gray paper before the execution of a reduced or life sized model of his ornaments, made of wax or Terra Cotta. From 1885, Léon Messagé started working with important Parisian cabinet-makers such Joseph-Emmanuel Zwiener and François Linke. François Linke developed his personal style, with such talent and quality that he was named during the 1900 Universal Exhibition the "Linke Style". His tremendous success and his particular formal imagination came from his association with the designer Léon Messagé. The mutual influences concerning these three artists can be concretely observed in numerous realizations. Notably, the "Louis XV style régulateur surmounted by a motif representing Time", which was at first executed in Terra Cotta by Messagé. It was presented by Linke at the 1900 Universal Exhibition under the number 551.

Auguste Metgé (1883-1910)

The cabinet-maker Auguste Metgé followed courses at the École des Beaux-Arts in Toulouse from 1899 until 1903, and won a scholarship from the Regional Council in order to continue his art studies in Paris, where he finally exhibited sculptures and paintings at the Salon des French Artists in 1910. He took after the family entreprise, making seats and carved furniture in Sorèze (Southern France), and thanks to his education and talent, he gave a new impetus to the workshop, which quickly specialized in the artistic cabinet-making. Auguste Metgé created furniture and ensure their perfect realization. While performing his own drawings, woodworking and carving, his wife made on her own the inlay work after her husband’s compositions. The finely executed subjects took their source in the Sorèze landscape. Marked by the Great War (1914-18), Auguste Metgé withdrew gradually, responding to very few commands. His work include the bas-reliefs of the Memorials in Sorèze and Durfort, and a Christ for the Benedictine Abbey in En Calcat. Metgé was a member of the jury for the "Greatest France Craftsman", and was awarded the "Ordre National de la Légion d’Honneur", France’s hightest official mark of recognition.

maison Millet (active from 1853 until 1818)

The firm of Millet T. was founded in Paris in 1853. A very talented specialist in 18th century reproductions, Millet produced furniture and artistic bronzes of the highest quality. He was one of the few cabinet-makers to obtain authorisation from the Château de Versailles to make a replica of Queen Marie-Antoinette’s great jewel cabinet. As an artist of great merit he obtained the highest rewards such as the Gold medal at the Paris Universal Exhibition in 1889 and the Grand Prize at the Universal Exhibition of 1900. The photographic archives show, among some views taken in the Millet’s workshop and his parisian shop, the stand held by him during the Saint-Louis Universal Exhibition of 1904. Among Millet’s masterpieces then exposed, this chimney decoration is to be seen. The firm lasted until 1918.

Martha Darlay Mutrie (1824-1886) and Annie Ferray Mutrie (1826-1893)

Martha Darlay Mutrie and Annie Ferray Mutrie were born in Manchester in 1824 and 1826. Both were pupils of Georges Wallis at the Royal Academy of Manchester. They specialized in still life paintings of flowers and fruits. Between 1851 and 1882, they showed their work at the Royal Academy of Manchester and Royal Academy of London exhibitions. They were greatly appreciated by British high society ladies. They also participated in numerous Universal Exhibitions, held such in Paris in 1867. Martha Darlay Mutrie was rewarded at the exhibitions of 1855 in Paris, 1876 in Philadelphia, 1879 in Sydney and 1880 in Melbourne.

Victor Paillard (1805-1886)

Victor Paillard was one of the most distinguished bronze-casters in Paris during the second half of the 19th century. He was taught chasing by Guillaume Denière (1815-1903), then opened in the 1830’s his own workshop making "Art bronzes and Furnishing bronzes", settled n°105 boulevard Beaumarchais in Paris. He executed first small objects, then cast statuettes, candelabra, clocks as well as impressive sized torcheres. He appeared to the public for the first time at the Industrial Products Exhibition of 1839 and worked for the greatest French sculptors, such as Pradier, Barye and Carrier-Belleuse. He exhibited extensively with great success being

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mentioned for the quality of his work at the famous 1851 and 1862 London Universal Exhibitions, and the 1855, 1867 and 1878 Universal Exhibitions then held in Paris. Paillard was there celebrated by everyone for the exceptional quality of his work. Appointed a Chevalier of the "Légion d’honneur" by the French Government, Paillard employed since the 1850’s a hundred workers and proposed to his wealthy clients about four hundreds models, cast in bronze not only after famous sculptors’ works, but also after his own creations. It is especially interesting that his "Cherub" figures, such as those ones presented here were particularly singled out for their charm and popularity by commentators at both the 1862 and 1867 Universal Exhibitions. Burney Waring noted that they portrayed the "happy and innocent moods of childhood".

Paris Porcelain (18th - 19th century)

Since the discovery of kaolin, needed material for the making of porcelain, porcelain factories also called porcelain manufactures are on the increase in all France and naturally in Paris. Most of those manufactures worked in the 18th century under the protection of a member of the Royal family, such the comte de Provence, future Louis XVIII, who protected the Clignancourt manufacture. But during and the 19th century, numerous pieces did bear no making mark. It was then almost imposssible to attribute them to any particular Parisian factory, hence the expression "Paris porcelain" or "Vieux Paris" including all those various productions.

Henri Pernot (1859-1937)

Henri Pernot born in Gent (Belgium) in 1859, was naturalized French. He studied sculpture at the Fine Arts School in Brussels. He was a renowned sculptor, well reguarded during his lifetime. He set up his workshop in Paris, participating with success as soon as 1895 at the famous Paris Salon of the French Artists (Salon des Artistes Français), where he was awarded a "mention honorable" in 1897 with "the Wolf Trap", then a third class medal in 1904. He steadily attended this Salon where he was a member since 1906. He won in 1909 a second class medal with "Coquettery". H. Pernot also supplied beautiful models to the porcelain manufacture of Sèvres.

