A PAIR OF LOUIS XV BEECHWOOD FAUTEUILS
This lot is offered without reserve.
A PAIR OF LOUIS XV BEECHWOOD FAUTEUILS

CIRCA 1750, EACH STAMPED 'TILLIARD'

Details
A PAIR OF LOUIS XV BEECHWOOD FAUTEUILS
CIRCA 1750, EACH STAMPED 'TILLIARD'
The arched crestrail carved with shell clasp shoulders and over a padded back, downswept arms and seat covered in close-nailed crimson cut-velvet, over a waved scroll-carved seatrail with cabochon clasp, on fan-headed cabriole legs ending in toupie feet, stamped to underside rear seatrail (2)
Special notice
This lot is offered without reserve.
Further details
This lot will be sold without reserve

Lot Essay

Jean-Baptiste Tilliard, maître in 1717, or Jacques-Jean-Baptiste Tilliard, maître in 1752.

The celebrated menuisier Jean-Baptiste Tilliard (1685-1766) established one of the most important worshops in Paris in the rue de Cléry, 'Aux Armes de France'. Working closely with his son Jacques-Jean-Baptiste, who continued to use the same stamp after his father's retirement, Tilliard often employed other skilled sculpteurs such as Nicolas Heurtaut, Damien Quintel and Toussaint Foliot, and retailed much of his production through the marchand-mercier Julien-Etienne Olivier. In 1728 he received the title of maître menuisier du Garde-Meuble du Roi, and his distinguished clientele included the Prince de Soubise and the marquise de Pompadour.

The distinctive and characteristic heart-shaped cabochon motif features on much of Tilliard's documented oeuvre, including the pairs of fauteuils, bergeres and chaises à la reine in the Wrightsman Collection (illustrated in F.J.B Watson, The Wrightsman Collection, New York, 1966, vol.I, p.48, p.66-67), as well as in G. Jeanneau, Les Sièges, Paris, 1967, pls.130, 175, 190.

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