A REGENCE BOIS SATINE AND CHINESE AND EUROPEAN LACQUER ARMOIRE
A REGENCE BOIS SATINE AND CHINESE AND EUROPEAN LACQUER ARMOIRE

SIGNED AND DATED TWICE LOUIS GUIGNARD, 1723, THE CHINESE LACQUER PANELS 18TH CENTURY WITH LATER EUROPEAN EMBELLISHMENTS

Details
A REGENCE BOIS SATINE AND CHINESE AND EUROPEAN LACQUER ARMOIRE
SIGNED AND DATED TWICE LOUIS GUIGNARD, 1723, THE CHINESE LACQUER PANELS 18TH CENTURY WITH LATER EUROPEAN EMBELLISHMENTS
Of exceptionally large proportions, with a stepped coved cornice above a pair of panelled doors inlaid with multiple featherbanding and centering gilt and polychrome-decorated black lacquer panels of flowering trees and birds, the rounded angles and sides with similar lacquered panels, with waved paneled apron, the interior fitted with shelves, with hinged compartment to top of base, the underside of top and inscribed in red ink Louis Guignard m'a fait en l'année 1723, the inside of one panel similarly inscribed, cracking to lacquer panels of door, some losses and restorations to lacquer
102 in. (259 cm.) high, 63½ in. (161 cm.) wide, 27½ in. (70 cm.) deep
Provenance
with Fabre, Paris, until 1976.

Lot Essay

This spectacular armoire is a rare example of early French ébénisterie incorporating Chinese lacquer on a large scale. It has the particularly unusual feature of being signed twice by the maker Louis Guignard, once in red chalk, and once through an incised inscription, and dated 1723, before the guild system imposed a strict system of stamps on cabinet-makers.

Although Louis Guignard appears to be unrecorded, it is likely that he was related to Nicolas and Pierre Guignard, who are both recorded early in the 18th Century as marchands-merciers with access to the lacquer wares of the Compagnie des Indes (see T. Wolvesperges, Le Meuble Français en Laque au XVIIIe Siècle, Paris, 1999, p. 410).

The exotic wares of the East, particularly the wondrous materials lacquer and porcelain, had long exercised a fascination on the West. In the mid-17th Century, Athanase Kirchere described how 'la beauté de l'intérieur ... semble surpasser de beaucoup la somptuosité des Européens à raison de ce beau vernis dont tous leurs meubles sont peints & embellis, & que nous estimons si fort en Europe' (see Wolvesperges op. cit, p. 13).

Although it is likely that Louis Guignard acquired the lacquer panels for this armoire, which were probably cut from a screen, from a marchand-mercier in Paris, it is interesting to note that in 1721 and 1722 large sales of lacquer wares were conducted by the Compagnie des Indes in Nantes, following the arrival of their ships there, laden with Eastern wares (see Wolvesperges, op. cit., pp. 136-7). The marchand-mercier Julliot was a significant buyer at these sales.

Wolvesperges also illustrates a panel of Chinese lacquer from Canton, with designs of foliage and birds within scrolling borders similar to those on the main doors of this armoire, citing it as typical of the type of lacquer imported from China early in the 18th century (op. cit., p. 45).

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