Jacob Petit (1796-1865)

The famous French porcelain artist Jacob Petit (1796-1865) owned one of the most important and wellknown porcelain factories in France, becoming one of the major producers of Rococo ornamental ware during the 1830s. He however didn’t attend to become a ceramist and began by studying painting under the painter Antoine-Jean Gros (1771-1835) and then travelled throughout Europe. England gave him a taste for ornamentation and back in France in 1830, he was quick to issue an interior design book including everything about furniture. Soon, it seemed china best way to express his taste and created a workshop at the Sèvres Manufacture. Jacob Petit (nickname composed of his first name Jacob Mardoché and his wife’s family name) started a business in Belleville (Paris). He then bought in 1838 the porcelain small Baruch Weill business located in Fontainebleau. This was so successful that Jacob Petit tripled the number of workers. In 1850, he gathered his two factories in Avon, and retired in 1862 at Paradise-Poissonnière street in Paris, giving his business to one of his workers named Jacquemain. Jacob Petit was imitated throughout Europe and his highly decorative porcelain was enormously popular in both England and France.

Raphaël Charles Peyre (1872-1949)

Raphaël Charles Peyre was born in Paris in 1872. He studied sculpture at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris with renowned sculptors Alexandre Falguière, Antonin Mercié and Théodore Barreau. He inherited the classical vocabulary, themes and emotional figures from which emerges grace combining flexibility with naturalist strength, which made thus him a brilliant French sculptor of the first half of the 20th century. During his career, Peyre regularly presented his work at the Paris Salon des Artistes Français where he is awarded several medals such at the 1902 and 1903 salons. He often worked with woman and childhood themes.

Henri Picard (active since 1831)

Henri Picard was established in Paris, 6 rue Jarente from 1831 to 1839 and then 10 rue de la Perle from 1840 to 1864. He worked on the Emperor Napoleon III’s apartments gilding at the Louvre Palace. His production was in a rich and fine style, like a Japanese style inkwell, or his Pompeian style dining table centerpieces.

Emile-Louis Picault (1833-1915) Emile-Louis Picault, brilliant pupil of the Flemish sculptor Louis Royer (1793-1868), exhibited numerous sculptures at the French Artists Salon from 1863 to 1909. His allegorical, biblical and mythological subjects (Perseus delivering Andromeda, Salon of 1880) are treated in a realistic style. Picault generally collaborated with the founders Colin, Houdebine and Susse, all three renowned for the quality of their casts. He also acquired an important popularity for his Egyptian subjects, cast then by Servant. The Picault’s Japanese style subjects are scarce, and there are above all his Greek subjects, presenting a high standard quality of sculpture, very realistic, which are much fashionable during the second half of the 19th century. 268


Jean Pillement (1728-1808) Jean-Pillement was born in a family of painters and was a student of Daniel Sarrabat in Lyon. Jean Pillement began to work at an early age for the Gobelins manufacture. He became official painter not only to Queen Marie-Antoinette of France but also to the King of Poland, Stanislas Auguste. During the artist’s journey in Vienna, his landscapes were in great demand by the Prince of Liechtenstein and also by a wide range of private clients in London, where he was an active and greatly popular member of the artistic society there. J. Pillement achieved success not only as a landscape painter but was also one of the most influential decorators of the 18th century. His chinoiseries, arabesques and flower paintings providing elegant leitmotives for furniture makers, tapestry weavers, and particularly in his old age, for the Manufacture de Soie et des Indiennes in Lyon, where he ended his distinguished career. Georges et Constantin Potheau (Late 19thcentury)

Georges and Constantin Potheau took over the cabinet-making company led by Charmois and Lemarinier, and installed their workshops at the n° 21, rue du Faubourg-Saint-Antoine in Paris. "Potheau Brothers" were quite renowned for their fine furnishings, simple but luxuruous. Remarked by the jury at the 1889 Paris Universal Exhibition, both of them were awarded a Silver medal for a superb carved fireplace. From 1894 onwards, Constantin ran alone the company.

Jean-Louis Prieur (18th century)

Jean-Louis Prieur (born circa 1725) was the most famous member of the Prieur family, an important dynasty of ciseleurs (chiselors). Active from 1765 to 1775, he was a member of Académie de Saint-Luc at the time of its dissolution in 1776. He was known as an «ornament sculptor, modeleur and ciseleur». In 1777, he lived at Faubourg Saint-Denis. He was chosen to execute the ormolu ornamentation for the coach of King Louis XVI coronation.

Raingo Frères founded in 1813

The company Raingo Frères, founded in Paris in 1813, installed their workshops around 1830 at n°8 Touraine Street, then at n°102 Vieille-du-Temple Street. The four Raingo brothers first known as clockmakers, added to their 1841 sale catalog some art bronze works as well as decorative bronze pieces. In 1860, they supplied the palaces of the Emperor Napoleon III. First specialized in Antique statues reproductions, they cast then models sculpted by contemporary artists such James Pradier (1790-1852), Albert Carrier-Belleuse (1824-1887) et Auguste Moreau (1834-1917).

