Lot Essay
Noël Gérard, active 1690-1736.
This striking bureau en commode of singular design, richly embellished with ormolu mounts, can be attributed to the marchand-ébéniste Noël Gérard.
Two further commodes with identical handles to those on the present commode attributed to Gérard have recently been offered at auction. The first, a two drawer commode sold Christie’s, Monaco, 1 July 1995, lot 198 and was sold subsequently with Thierry de Maigret, Drouot, Paris, 21 June 2019, lot 282. The second was offered for sale Christie’s, London 21 September 2022, lot 16.
Gérard was apprenticed to Francois Clabaux in 1701 and by 1719 he was established in the rue du Faubourg-Saint-Antoine. His business prospered and he soon moved to the hôtel of the financier Janach on the rue Saint-Martin. Apart from his activities as an ébéniste, in 1726 he was appointed a marchand-mercier and his clients included the ex-King of Poland Stanislas Leczczynski, the comte de Clermont as well as the ambassador of Spain and the Marquis de Castellas. The inventory drawn up at the time of his death in 1736 revealed the extent of his business, recording seven work benches, a large stock of exotic woods, gilt-bronze mouldings and more than one hundred and fifty pieces of furniture.
Gérard was the half-brother of the ébéniste Jacques Dubois; a commode of related design to the present lot attributed to Gérard but bearing the stamp of Dubois was sold Christie’s, Paris 6 November 2015, lot 703. It is likely that Dubois added his stamp to the commode after carrying out restoration.