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      • Bureau PlatBureau Plat
        3,000.00

        in Louis XV style, France, late 19th century, various hardwoods and softwoods, rosewood veneer, polished using traditional craftsmanship, one drawer, rich, chased and gilded bronze decorative fittings and panel edging, renewed gold-trimmed leather covering, 76 x 99 x 59 cm, beautiful professionally restored condition.

      • Zierliches Bureau PlatZierliches Bureau Plat Sold

        Maison Millet, Paris, late 19th century, in the Louis XVI style, worked after an 18th century model by Jean Henri Riesener, oak frame veneered with rosewood and mahogany, as well as latticed, marquetry, polished in traditional craftsmanship, conical fluted feet, one drawer, finely chased gilt bronze fittings and plate surround, embossed lock, Millet a Paris, approx. 75 x 100 x 60 cm, beautiful professionally restored condition.

        Subject to species protection (ASB)

        MAISON MILLET (1853-1918) was founded in 1853 by Theodore Millet. The company exclusively produced luxury furniture and gilded bronze objects of the highest quality. It was mainly furniture in the style of the 18th century. Due to the high demand, Millet had some of his orders made by other renowned ebenists. These included François Linke. Millet won the gold medal at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1889. Maison Millet was open as a producer until 1902 and, after the death of the company founder in 1906, as a store until 1918.

      • Monumentales Bureau PlatMonumentales Bureau Plat seitlich
        14,000.00

        France, Louis XVI period, ca. 1780, by the ebenist Pierre Garnier (master from 1742), predominantly oak, mahogany veneered and with ebony marquetry, matted, double-sided drawer design with a total of 10 drawers. 10 drawers, conical feet, gilt bronze ornamental fittings and panel edging, extendable extension panels on 3 sides with gold-decorated leather covering, stamped P. Garnier on the underside, approx. 79 x 171 x 94 cm, can be enlarged to approx. 275 x 148 cm, minor signs of age and wear.

        Pierre Garnier, (1720-1800), became a master in 1742 at the age of 22 and a member of the Parisian “Jurande des Ebenistes”. His work illustrates the evolution of all styles in France in the XVIII century, beginning with the early Louis XV period, through the Transition and Louis XVI, to the Directoire, the period of the Great French Revolution. In the “L’ Almanach général des Marchands du Royaume”, Garnier is cited as one of the most important ebenists of the XVIII century, alongside Oeben, Riesener, Weisweiler and Leleu. He is regarded as one of the inventors of the “style à la grecque”, which heralded the beginning of classicism. In the “Petites Affiches” of 1800 – in his obituary – he is described as someone who for 50 years produced a quality that makes any praise superfluous. In addition to the royal family, he supplied the entire aristocracy. His works can be admired in the Louvre, Musée Jacquemart-André, South Kensington Museum and Metropolitan Museum of Arts, among others.