The "Royal Worcester Porcelain Company Ltd" (19th century)

On the retirement of William Henry Kerr (1823 – 1879) in 1862, The Worcester Royal Porcelain Company Limited was formed with Richard William Binns (1819 – 1900) and Edward Phillips (d.1881) as joint managing directors. Between 1851 and 1887 the Severn Street factory expanded from 70 to 700 employees. Royal Worcester kept pace with public demand for novelty in design with the development of a wide range of new materials and glazes, including glazed and unglazed Parian, earthenware, majolica and bone china. The firm concentrated on the production of figures and vases, introducing over 2500 new decorative items between 1862 and 1900. The Victorians believed that good designs from the past should be adapted and improved to create tasteful new designs. They favoured a mixture of period and foreign styles including Japanese, French Empire, Persian, Indian, Renaissance and Classical Greek. The Aesthetic Movement – In the 1860’s, after 100 years of isolation the Japanese started to trade again with Europe. In 1872 His Excellency Sionii Tomomi Iwakura, Junior Prime Minister of Japan, visited Royal Worcester and saw Japanese style wares being made for display in Vienna the following year. Japanese bronzes, ivories and prints, purchased by R.W. Binns in Europe, inspired the Worcester craftsmen who did not slavishly copy, but adapted ideas for the English market.

Rousseau brothers

Rousseau brothers, Jean-Siméon Rousseau de Rottière (1747-1820) and Jean-Hugues Rousseau, named Rousseau the elder (1743-1806) are best known for having worked to the apartments of the Dauphin at Versailles as soon as 1772, then for having achieved the boudoir of Marie-Antoinette at Fontainebleau castle and queen’s cabinet rooms in 1783 in Versailles p alace. The originality of Rousseau was to exercise both the trade of painter and sculptor for ornaments, and to excel in the genre of «arabesques», mixing painted medallions imitating low-reliefs and paintings whose «grotesques» were inspired from the ancient Domus Aurea in Rome. Rousseau brothers realized similar «arabesques» for the cabinet room in the Mégret Serilly mansion in Paris (panels now exhibited at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London), and for the salon in the Hosten mansion (panels now preserved at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu).

Charles Rudhardt (1829-1895)

Charles Rudhardt, born 1829 in Geneva, dead 1895 in Paris, was a great ceramist of the 19th century, as well as a talented painter. He settled in Paris in 1862, founded a workshop and presented at the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1867 some earthenware imitating the "old Rouen" and "Urbino" decors. He is also mentioned as a painter producing at the famous earthenware Loebnitz manufacture. Ch. Rudhardt then worked in Longwy, a famous place for fine decorative earthenware, where he not 269


only produced prestigious pieces in collaboration with renowned artists such as the painter Eugène Carrière (1849-1906), but also executed his own creations. His signature is however relatively rare in Longwy, dating between 1882 and 1893, therefore a very brief period revealing his interesting work. Rudhardt achieved landscapes and portraits sometimes in addition of flowers in relief. As a creative and independent artist, some of his works bear only his own signature without the Longwy mark.

Marius Joseph Saïn (1877-1961)

Marius Joseph Saïn, born 1877 near Avignon, dead 1961, studied sculpture at the École des Beaux-Arts in Avignon and Marseille. He was awarded there several medals and awards. Following the death of his parents in 1901, for whom he raised a monument to their memory (Montfavet cemetery, Vaucluse), he came to Paris in 1902 and moved rue de Seine. He successfully passed the exam to integrate the prestigious Paris École des Beaux-Arts and won the Avignon City scholarship. He became the student of Gabriel Thomas, Antoine Injalbert, Henri Allouard and Félix Charpentier, and he struck up a friendship with several artists from Avignon in 1903. Saïn finally participated in the third exhibition of the Vaucluse Society of Friends of the Arts as well as in the famous Paris salon of the Society of French Artists, where he exhibited A la recherche des crabes, a work which gained him an honorable mention and acquired by the Baron Rothschild for the Grenoble Fine Arts Museum. In 1910, Marius Saïn obtained a travel grant due to its participation in the Salon of the Colonial Society of French Artists. He went live several months in Algeria where he reported several orientalist models. In 1912, he went to Greece, but was 1914 mobilized for war. In 1922, Marius Saïn received the prize of the Society of navigation, awarded by the Colonial Society of French artists, and won the prize of French Equatorial Africa. In 1924, he exhibited at the Salon of the Colonial Society the two plaster models of an Arab girl and a young shepherd presented here. In 1926 Saïn was awarded the Order of the Legion of Honor and exhibited at the Salon of the Society of French Artists until 1935.

Edmé Samson (1810-1891)

Edmé Samson, painter on ceramics established 1845 at n°7 rue in Paris, bought his white porcelain pieces, in other words undecorated porcelains from various Paris manufactures. His son, Emile (1837-1913) who succeeded him, began to make reproductions from older models. Exhibiting at the 1863 Exposition of the fine Arts applied to Industry, Emile Samson became particularly noted for his porcelain works imitating the "Old Japan" ones. He installed in 1864 a factory in Montreuil-sous-Bois, nearby Paris and enjoyed great success at the Paris International Exhibition of 1867 with their imitations of Saxony, China and Japan porcelain pieces, all considered of very fine quality. At the 1889 Universal Exhibition, Samson & Cie was deemed to be specialized in large size pieces, made either in porcelain or earthenware, whose models were chosen from the most wellknown museums, such as the Louvre Museum in Paris and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. In 1891, Emile went into partnership with his son Léon (1868-1928), under the name Samson & Son, who gave a major extension to the factory, employing a large number of workers and decorators. In addition to the manufacturing of porcelain, they also made their own bronze decorative mounts used on the pieces.

