A ROYAL LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED TULIPWOOD AND KINGWOOD TABLE DE SALON,
This lot is offered without reserve. PROPERTY FROM A NEW YORK PRIVATE COLLECTION
A ROYAL LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED TULIPWOOD AND KINGWOOD TABLE DE SALON,

CIRCA 1758, BY MATHIEU CRIAERD, SUPPLIED BY GILLES JOUBERT TO THE CHATEAU DE FOUNTAINEBLEAU,

细节
A ROYAL LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED TULIPWOOD AND KINGWOOD TABLE DE SALON,
CIRCA 1758, BY MATHIEU CRIAERD, SUPPLIED BY GILLES JOUBERT TO THE CHATEAU DE FOUNTAINEBLEAU,
with ink inventory number DU No2112, with stenciled inventory number F with a crown No187, stamped M.CRIAERD and JME
29½ in. (75.5 cm.), 22¼ in. (57 cm.) wide, 15 in. (38 cm.) deep
来源
Supplied by Gilles Joubert in 1758 to the daughters of Louis XV (Mesdames Adélaïde, Sophie et Victoire) for their bedchambers in the Château de Fontainebleau.
注意事项
This lot is offered without reserve.
拍场告示
The catalogue note in the printed catalogue and the e-catalogue are incomplete. For complete cataloguing information, please go to Christie.com

Mathieu Criaerd, maître in 1747.

This charming table has the rare distinction of being one of a handful of pieces made by ébeéniste, Mathieu Criaerd, that can be specifically traced to the appartement of the daughters of Louis XV, Mesdames de France Adélaïde, Sophie et Victoire, at the château de Fontainebleau. Originally delivered by ébéniste de la Couronne, Gilles Joubert on 27 September 1758, the table was - according to the Archives - recorded in the chambre of Madame Adélaïde. In its original form, it had two levels of shelving, each with a brèche d'alep marble top, and was fitted with two ormolu handles that permitted its easy transfer from the garde robe to the bedside of the princess. This table is subsequently recorded in the garde robe of the dauphin, son of Louis XVI and Marie-Antonette in the Fontainebleau inventory of 1787. It would appear, therefore, that the modifications to the table - the enclosure of the sides and replacement of the upper-most tier with a wooden top - took place sometime after the fall of the Ancien Régime.

That this table is connected to Joubert is of interest because he supplied over 4,000 pieces to the royal family at numerous residences between 1748 and 1774 (A. Pradère, Les Ébénistes Français de Louis XIV à La Révolution, 1989, pg. 209). Criaerd was one of the many ébénistes with whom Joubert collaborated to create works such as a small encoignure for the dauphine at the château de Compiègne, a table de nuit for Madame de Pompadour at the château de Choisy and, as the present table suggests, a table de nuit for Louis XV's daughters at Fontainebleau (A. Pradère op. cit. p. 224).

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Mathieu Criaerd, maître in 1747.

This charming table has the rare distinction of being one of a handful of pieces made by ébeéniste, Mathieu Criaerd, that can be specifically traced to the appartement of the daughters of Louis XV, Mesdames de France Adélaïde, Sophie et Victoire, at the château de Fontainebleau. Originally delivered by ébéniste de la Couronne, Gilles Joubert on 27 September 1758, the table was - according to the Archives - recorded in the chambre of Madame Adélaïde. In its original form, it had two levels of shelving, each with a brèche d'alep marble top, and was fitted with two ormolu handles that permitted its easy transfer from the garde robe to the bedside of the princess. This table is subsequently recorded in the garde robe of the dauphin, son of Louis XVI and Marie-Antonette in the Fontainebleau inventory of 1787. It would appear, therefore, that the modifications to the table - the enclosure of the sides and replacement of the upper-most tier with a wooden top - took place sometime after the fall of the Ancien Régime.

That this table is connected to Joubert is of interest because he supplied over 4,000 pieces to the royal family at numerous residences between 1748 and 1774 (A. Pradère, Les Ébénistes Français de Louis XIV à La Révolution, 1989, pg. 209). Criaerd was one of the many ébénistes with whom Joubert collaborated to create works such as a small encoignure for the dauphine at the château de Compiègne, a table de nuit for Madame de Pompadour at the château de Choisy and, as the present table suggests, a table de nuit for Louis XV's daughters at Fontainebleau (A. Pradère op. cit. p. 224).

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