A FINE AND LARGE FRENCH ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND TULIPWOOD BOMBE VITRINE
A FINE AND LARGE FRENCH ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND TULIPWOOD BOMBE VITRINE
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THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A FINE AND LARGE FRENCH ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND TULIPWOOD BOMBE VITRINE

ATTRIBUTED TO MAISON MILLET, PARIS, LATE 19TH CENTURY

细节
A FINE AND LARGE FRENCH ORMOLU-MOUNTED KINGWOOD AND TULIPWOOD BOMBE VITRINE
ATTRIBUTED TO MAISON MILLET, PARIS, LATE 19TH CENTURY
The arched top with foliate-cast frieze centred by a female mask flanked by crossed branches, above a shaped glazed door with floral cresting, flanked by glazed side panels and ends, each with quarter-veneered lower section framed with acanthus and floral mounts, the angles cast with bulrushes above scrolled acanthus chutes, headed to the front by a male and female caryatid bearing flower chains, the shaped apron cast with further bulrushes, on scrolled feet, the right-hand caryatid bearing the inscription F. Linke; the interior with mirrored back, silk-lined base and three adjustable glass shelves
112½ in. (286 cm.) high; 78 in. (198 cm.) wide; 27½ in. (70 cm.) deep
来源
The Property of a Gentleman, Christie's, London, 30 September 2004, lot 220 (£71,700).

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Casey Rogers
Casey Rogers

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拍品专文

This large vitrine in the Louis XV style is reminiscent of the work of François Linke, however none of the mounts are specifically recorded in his oeuvre nor does the construction have the hall-marks of his workshop. Instead the mounts, construction and exaggerated bombé form are characteristic of the production of Maison Millet. The distinctive illustrated bust 'chutes' to the front corners also appear on a large vitrine shown by Millet at the Paris salon of 1905.

Established by Blaise Millet in 1853, the Maison Millet operated until 1902 from premises at 11, rue Jacques-Coeur, Paris, before relocating to 23, boulevard Beaumarchais. Maison Millet was expanded under the direction of Blaise's son Théodore, receiving a gold medal at the 1889 Paris Exposition Universelle, a Grand Prix in 1900 and three further diplomes d'honneur and four médailles d'or. Specialising in 'meubles et bronzes d'art, genre ancien et moderne' with the accent on Louis XV and XVI antecedents, in 1902 Maison Millet was authorised by the director of the Palais de Versailles to replicate Marie-Antoinette's celebrated Grand cabinet à bijoux. An auction of the firm's inventory was held in 1906 and they finally ceased trading in 1918.