Cabinet

Getty Museum

Cabinet

Date
1788; pietra dura plaque late 17th–18th century
Medium
Oak veneered with ebony, mahogany, and lacquer, set with pietra dura plaques; gilt bronze mounts; bleu turquin marble top
Culture
French
Department
Decorative Arts
Institution
Getty Museum

This cabinet was one of a pair delivered in 1788 for the bedroom of Louis XVI at the château of Saint-Cloud. From a memoir written in the same year giving a detailed description of both cabinets, scholars know that both were originally veneered with panels of Japanese lacquer cut from a screen. The document lists in detail not only the names of most of the artisans who worked on the cabinet, but also the cost of each part--an unusual and fascinating detail. From this document, researchers learned that the most expensive part of this piece was the elaborately chased and gilded mounts, which show symbols of the king. At some point in the early 1800s, someone replaced the lacquer panels with *pietre dure* (hardstone) plaques. The companion piece, now in the Royal Palace in Madrid, has been changed too; marquetry panels showing harbor scenes replaced the original lacquer. The mounts were cast by Étienne-Jean Forestier and Denis Bardin. They were chased by Pierre-Philippe Thomire and gilt by Claude Galle.

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