Jean-Baptiste-Claude Séné (1748-1803)

Jean-Baptiste-Claude Séné member of a family of carpenters and cabinetmakers, was received as a mastercarpenter in 1769. In 1785, Queen Marie-Antoinette bought Saint-Cloud Castle from the Duke of Orléans. At first, it was quickly furnished with simple furniture or taken from other residences. Then the GardeMeuble de la Couronne (Crown Furniture Repository) ordered the making of seats made of high standard quality so that the king and queen could enjoy their furnished apartments during their 1788 Spring journey. This command was made under the direction of the Quarter general master of the Crown Furniture Repository and of the Minister of Finance in order to refurnish the royal residences. To do this, they assigned to this task carpenters like Georges Jacob, Jean-BaptisteBoulard and Jean-Baptiste-Claude Séné, whom for the last one became one of the leading suppliers of the Royal Furniture Repository, making then the most beautiful Louis XVI style furniture, as evidenced by the bed he made for Queen Marie-Antoinette at Fontainebleau and King Louis XVI’s bed at Saint-Cloud.

Georges Emile Henri Servant (1828-c. 1890)

Georges Emile Henri Servant, who took over his father in 1855 at their foundry, rue Vieille-du-Temple, in Paris, specialized in the production of neo-Egyptian style clocks, very popular in France since 1860’s, and also the making of Greek style decorative objects. He drew considerable attention to the high quality of his bronzes at the 1855 Paris Universal Exhibition and then at the 1862 London Exhibition. At this time Servant exported up to 40% of his production, principally to the United States. But his success came really at the 1867 Paris Universal Exhibition, where he was awarded a gold medal for his neo-Greek works, among which was exposed this "vase of Bacchus". Jules Mensard explains in his report of the exhibition (Les Merveilles de l’Exposition Universelle de 1867, t. II, p° 165 & 167): "The general shape and the details (of the piece) reach perfection in character and taste, and bear the same stamp as the best works left to us by antiquity, notably those from Pompeii, which was Roman, although many of the vases found there were of pure Greek style... This vase of Bacchus is made entirely of bronze". Servant was even awarded in 1874 the "Ordre national de la Légion d’Honneur", France’s highest official mark of recognition. Servant participated once again successfully at the 1878 Paris Universal Exhibition, where he not only exhibited vases and small bronze pieces of furniture, but was also a member of the jury for the class of bronze pieces of art. He finally retired shortly before the 1889 Paris Universal Exhibition. 270


Louis-Constant Sévin (1821-1888)

Louis-Constant Sévin was apprenticed to the parisian sculptor Marneuf. In 1839, he joined the sculptormodelors Phénix and Joyau, as designer, and designed silver-smith’s objects for famous firms like Denière, Froment-Meurice, Morel and Duponchel. During the Revolution in 1848, C. Sévin joined Morel in London, as workshop manager and designed pieces that Morel exhibited in 1851. Back in France in 1851, C. Sévin went to Limoges and designed models for the porcelain factories of Jouhanneaud and Dubois of which many pieces were exhibited at the Universal Exhibition in 1855. From this date on, he worked for Ferdinand Barbedienne as sculptor-ornemanist until the end of his life. Sévin’s works are considerable, he designed furniture bronzes for the "hôtel de La Païva". At the London Exhibition in 1862, he was awarded a medal "pour l’excellence artistique des meubles qu’il a dessinés et qui sont exposés par Barbedienne": for the artistic excellence of the furniture he designed and which is exhibited by F. Barbedienne. He won a second class medal at the Union centrale des Arts décoratifs Exhibition in 1863 and was awarded a gold medal as "cooperator". F. Barbedienne said that posterity would remember Sévin’s compositions. The most extraordinary object designed by C. Sévin for F. Barbedienne, was a Renaissance style gilded bronze monumental clock, four metres high, for which C. Sévin won a gold medal as well as was awarded the Légion of Honour at the Universal Exhibition in 1878. His triumph was still valid at the 1889 Universal Exhibition.

The Sèvres Manufacture (active since 1738)

The Sèvres factory of soft-paste porcelain was created, about 1738 at Vincennes by bankers and financiers with the aim of making true or "hard-paste" porcelain, like Meissen did. In 1753 Louis XV, became a major shareholder and the manufactory was transferred to Sèvres, closer to Versailles and the château de Bellevue, acquired by the Marquise de Pompadour. The Marquise took a personal interest in Sèvres activities, and encouraged production. In 1759, Louis XV bought out the other shareholders and Sèvres became the exclusive property of the France Crown. From then, the manufactury mark was a symmetrically crossed Ls (the royal monogram) together with a letter indicating the year. The period between 1756 to 1779 represents the most successful and prosperous years for the factory. Louis XV, ordered large services for diplomatic and royal presents. The foremost artists, like the painters Boucher or Bachelier, the sculptors Falconet or Boizot, worked for Sèvres, creating models. Experimentation in order to discover the hard-paste porcelain technic continued, and was discovered after 1769. The factory produced with success both soft-paste and hard-paste porcelain. In these years the most famous ground colours were invented: the dark blue (bleu lapis) about 1752, the turquoise blue (bleu céleste) in 1753, the applegreen in 1756, the famous rose in 1757, and the king’s blue in 1763. These remarkable pieces were usually painted with scenes form engraving by famous painters (François Boucher) or ornementalists, with garlands, baskets of flowers and trophies. The production included sculptures ("l’Amour menaçant" by Falconet), large services (the service for Rambouillet was delivered to Marie-Antoinette in 1788), decorative and utilitarian objects. The "marchands-merciers" played an important role in supporting the factory and making its production popular. Daguerre was the first to decorate furniture with porcelain, one of the most striking innovations of the century and one of the most admired today.

