A LATE LOUIS XVI WHITE-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT MARQUISE
A LATE LOUIS XVI WHITE-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT MARQUISE

CIRCA 1790

Details
A LATE LOUIS XVI WHITE-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT MARQUISE
CIRCA 1790
The scrolled back and arms with rosette terminals and covered in gold swan and rosette woven silk, on circular tapering legs, the seatrail branded CP and with a partial stenciled number
44 in. (112 cm.) long
Provenance
Supplied to the Château de Compiègne.
Anonymous Sale; Butterfield & Butterfield, San Francisco, 18 September 1996 (part of the previous two lots).

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Lot Essay

Built for Louis XV the château de Compiègne was, together with Versailles and Fontainebleau, one of the three main royal residences and the preferred summer residence due to the extensive hunting grounds in the Compiègne forests. In 1750, Louis XV's preferred architect, Ange-Jacques Gabriel, proposed a thorough renovation of the château. Work began in 1751 and was finished in 1788 by Gabriel's student, Le Dreux de La Châtre, when this suite could have arrived at Compiègne. During the French Revolution, Compiègne was under the jurisdiction of the Minister for the Interior, whose task it was to liquidate all assets. In 1795, all the château's furniture ensembles were sold and its works of art sent to the Muséum Central.

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