A PAIR OF LOUIS XVI GILTWOOD FAUTEUILS EN CABRIOLET
A PAIR OF LOUIS XVI GILTWOOD FAUTEUILS EN CABRIOLET

CIRCA 1770, ONE STAMPED DELANOIS

Details
A PAIR OF LOUIS XVI GILTWOOD FAUTEUILS EN CABRIOLET
Circa 1770, One stamped DELANOIS
Each padded oval back, arms and sprung bow-fronted U-form seat upholstered in pink silk, the gadrooned frame with laurel leaf-sheathed stiles beneath the back and scrolled terminals above the downswept arm supports, the tapering turned fluted legs headed by panelled patera and with peg feet, carved of walnut, regilt (2)
Provenance
The Minneapolis Museum of Art, Minnesota.

Lot Essay

Louis Delanois, maître in 1761.

Louis Delanois, born in Paris in 1731, was one of the most important chair-makers of the last quarter of the eighteenth century. Becoming prominent in the Transitional period, where his imaginative and original designs were allowed to flourish, he brought a distinctive character to what was all too often monotonous Louis XVI seat-furniture.

Opening his workshops on the rue de Bourbon-Villeneuve, the present day rue d'Aboukir, his rapid success prompted his move to rue des Petits-Carreaux. Most reknowned for the suite of seat-furniture supplied to Madame du Barry for her Pavillon at Louveciennes, he also supplied pieces for her apartements at Fontainebleau and Versailles. Upon the coronation of Louis XVI, it was Delanois who made both the King's throne and the armchair of state for Marie-Antoinette. His popularity was not solely limited to wealthy French patrons, but spread across the continent supplying both the King of Poland and Catherine the Great's Court at Saint-Petersburg. The Revolution proved to be his ruin and after being forced to surrender his assets in 1790, he died in 1792.

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