Paul Sormani (1817-1877)

Paul Sormani, born in Italy in 1817, dead in 1877, specialized at first in the making of small furniture. He installed 1854 his workshops at the n°114 rue du Temple in Paris. The Sormani company knew then a great success and was much in favour with the Imperial Family as well as with the Paris high society. Empress Eugénie, who admired Queen Marie-Antoinette and the style at her time, furnished her palaces in the Louis XVI style, with some Sormani’s creations. Presenting his work at all important fairs, such the 1849 Exposition of the Industrial Products or the Universal Exhibitions from 1855 until 1867, Sormani was then honored by jurys for his "production of high standard quality" and won the highest awards. In 1867, by the time of the great Universal Exhibition, Sormani enlarged and transfered his workshops to the n°10 rue Charlot. When Paul Sormani died (circa 1877), his wife and son took over the business and from this date onwards pieces are normally signed "Veuve Sormani & Fils à Paris".

Arthur Strasser (1854-1927)

Arthur Strasser, born 1854 in Adelsberg, dead 1927 in Vienna, was an Austrian sculptor. He studied from 1871 until 1875 at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts. He marked his early interest in sculpture. With a scholarship he was able to continue and expand his studies in Paris from 1881 until 1883. He then returned to Vienna to sculpt his work in the naturalistic style. In 1892, Strasser took the painter Charles Wilda (18541907) to a trip to Egypt, where he found inspiration for his art. He directed particularly his attention to the representation of typical Arab country-people, dressed in traditional clothes. Being one of the leaders of Orientalism, he chose very carefully the right colour for his bronze patina, appearing as naturalistic. Those sculptures were quite popular with buyers who were also in the Austrian imperial family. In 1893, he received the Imperial Prize, an d in 1896, the Great Golden States Medal. He became professor in 1899, taking over the sculpture class at the Vienna School of Applied Arts. Arthur Strasser was certainly not a revolutionary reformer, but his natural subtle design could put some momentum in accordance with The Vienna Secession, seeking to move away from the prevailing historicism and appointing several new professors to give the new teaching ideas. Strasser created for the Universal Exhibition in Paris in 1900, the bronze statuary of Marc-Antony on his triumphal char.

271


Susse (19th century)

Susse Company awarded medals several times at the famous Paris "Expositions des Produits de l’Industrie", Susse Frères (Brothers), Victor (1806-1860) and Amédée (1808- 1880), were known since 1841 as makers of "Art bronze pieces for clocks, candelabras, statuettes, etc". Installed Place de la Bourse in Paris, they also presented at the second storage of their luxurious shop "fine furniture, ormolu mounted porcelain pieces and art objects". As a worldwide reknown foundry, the Susse company began to cast pieces as soon as the first half of the 19th century The most wellknown French sculptors gave their sculpted models to Susse in order to cast them, such Pradier who signed in 1841 the oldest known publishing contract for bronzes between a publisher and an artist. After the death of the two brothers, Albert Susse took over the business from 1880 until 1922.

Pierre-Philippe Thomire (1751-1843)

Pierre-Philippe Thomire was considered as one of the most talented bronze-chaser under the First Empire. He studied chasing with the renowned Pierre Gouthière (1732-1813) and installe then in 1776 his Paris workshop, where all the famous cabinet-makers and the Sèvres Manufacture went into, to embellish their own production. Thomire was many time commissioned to ornate with light fittings and clocks the various Imperial residences, such as the Tuileries Palace, the Saint-Cloud Palace and the Fontainebleau Palace.

Armand Toussaint (1806-1862)

Armand Toussaint (1806-1862) who was son of a Paris locksmith, trained with him before entering the Paris Fine Arts School in 1827. He followed the sculpture teachings of David d’Angers (1788-1856) and won the second Grand Prix de Rome in 1832 with the subject of Capaneus strucked down under the walls of Thebes. Toussaint exhibited the first time at the Salon of 1836 by presenting A young Farmer finding a Sword. He obtained a third class medal at the Salon of 1839 and a second class medal to the 1847 Salon. Armand Toussaint has specialized very early in monumental sculptures with reliefs and figures, such in 1839 at the PèreLachaise cimetery for the Forestier’s tomb with A seated young Woman. The following year he participated in the project of the Dampierre Castle by making for the Duke of Luynes the sculpted decor of the main staircase and the Four Seasons drawing room. At the Salon of 1847, he exhibited the Indian Slave holding a torch and the Indian Slave maid holding a torch. On February 23, 1850 the French Home Office commissioned him to cast in bronze these both sculptures. The pair was then delivered to the Elysee Palace, France President residence. These two torcheres were cast by Marly-Graux and Barbedienne under the title The two Indians. Besides, the Barbedienne foundry also cast further Armand Toussaint’s works, such the medallion Laissez venir à moi les petits Enfants, made in four sizes. In 1851, it made thus Law, Justice and Two seated Children for the clock of the Justice Palace in Paris. He executed several statues for the west front of Our-Lady Cathedral in Paris (St Marcel, St Peter, St Etienne, St Martin). In 1852 Toussaint was awarded the Cross of the Legion of Honor. In 1854 he made one of his greatest commands: the pediment of the newly built St. Clotilde Church in Paris, representing Christ surrounded by two angels bearing the instruments of the Passion. Also portraitist, Armand Toussaint sculpted a bust of David d’Angers in 1861 (exhibited in the David d’Angers museum, Angers) and a statue of Dr. Esquirol (1860, Charenton Hospital).

Willem Jan van den Berghe (1823-1901)

Willem Jan van den Berghe, born in 1823 in The Hague, Holland, became known as a painter of genre subjects and landscapes animated with figures. He participated in the 1858 exhibition held in Amsterdam.

