A REGENCE ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND PARQUETRY COMMODE
A REGENCE ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND PARQUETRY COMMODE

CIRCA 1720-30, ATTRIBUTED TO ETIENNE DOIRAT

Details
A REGENCE ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND PARQUETRY COMMODE
CIRCA 1720-30, ATTRIBUTED TO ETIENNE DOIRAT
The moulded top above two slightly bowed drawers centred by espagnolette mask escutcheons, on cabriole legs and hoof sabots, the locks changed with consequential reveneering behind the escutcheons
32¼ in. (82 cm.) high; 47¼ in. (120 cm.) wide; 25¼ in. (64 cm.) deep
Provenance
Anonymous sale ('A Lady of Title'), Christie's London, 18 June 1987, lot 197.

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Amelia Elborne
Amelia Elborne

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Lot Essay

Etienne Doirat (1675-1732) set up his workshop in the Cour de la Contrescarpe des Fosses de la Bastille in 1726, and in 1731 leased a store in the fashionable rue Saint-Honoré. Distinguished as one of the few ébénistes of the Régence period to occasionally stamp his pieces, the overall form, parquetry and mounts of this commode are recurrent features throughout his oeuvre. As a result of the inventory taken following his death in 1732, which effectively discloses that Doirat kept exclusive control of his bronze mounts, not only retaining the lead models but also the unchased mounts and finished examples, it is possible to attribute certain pieces on the basis of the mounts alone. This inventory further reveals that Doirat was making two-drawer commodes of this type, described as 'commodes à la Régence' by 1732 (J.-D. Augarde, 'Etienne Doirat, Menuisier en ébène', J. Paul Getty Museum, vol. 13, 1985, pp. 33-52).

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