A PAIR OF EMPIRE GILTWOOD BERGERES
A PAIR OF EMPIRE GILTWOOD BERGERES

BY FRANCOIS-HONORE-GEORGES AND GEORGES JACOB, CIRCA 1803-1813

Details
A PAIR OF EMPIRE GILTWOOD BERGERES
BY FRANCOIS-HONORE-GEORGES AND GEORGES JACOB, CIRCA 1803-1813
Each with an arched rectangular padded back, arms and bowed seat with loose cushion covered in green velvet, the panelled frame carved overall with ribbon and rosette and flanked by a stiff-leaf border, the toprail centred by oak-leaf and ribbon-tied and headed by foliate finials, the husk-trailed and scrolled arms with acanthus-carved arm terminals, on spirally-turned tapering fluted legs headed by rosettes, stamped JACOB.D R.MESLEE, with royal château marks 'TH' and crowned 'CP' and with indistinct ink inventory marks, previously painted
40 in. (102 cm.) high; 25 in. (64 cm.) wide; 22 in. (56 cm.) deep
Provenance
Chateau des Tuileries, Chateau de Compiegne, Chateau de Versailles, Grand Trianon and Petit Trianon

Brought to you by

Carlijn Dammers
Carlijn Dammers

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Lot Essay

The 'TH' stamp, the only mark that can be found on all of the pieces, indicates that the suite was made for the Tuileries Palace at the beginning of the 19th century. It was delivered between 1803 and 1813, as can be concluded by the design of the stamp, which was only used during this period. The incomplete and terse entries in the records of the National Garde-Meubles indicate that originally there was no sofa. Appart from the fact that the sofa is stamped by Brion, it is also the only item to have the brand mark TH in an oval with three crowned fleur de lys, a mark that was only used after the Restoration (1815).
The suite was dispersed, as indicated by the great diversity of stamps.
The stamp 'V1860' refers to an inventory taken in 1820 at Versailles (Archives Nationales, Paris, AJ/19/386), in the room of Madame la Baronne Monnier. Number 1861 is 'a bergere in painted wood, yellow Utrecht velvet, Hyacinth design, feather cushion, gild nails'; number 1862, 'four armchairs, wood and fabric idem'. It appears that the suite was originally not gilt. The same description also appears in different inventories at Versailles in 1840 and in 1847, and at Compiegne in 1833.



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