A LATE LOUIS XV OMOLU-MOUNTED TULIPWOOD, ROSEWOOD, AMARANTH, MARQUETRY AND PARQUETRY COMMODE
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A LATE LOUIS XV OMOLU-MOUNTED TULIPWOOD, ROSEWOOD, AMARANTH, MARQUETRY AND PARQUETRY COMMODE

ATTRIBUTED TO JEAN-FRANCOIS OEBEN, CIRCA 1760

Details
A LATE LOUIS XV OMOLU-MOUNTED TULIPWOOD, ROSEWOOD, AMARANTH, MARQUETRY AND PARQUETRY COMMODE
ATTRIBUTED TO JEAN-FRANCOIS OEBEN, CIRCA 1760
The breakfront rectangular Saint-Anne des Pyrennées marble top with moulded edge above a Greek-key frieze fitted with three drawers flanked by acanthus and husk mounts headed by rams' heads, above two central drawers decorated sans traverse with a flower trellis cube parquetry, with conforming side panels, above a shaped apron mounted with an acanthus spray, on cabriole legs with acanthus scroll sabots, some handles later, the underside of the marble top with black painted 'M:S' and inscribed in red paint '49', central frieze drawer lacking handle
34¼ in. (87 cm.) high; 50 in. (127 cm.) wide; 21 in. (53.5 cm.) deep
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Jean-François Oeben, ébéniste du roi in 1754 and maître in circa 1761.

This elegant model of breakfront commode 'à la grecque', with its elaborate parquetry façade, first evolved in the workshop of Jean-François Oeben around 1750 - 1760 (see F.J.B. Watson, Louis XVI Furniture, 1960, p. 68) and the stylized Greek-key frieze and framing of the breakfront panels as well as the bucranium-cast mounts clearly characterise the nascent neo-classicism of the goût grec style of the late Louis XV period. No fewer than 17 such commodes were made by Oeben for Madame de Pompadour and distributed throughout her residences at Versailles, Ménars and the Château d'Auviliers.

Closely related commodes à la grecque stamped by Oeben include one in the J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu (illustrated in R. Stratmann-Döhler, Jean-François Oeben, Paris, 2002, p. 54) and another sold at Christie's, New York, 11 November 1978, lot 136, while a further example in a private collection is illustrated in A. Pradère, Les Ebénistes Français de Louis XIV à la Révolution, Paris, 1989, p. 261, fig. 276.

This model evidently achieved great success and was soon emulated by other Parisian ébénistes, such as the Dutch-born Jacques Dautriche (maître in 1765) and Pierre Macret (ébéniste suivant la Cour from 1756).

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