Lot Essay
With its elongated sinuous design incorporating carved shell motifs and cabochons, this table relates closely to the work of Pierre Contant d'Ivry (1698-1777) of the mid-1750s, at the Palais Royal in Paris and the Palais Bernstorff in Copenhagen (Svend Eriksen, Early neo-classicism in France, London, 1974, pp. 42-43, figs. 22-27). The symmetry in the rococo forms and frozen quality of the curves are characteristic of the rocaille symmetrisé, first evident in 1748-’49, as discussed by B. Pallot, L’Art du Siège, Paris, 1989, p. 132. This style would then further develop into the so-called Classical symmetrical rococo, preceding the beginning of neo-classicism, and the present table has elements of both stylistic phases. Two related console tables, with similar sinuous shapes to the present example, are illustrated in B. Pallot, ibid. pp. 154-155.