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BY HENRY DASSON, PARIS, ONE DATED 1882, AFTER THE MODEL BY MARTIN CARLIN
細節
A NEAR PAIR OF FRENCH ORMOLU-MOUNTED EBONY AND JAPANESE BLACK LACQUER COMMODES A L'ANGLAISE
BY HENRY DASSON, PARIS, ONE DATED 1882, AFTER THE MODEL BY MARTIN CARLIN
Each with a 'D'-shaped white marble top above a swag frieze and pair of lacquer cupboard doors enclosing an adjustable shelf, flanked by a pair of marble shelves, raised on toupie feet, one variously stamped 'HENRY DASSON / 1882' and signed and dated to the top moulding 'henry Dasson 1882', the other variously stamped 'HENRY DASSON' and with 'HD' cachet
38 ½ in. (98 cm.) high; 64 ¾ in. (164.5 cm.) wide; 18 ¾ in. (47.5 cm.) deep
BY HENRY DASSON, PARIS, ONE DATED 1882, AFTER THE MODEL BY MARTIN CARLIN
Each with a 'D'-shaped white marble top above a swag frieze and pair of lacquer cupboard doors enclosing an adjustable shelf, flanked by a pair of marble shelves, raised on toupie feet, one variously stamped 'HENRY DASSON / 1882' and signed and dated to the top moulding 'henry Dasson 1882', the other variously stamped 'HENRY DASSON' and with 'HD' cachet
38 ½ in. (98 cm.) high; 64 ¾ in. (164.5 cm.) wide; 18 ¾ in. (47.5 cm.) deep
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更多詳情
The use of Chinese and Japanese lacquer in French furniture was prevalent starting in the 18th century, when the taste for chinoiseries was encouraged by the marchands-merciers, the purveyors of luxury goods in Paris who had a monopoly on the import of precious art from the East such as lacquer and porcelain. This lacquer furniture was prized not only as an exotic and rare luxury, but also for the technical skills the panels required of the ébénistes to shape these pieces – often re-used from screens or coffers – to harmoniously fit the forms of their furniture (C. Payne, Paris Furniture: The Luxury Market of the 19th Century, 2018, p. 86). During the third quarter of the 19th century, a renewed fascination in lacquer and other Eastern objets d'art emerged with the advent of the 'japonisme' movement, due in part to the globalization of the world markets and the opening of trade with Japan. No longer were panels worked into existing forms, but instead, lacquer decorations could be commissioned specifically for pieces (op. cit. p. 88). Some cabinet makers, like François Linke, reputedly sent carcasses of their works to Japan by way of the trans-Siberian railway to be adorned in sumptuous and sculptural lacquer (op. cit. p. 152).
The design of the present pair of commodes ‘à l'anglaise’, or ‘à encoignures’, relates closely to the model by Martin Carlin, maître 1766, supplied between 1775 and 1780 to the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré home of the Marquise de Brunoy, née Françoise-Emilie de Pérusse des Cars, daughter-in-law of the financier Pâris de Montmartel. The commode and its matching pair of small lacquer consoles became separated when they were confiscated from the Marquise at the time of the Revolution. The latter are now in the Petit Trianon, whilst the commode was sent to the Palais de Saint-Cloud in 1802 to furnish the grand salon of the Premier Consul's apartment overlooking the Orangerie, remaining in the palace until 1870 when it was moved to the Louvre. Late 19th century ébénistes were inspired by Carlin’s model and modified copies by makers such as Alfred Beurdeley and Gervais Durand are known, including those by Henry Dasson. As seen with present lot, Dasson made subtle alterations to Carlin’s model, by fitting his design with a pair of lacquer panels, rather than the three associated Carlin's original. In L'ameublement d'art français: 1850-1900, Mestdagh cites the 1894 sale of Dasson & Cie.'s master models for furniture mounts, at which Beurdeley acquired various mounts, including 'an important cabinet Louis XVI, with lateral shelves, Louvre Museum'. In referring to this acquisition, Payne goes on to further speculate that the patterns were almost certainly those associated with Carlin's design (op. cit. p. 204), thus continuing the 19th century tradition of passing enduring and iconic designs of the ancien régime through generations of cabinetmakers.
Another example by Henry Dasson dated 1884 is recorded by Ledoux-Lebard as having sold at Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 23-24 October 1973, no. 221. A nearly identical pair of commodes, by Henry Dasson, is illustrated in C. Payne, Paris Furniture: The Luxury Market of the 19th Century, 2018, p. 204).
榮譽呈獻
Paul Gallois