Sold by Order of a descendant of the 2nd Viscount Bearstead
A LOUIS XVI TULIPWOOD, MARQUETRY AND PARQUETRY BUREAU A CYLINDRE by Joseph Stockel, banded overall in amaranth, inlaid à quâtre faces and mounted with lacquered brass, the rectangular top with pierced three-quarter gallery and centred by an oval inlaid with figures beside a townscape on a flower-filled latticework ground above a foliate-filled entrelac border, the solid cylinder centred by an oval panel with beaded moulding inlaid with a landscape scene in the style of Berchem with travellers in a landscape, flanked by two shaped panels with beaded moulding inlaid with capriccii of Roman ruins with reclining figures highlighted in bone flanked by a beaded entrelac-moulding, enclosing a fitted interior with green leather-lined slide, with four drawers and four simulated drawers each inlaid with latticework and four pigeon-holes, above a Vitruvian scroll moulding and a panelled kneehole-drawer inlaid with foliate-filled entrelacs and flanked on one side by a deep panelled drawer inlaid with flower-filled latticework within a beaded moulding and formerly with coffre-fort, on the other side by two drawers, one with spring-action, inlaid sans traverse with conforming decoration, the sides each with a demi-lune panel inlaid with a capriccio with beaded moulding above a green leather-lined slide and a rectangular panel inlaid with flower-filled latticework within a beaded moulding, the panelled back with five rectangular beaded mouldings divided by a Vitruvian scroll moulding, on turned tapering legs with shadowed simulated fluting with turned collars and turned beaded sabots, the underside stamped twice I.STOCKEL and JME once 51¾in.(131.5cm.)wide; 42½in.(108cm.)high; 27in.(68.5cm.)deep

Details
A LOUIS XVI TULIPWOOD, MARQUETRY AND PARQUETRY BUREAU A CYLINDRE by Joseph Stockel, banded overall in amaranth, inlaid à quâtre faces and mounted with lacquered brass, the rectangular top with pierced three-quarter gallery and centred by an oval inlaid with figures beside a townscape on a flower-filled latticework ground above a foliate-filled entrelac border, the solid cylinder centred by an oval panel with beaded moulding inlaid with a landscape scene in the style of Berchem with travellers in a landscape, flanked by two shaped panels with beaded moulding inlaid with capriccii of Roman ruins with reclining figures highlighted in bone flanked by a beaded entrelac-moulding, enclosing a fitted interior with green leather-lined slide, with four drawers and four simulated drawers each inlaid with latticework and four pigeon-holes, above a Vitruvian scroll moulding and a panelled kneehole-drawer inlaid with foliate-filled entrelacs and flanked on one side by a deep panelled drawer inlaid with flower-filled latticework within a beaded moulding and formerly with coffre-fort, on the other side by two drawers, one with spring-action, inlaid sans traverse with conforming decoration, the sides each with a demi-lune panel inlaid with a capriccio with beaded moulding above a green leather-lined slide and a rectangular panel inlaid with flower-filled latticework within a beaded moulding, the panelled back with five rectangular beaded mouldings divided by a Vitruvian scroll moulding, on turned tapering legs with shadowed simulated fluting with turned collars and turned beaded sabots, the underside stamped twice I.STOCKEL and JME once
51¾in.(131.5cm.)wide; 42½in.(108cm.)high; 27in.(68.5cm.)deep

Lot Essay

Joseph Stockel, maître in 1775

It is rare in the oeuvre of Joseph Stockel to find furniture with marquetry decoration. It is likely that he, in common with many ébénistes of the time, bought marquetry panels from marquetry specialists such as Andre-Louis Gilbert (1746 - 1809) who is thought to have supplied ébénistes such as Bircklé, Boudin, Roussel and Dautriche (see: A. Pradère, French Furniture Makers, London, 1989, p. 323). It would however also seem likely that, in an age when marquetry decoration was in such demand, the larger ateliers would have perhaps had their own marquetry specialist (see: G. de Bellaigue, 'Engravings and the French Eighteenth-Century Marqueteur', Burlington Magazine, May 1965, pp. 240-250 [part I] and July 1965, pp. 356-363 [part II]). The sources for marquetry ruins such as appear on this bureau are examined by G. de Bellaigue, 'Ruins in Marquetry', Apollo, January 1968, pp. 12-16. Such scenes were intended to resemble paintings as much as possible, an illusion heightened by ormolu framing and their positioning. Engravings after G. P. Pannini, Hubert Robert and P.-A. de Machy were particularly popular for the sentiments they evoked of the Grand Tour. G. de Bellaigue illustrates the panel on a roll-top desk at Waddesdon with a scene (fig. 1) similar to the oval panel on the roll-top of this lot, derived from a painting by G. P. Pannini, Les Ruines du Péloponèse, engraved by P.-F. Tardieu. He also illustrates a commode by Stockel (figs. 14 and 15) in the Jones Collection, Victoria and Albert Museum, with oval marquetry panels, one of which has a similar pyramid to the central panel on the roll-top of this lot, which derives from N. Tardieu's engraving of Sebastiano and Marco Ricci's Memorial to Sir Clowdisley Shovell

Similar marquetry panels appear on various pieces of furniture sold at Christie's, for example a Louis XVI commode by Gilbert and a Louis XVI bureau à cylindre, sold from the Edward James Collection, West Dean, Sussex, 2, 3 and 6 June 1986, lots 135 and 137 respectively, and a bureau à cylindre by Denizot, sold twice in these Rooms, most recently 6 July 1978, lot 112. Similar marquetry also appears on a table à ecrire, a secretaire and a commode from the Cartier Collection, sold Sotheby's Monaco, 25-27 November 1979, lots 143, 167 and 168 respectively.

A similar Louis XVI marquetry bureau, sold in these Rooms, 5 July 1928, lot 144, thought at the time to be by Georges Jansen, is also illustrated, Christie's Season 1928, London, 1928, p. 334

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