Georges van der Straeten (1856-1928)

Georges van der Straeten, born in Ghent (Belgium) in 1856, dead 1928 in Paris, began his sculptor career in 1882, after having trained as a lawyer. He studied sculpture in Belgium under G. Kasteleyn and Jef Lambeaux, and left then Ghent for Paris, where he lived from 1883 until 1928. He met there a group of Belgian artists and was in particular very close to the painters Jan Van Beers and Rik Wouters. Straeten exhibited regularly his works at the Salon. He took inspiration from Antoine Watteau’s paintings to realize his numerous busts, made with elegant gestures and full of lively charm.

Joseph van Severdonck (1819-1905)

Joseph van Severdonck was a Belgian painter. He studied painting under Baron Wappers (1803-1874) from Anvers. He specialized in historical and military paintings, including animals, what also classified J. van Severdonck among animal painters. He also painted classic style allegories. He became professor at the Royal Academy of Brussels and had many pupils, among them, Walter Shaw Sparrow, whom considered him a "noted character" and wrote of him in his memoirs. J. van Severdonck is considered to be one of the last representative painter of the Rubens School. He also became the appointed professor to Queen Marie Henriette, wife of King Leopold II of Belgium.

272


Emilio Vasarri (1862-1928)

Emilio Vasarri born in Montevarchi, in the province of Arezzo, in Tuscany, studied painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence. Talented drawer and brilliant colourist, he regularly exhibited from 1878, both in Rome and Palermo, works full of meticulous details. He came to Paris in the late 19th century, where he participated in the Salon of French Artists. At the 1900 Universal Exhibition, Emilio Vasarri was awarded a bronze medal, then a mention honorable at the 1904 Salon. As Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904) and Ernest Meissonier (1815-1891), Emilio Vasarri specialized in genre scenes, referring to the ancient Greco-Roman period. Keen on detail and picturesque, he painted with such a prodigious talent the various colored fabrics and matching jewelry.

André César Vermare (1869-1949)

André César Vermare (son of sculptor André Vermare) grew up in a French and Italian renaissance admiration. He studies sculpture at the Lyon École des Beaux-Arts, where he receives a gold medal in 1889 before joining the workshop of Alexandre Falguière (1837-1900) in Paris. In 1899, André César Vermare wins the "Premier Prix de Rome" for a plaster bas relief representing "Adam and Eve finding the body of Abel". This sculpted group, "triangular and compact, in a clay and smoke recently born world decor", is still displayed at the Paris École des Beaux Arts.

Henri Vian (19th century)

Henri Vian, a bronze-caster active in the second half of the 19th century, made a lot of interior decorations with chimney mantelpieces, ormolu and patinated-mounted vases, chandeliers,… He became especially renowned for his light decorations of high quality.

Gabriel Viardot (1830-1906) Gabriel Viardot career began as a wood carver and he produced small furniture, sculpturally carved with naturalistic motifs and animals. In the 1855 Exposition Universelle in Paris, his finely sculpted objects were well received. However, with the increasing importation of similarly produced Swiss and German articles, he found less opportunity for these and decided to inovate. G. Viardot succeded to his father's business in 1861 installed rue Rambuteau in Paris. Around 1870 he turned to the idea of producing "Meubles genre Chinois et Japonais". The taste in Europe for exotic furniture, incorporating sometimes authentic Chinese or Japanese objects was well established. But Viardot early designed his own models enriched with ivory, mother-of-pearl and beautiful gilt-bronze mounts. After having won four medals at the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1867, Viardot was awarded a silver medal at the 1878 Universal Exhibition in Paris. He was also awarded gold medals several times: Universal Exhibitions in Anvers (Belgium) in 1884, and again in Paris in 1889 and 1900. A contemporary commentator notes that he had a workshop employing approximately 100 men, both sculptors and cabinet-makers with another 25 to 30 outside contract workers. "l'Escalier de Cristal", the famous Parisian offering luxuruous furniture got the exclusivity to use their own stamp on six Viardot’s furniture models.

Emmanuel Villanis (1858-1914)

The sculptor Emmanuel Villanis was born on 12 December 1858 in Lille, from Italian parents. In March 1861, the Italian Kingdom was proclaimed and the Villanis settled back in their country, in the Piemont region. From 1871 to 1880, Emmanuel Villanis studied at the Albertina Fine Arts Academy in Turin, under the direction of the renowned sculptor Odoardo Tabacchi (1831-1905). As soon as he finished his studies, E. Villanis exposed in various Italian cities, such with Alda, a bust exhibited in Milano in 1881. In 1885, Villanis returned to France, for living and working in Montmartre, where he stayed untill his death in 1914. From 1886 until 1910, he participated eleven times in the famous Paris Salon des Artistes Français, where he was awarded the Mention Honorable in 1892 for two plaster sculptures. Among his seventeen sculpted works shown there: Nérina (1887 Salon); Galtée (1894 Salon); Mignon (1896 Salon) and Judith (1898 Salon). E. Villanis also participated in numerous Universal Exhibitions, such the the 1889 Paris Universal Exhibition, where he won the Mention Honorable for La Souricière. He sent to the 1893 Chicago Paris Universal Exhibition two busts named Europe and Orient.Madeleine au passage du Christ. Villanis avait déjà reçu cette même récompense en 1889, à l’Exposition Universelle de Paris, pour la statue La Souricière. Quatre ans plus tard, en 1893, à l’Exposition Universelle de Chicago, il envoya deux bustes: Europe et Orient.

