The Property of a European Princely Family
A LOUIS XIV ORMOLU-MOUNTED RED TORTOISESHELL, SATINWOOD, GREEN-STAINED WOOD, IVORY AND EBONY CABINET-ON-STAND

ATTRIBUTED TO PIERRE GOLE

细节
A LOUIS XIV ORMOLU-MOUNTED RED TORTOISESHELL, SATINWOOD, GREEN-STAINED WOOD, IVORY AND EBONY CABINET-ON-STAND
Attributed to Pierre Gole
Decorated overall with floral and foliate sprays, swags, vases of flowers, birds and insects, the breakfront body surmounted by a moulded and stepped canted frieze with two drawers and centred by a secret and S-scrolled pedimented drawer with balustrated glazed panels, above three drawers simulated as four and flanked by shaped, berried and foliate mounts with putti herms, above two further outer panelled drawers concealing an interior with two concealed drawers on each side, bordered by an entwined foliate ribbon, centred by a pair of doors opening on an architectural fitted interior with trompe l'oeuil effects of an arcaded passage, arabesque parquetry stage, ebonised Solomonic columns, balconies and glazed panels and with nine various secret drawers, the main doors divided by ebony pilasters with Corinthian capitals, above three confoming drawers, all drawers amaranth-lined and with marbelised paper, the sides conformingly decorated with circular ivory-banded fields, the stand with one long and one short frieze-drawer simulated as six drawers, divided by scrolling mounts, on four turned tapering semi-detached supports flanked by architectural pilasters and hung with floral ribbon-tied garlands, the concave-sided ebonised plinth and later back-plate on a further later concave-sided base, minor losses and areas of re-veneering, one glazed panel broken, two frieze-drawers locked, two elements to the top angles lacking
The cabinet-on-stand 53 in. (135 cm.) wide; 64 in. (163 cm.) high; 19½ in. (50 cm.) deep
The later base 6 in. (15 cm.) high
来源
By descent, certainly since the early 19th Century.

拍品专文

Pierre Gole (d.1684), maître menuisier en ébène du Roi

This ebony and brass-enriched cabinet, richly polychromed in rosy flower-inlaid tortoiseshell and recalling Florentine cabinets with pietra dura marble, is designed in the Louis XIV antique style introduced by the Manufacture Royale des Gobelins at Versailles. This type of marquetry, inlaid with ivory appears to have been produced in France from the middle of the 17th Century, as the artist J. M. Picard mentions a similar piece in a letter to a friend in Anvers in 1655 (T. Lunsingh Scheurleer, The Philippe d'Orléans Ivory Cabinet by Pierre Gole [now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London], Burlington Magazine, June 1984, p. 333).

Indeed, by this time cardinal de Mazarin (d. 1661) already owned such inlaid cabinets, as they are isted in an inventory of his possession in 1653. It is probably also at this date that he commissioned two new cabinets decorated, among others, with fleurs, oiseaux et insectes, which, in the inventory drawn up after his death are attributed to Pierre Gole (d. 1684), who became maître menuisier en ébène ordinaire du Roi (the young Louis XIV) in 1651.

The indistinct descriptions of these cabinets in the inventory unfortunately prevent any positive identification with this cabinet, although the style and the quality certainly evoke a comparison. Furthermore, the size and the base, which is inspired by Tuscan prototypes, aswell as the richness of the colours is reminiscent of the cabinet delivered to the appartements of the duc d'Orléans in the Palais Royal by Pierre Gole in 1662 (A. Pradère, French Furniture Makers, London, 1989, p. 44).

Although there are similarities with the work of the Anvers and Florence ateliers of the mid-17th Century, such as that of Leonardo van der Vinne, the attribution to Pierre Gole is based on distinctive characteristics found in his documented oeuvre; thus, the floral swags with ivory inlay between the columned supports can be found on the cabinet supplied to Monsieur, the brother of Louis XIV, while the column-supports with the lower section decorated with floral marquetry below an ormolu band and a section with plain tortoiseshell is also found on a Louis XIV cabinet which was sold anonymously in these Rooms, 23 June 1988, lot 109. Furthermore the interior with its trompe l'oeil architecture and pediment supported by Solomonic columns is identical to contemporary cabinets commissioned from Pierre Gole for the rue Guirsade, Faubourg Sain-Germain by Macé Bertrand de la Bazinière in 1646 (J.B. Chapuis, Le Cabinet Fouquet, L'Objet d'Art, June 1992, p. 74).