A LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED BOIS SATINE, AMARANTH AND BOIS DE BOUT MARQUETRY BUREAU EN PENTE
A LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED BOIS SATINE, AMARANTH AND BOIS DE BOUT MARQUETRY BUREAU EN PENTE

CIRCA 1745-50, STAMPED TWICE BVRB

Details
A LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED BOIS SATINE, AMARANTH AND BOIS DE BOUT MARQUETRY BUREAU EN PENTE
Circa 1745-50, stamped twice BVRB
Inlaid overall with scrolling foliate bois de bout marquetry, the serpentine-fronted top with foliate scrolls and rocaille clasps above a slightly bomb fall with trailing foliage and rocaille encadrements, enclosing a tulipwood and bois de bout marquetry interior with three spring-loaded satinwood-lined secret compartments and leather-lined writing-surface beneath a bank of six drawers and an open compartment, the sides and reverse similarly inlaid with bois de bout floral marquetry and with waved apron, on cabriole legs with pierced foliate and rocaille chutes trailing to rocaille sabots, with handwritten inscriptions Gauche and Droite and with label in inner left drawer comic
38in. (98cm.) high, 51in. (129.5cm.) wide, 26in. (66cm.) deep
Van Risen Burgh, Bernard II

Lot Essay

Bernard II van Risen Burgh, matre in 1730

BVRB has been credited with reviving the fashion for floral marquetry decoration on furniture, a taste which had been out of favour since the Rgence period. Indeed, the first deliveries of floral marquetry furniture to the Garde-Meuble were by the marchand-mercier Thomas-Joachim Hbert in 1745 for the Dauphin and the Dauphine at Versailles, and these were almost entirely by BVRB, embellished with his characteristic bois-de-bout marquetry of end-cut floral trails in kingwood on a bois satin and, subsequently, on a tulipwood ground.

Hbert's delivery to the Garde-Meuble, dated 18 February 1745 for the Dauphine at Versailles included a bureau en pente of closely related from and decoration (A. Pradre, Les Ebnistes Franais de Louis XIV la Revolution, 1989, p. 192. fig. 179). Also stamped by BVRB and supplied for the cabinet de retraite de Madame la Dauphine, it is first described in the Journal du Garde-Meuble on 23 January 1745:-

No.1344 - Un secrtaire de bois satin fleur de placage de bois violet dans des compartiments de bois d'amarante, enrichi d'ornements, moulures, cartouches, encoignures, et pieds de bronze dor d'ormoulu. Le devant s'abat et forme une table couverte de velours bleu encastr qui se pose sur deux tirants mobiles de bois d'amarante termins de boutons dorer. En dedans sont six tiroirs, dont deux grands et quatre petits, dans l'un desquels droite est un encrier, poudrier et une bote ponge de cuivre argent, garnis de tapis bleu et bords d'une petite tresse d'or. Long de 31 pouces sur 18 pouces de profondeur et 30 pouces de haut.

Of slightly smaller proportions (81.2cm x 83.9cm x 48.7cm) overall, the bois-de-bout marquetry sprays within amaranth C-scroll borders of the Dauphine's bureau are extremely similar in character to the decoration of the Alexander bureau. Other BVRB bureaux which share this characteristically sinuous shape include the particularly fine example in Japanese lacquer sold by French & Company, Christie's New York, 24 November 1998, lot 20 and another in blue lacquer illustrated A. Pradre, op. cit. , p. 192 fig. 178.

The Alexander bureau is of unusually large size - most other examples being less than 36in. wide - and must, therefore, have been commssioned by a person of considerable status. Indeed, only two larger BVRB bureaux are recorded, and these are both dos d'ne. The first, now in the J. Paul Getty Museum (C. Bremer-David, Decorative Arts, An Illustrated Summary Catalogue of the Collections of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu, 1993, p. 36, no. 41), was originally supplied to the fermier gnral Franois Balthazar Dang (d.1777), whilst the other, almost certainly acquired by Baron Mayer Amschel de Rothschild for Mentmore Towers in the 19th Century, is now in the collection of the Earl of Rosebery at Dalmeny House, Scotland.

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