Lina de Weiler (1823-c.1880)

Lina de Weiler (or von Weiler), born in Mannheim in 1823, in the dukedom of Bade (Germany) came to France in order to study painting at the Parisian School of Fine Arts, under the direction of the famous portrait painter Léon Cogniet (1794-1880). There she met Edmond Lebel (1834-1908) who was soon to be noticed for his Italian scenes. In 1857 Lina de Weiler exhibited a full length portrait of sir William Forbes at the Living Artists Salon which took place in the Palace of Industry on the Champs-Elysées. With increasing success, she sent numerous portraits as well as some genre scenes to the 1859 Salon. These gentle and romantic scenes, as shows our painting The Return, won the favour of the public and were at the forefront since the 1861 Salon. The subjects of Lina de Weiler’s paintings sometimes also included landscapes of her place of birth, as attested by the Fording of the river: Recalling the Black Forest, exhibited at the 1864 Salon. Thanks to the catalogues of these Salons, where she exhibited her works until 1880, it is quite simple to follow our artist from one Parisian address to another: 5 rue Ménilmontant in 273


1857; 9 rue Duperré from 1858 until 1861; 21 rue Pigalle in 1866, the year she exposed The Return; 32 rue Blanche in 1869 and 6 rue de Milan from 1870 until 1880.

Adam Weisweiler (1744-1820) Adam Weisweiler became Master in cabinet-making on March 26th 1778. He settled his workshops in Paris, on FaubourgSaint-Antoine Street. Weisweiler was one of the great masters of the Louis XVI style. From German origin, he is assumed having received his training in the workshop of Roentgen. He came to France before 1777, year of his wedding in the capital city. He worked primarily for the «marchand-merciers» like Daguerre, whom sold Weisweiler’s works to Queen Marie-Antoinette. Very talented in his art, he developed a personal style, combining various materials such pietra-dura, lacquer or Sèvres porcelain plaques. Unlike most of cabinet-makers, the Revolution didn’t affect his production; Weisweiler worked under the First Empire for Queen Hortense. A large part of his production is now displayed in public collections such in the Louvre Musuem, the Paris Decorative Arts Museum, the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. Albert Willms (19th century)

Albert Willms was apprenticed as modeler and engraver to Klagman, Dieterle and Constant in Paris before working for Morel & Co. in London in 1848. On his return to Paris he was employed by the great Parisian silversmiths including Christofle and Froment-Meurice, for whom he designed pieces to be presented at the 1855 Universal Exhibition in Paris. It was during this period that he joined the firm of Elkington in London as head decorator. Elkington was soon to become one of the first to produce refined pieces in "champlevé" enamel in the Chinese and Japanese styles, which were presented with great success at the London Universal Exhibition in 1862 (see Masterpieces of Industrial Art & Sculpture at the International Exhibition 1862, J.B. Waring, London, 1863, III, pl. 211). Willms’ "champlevé" enamels could not be compared, however, with the delicate "cloisonné" enamels exhibited by Japan at the Universal Exhibition in Paris in 1867. This explains why Elkington adapted the ancient Japanese technique to produce pieces according to European taste and custom. Followings the 1867 Exhibition all the major European artists rivaled in ingenuity for the 1873 Universal Exhibition in Vienna. In London Albert Willms presented his luxurious vases and cups in "cloisonné" enamel for Elkington (see Illustrations of Art Manufacturers in the Precious Metals exhibited by Elkington & Co., Inventors, Patentees and Manufactures of electroplate, 1873), whilst in Paris, Ferdinand Thesmar (1843-1912) produced in the workshops of Ferdinand Barbedienne (1810-1892) a tray decorated with a golden pheasant in "cloisonné" enamel on copper and Emile-Auguste Reiber (1826-1893) designed for the Christofle firm, a large clock with matching candelabras in the Japanese style (Musée d’Orsay, Paris, Inv. O.A.O. 1360-1361) with "cloisonné" enamels executed by Antoine Tard. Albert Willms never the less became a specialist of "cloisonné" enamel on gilt metal between 1870 and 1876. The Universal Exhibitions where Elkington presented to the public his latest creations in the Japanese style, assured him a resounding success, as at the Philadelphia Exhibition in 1876 with an extensive set of vases and dishes in "cloisonné" enamel (reproduced in Contributions to the Centennial and International Exhibition at Philadelphia, 1876, London, 1876). Referring to his enamels the critics said "They surpass by far modern Chinese and Japanese works and approach the exquisite beauty of ancient Japanese pieces".

Charles-Guillaume Winckelsen (1812-1871)

Born in 1812, Charles-Guillaume Winckelsen is one of the most talented cabinet-makers of the Second Empire period, taking inspiration from 18th century furniture. He mainly used the Louis XVI style decorative motifs but without reverting to simple pastiche and creating then beautiful furniture. Winckelsen’s bronze casting was of the highest quality. He had his workshops in Paris at N°23 Val-Sainte-Catherine in 1854, moved in 1860 to N°21 rue Saint-Louis in the Marais, and in 1867 to N°49 rue de Turenne. His production varied from furniture to decorative works of art, specializing in particular in the Louis XVI style to a very high quality standard. As a very talented cabinet-maker he was often honoured the commands from the aristocrats as well as the Paris wealthy high society, such as Lafitte, de Béhague, prince Radziwill. Following Winckelsen’s death in 1871, Henry Dasson (1825-1896) purchased on July 27 the workshop and stock from Winckelsen’s widow.

Jean-Henri Zweiner-Jansen (1854-1928)

"Z.J".

Jean-Henri Jansen founded the famous interior decoration firm of Maison Jansen in 1880. Manufacturing revival and Nouveau furniture he became Fournisseur de la Cour d’Espagne and was awarded a Silver Medal at both the 1883 Amsterdam Exhibition and the Paris 1889 Exposition Universelle.The firm relocated to 9, rue Royale, Paris, in 1885 around wich time it incorporated the established firm of JosephEmmanuel Zwiener, renaming it Zwiener Jansen Successeur and adopting the practice stamping pieces,

Joseph-Emmanuel Zwiener (active from 1880 to 1895)

Joseph-Emmanuel Zwiener was born in Germany in 1849. In 1880 he set up his extensive workshops in rue de la Roquette in Paris where he created many original pieces of furniture. He immitated practically every style, ranging from «Boulle» to «Louis XVI» and including extraordinary personal interpretations of the «exhuberent» Louis XV style. His unique style won Zwiener the gold medal at the 1882 exhibition of the Union Centrale des Arts Décoratifs in Paris. One of the judges, René Ménard, remarked that «if Mr. Zwiener had limited himself to literal reproductions, he wouldn’t have attracted the attention of the jury so strongly. But alongside his very skillful copies, he has shown us works inspired by his own imagination». He then participated in the 1889 Universal Exhibition, held 274


in Paris, and was awarded the gold medal for his remarkable copy of that most famous piece of furniture, Louis XV’s desk. The catalogue of the exhibition included a wonderful elegy qualifying the work as perfect: «No criticism what-so-ever could be made». As that other famous cabinet-maker François Linke (1855-1946), Zwiener had most of his bronzes modelled by Léon Messagé (1842-1901) whose work was considered as being of the best possible quality. Zwiener was active until 1895, when Jean-Henri Jansen (1854-1928) purchased his business and stock. Operating under the name of «Zwiener Jansen Successeur», Jansen continued to faithfully produce Zwiener’s creations, using the original models and lavishing the utmost care on these «meubles de luxe».

275


Signatures ď •


277


Signatures Edouard Agneesens (1842-1885)

Désiré Attarge (c.1820-1878)

Ferdinand Barbedienne (1810-1892)

Alfred-Emmanuel Beurdeley (1847-1919)

Fernand Blayn (1853-1892)

Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse (1824-1887)

Christophe Charmois & Ernest Lemarinier (1839-1920)

Charles Christofle (1805-1863)

Emile Colin (2nd part of the 19th century)

Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier (1827-1905)

Eugène Cornu (1827-1899)

Alfred Daubrée

Joseph-Désiré Court (1797-1865)

Manufacture of Creil Montereau (18th- 20th centuries)

Albert Louis Dammouse (1848-1926) 278


Henry Dasson (1825-1896)

Théodore Deck (1823-1891)

Eugène Delaplanche (1836-1891)

Charles-Guillaume Diehl (1811-1885)

Paul Dubois (1827 - 1905)

Ferdinand Duvinage (1823-1876)

L'Escalier de Cristal (19th century)

Alexandre Falguière (1831-1900)

Charles-Auguste Fraikin (1817-1893)

Gagneau (19th century)

François Gautier (19th century)

Alphonse Giroux et Cie (1799-1885)

Oscar Gladenbeck (1850-1921)

Michele Grandville (1758-1836)

Jean-Louis Grégoire (1840-1890)

Emile Guillemin (1841-1907) 279


Eugène Hazart (19th century)

Zwiener Jansen successeur (active since 1880)

Lacarrière (19th century)

Eugène-Armand Lachaise (1857-1925)

Jules-Isidore Lafrance (1841-1881)

Ferdinand Levillain (1837-1905)

François Linke (1855-1946)

Paul Louchet (1854 -1936)

Emilio Marsili (1841-1926)

Auguste Metgé (1883-1910)

Victor Paillard (1805-1886)

Raphaël Charles Peyre (1872-1949)

Henri Picard (active since 1831)

Emile-Louis Picault (1833-1915)

Raingo Frères (founded in 1813)

Charles Rudhardt (1829-1895) 280


Susse Company (19th century)

Manufacture "Royal Worcester Porcelain Company Ltd" (19th century)

Paul Sormani (1817-1877)

Arthur Strasser (1854-1927)

Pierre-Philippe Thomire (1751-1843)

Armand Toussaint (1806-1862)

Willem Jan van den Berghe (1823-1901)

Georges van der Straeten (1856-1928)

Joseph van Severdonck (1806-1862)

Emilio Vasarri (1862-1928)

AndrĂŠ CĂŠsar Vermare (1869-1949)

Henri Vian (19th century)

Emmanuel Villanis (1858-1914)

L. de Weiler (1823-c.1880

Charles-Guillaume Winckelsen (1812-1871)

Zwiener Jansen successeur (active since 1880) 281


Founded before 1945 and handed down from father to son, this family enterprise specialises in European arts, including painting and sculpture, furniture and decorative arts, from the second half of the 19th century. Philippe Zoï represents the second generation in this line of connoisseurs. A member of the French National Syndicate of Antiquarians and the National Company of Experts in Paris, Mr. Zoï, a recognised expert for the 1850-1900 period, pursues the family tradition of giving meaning to the words ‘knowledge’ and ‘quality’. Tobogan Antiques, newly located in Paris, 14 avenue Matignon, also offers its clientele a selection of objets d’art reflecting some of the principal artistic movements of the French 19th century - such as Second Empire, Japonism, Orientalism or the Greek Revival - whose creators are now widely represented in private collections and museums. Philippe Zoï, Director


TOBOGAN ANTIQUES 14 Avenue Matignon. 75008 Paris. France For all information, please contact us on: TEL: + 33 1 42 86 89 99 - FAX: + 33 1 42 86 89 19 Email: tobogan.antiques@wanadoo.fr


Š TOBOGAN ANTIQUES - All rights reserved Updated March 2013 284


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