REF NO : B78080

François Linke

A Fine Louis XV Style Gilt-Bronze Mounted Mahogany Console Table

France, Circa 1890

£85,000

A Louis XV Style Gilt-Bronze Mounted Mahogany Console Table, With Marble Top, By François Linke, Paris. Surmounted by a serpentine-shaped Brèche de...

Dimensions

Height: 96 cm (38 in)
Width: 160 cm (63 in)
Depth: 53 cm (21 in)
REF NO : B78080

Description

A Louis XV Style Gilt-Bronze Mounted Mahogany Console Table, With Marble Top, By François Linke, Paris.

Surmounted by a serpentine-shaped Brèche de Saint-Maximin marble top. The frieze with acanthus cast naturalistic frame encircling central rocaille cartouches. On four cabriole legs, each headed by a female caryatid bust and oined by an ‘X’-shaped stretcher, centred by a Watteauesque man holding a mandolin, seated on a pierced foliate base. On scrolled sabots.

Incised marks ‘FL’ and ‘LF’ for François Linke to the back of the gilt-bronze mounts.

Linke Index Number 153.

France, Circa 1890.

 

This console table is designed in the rococo style of the 1750s. The caryatid angle mounts are after 18th century models by Charles Cressent (1685-1768); P. Kjellberg, Le Mobillier Français Du XVIII Siecle, Paris, 2002, p. 226).

Linke’s photograph of this model of console table under Index Number 153 (courtesy Christopher Payne / Linke archive).

It was produced by François Linke under Index Number 153. It is known that François Linke acquired designs, templates and models for furniture from other makers when they ceased trading. Linke continued to make and adapt these models by other makers. The present table is one such case in point. This model of console table is known to have been made by Mathieu Befort, known as Befort Jeune, who was active from the 1840s to the 1870s. When Befort closed in 1880, Linke would have purchased the master models for this table. For the gilt-bronze mounts he would make his own casts from the models by Befort Jeune, adding his initials ‘FL’, as can been seen to the bronzes on this table.

The rococo design of this table was an inspiration for the sculptor Léon Messagé who collaborated with François Linke to produce legendary Art Nouveau-infused rococo furniture for the Paris 1900 Exposition universelle. The evidence of this inspiration can been seen in a variation of this console table, also by Linke, which features different gilt-bronze mounts showing Messagé’s hand.

A variation of this model of console table showing the design influence of Léon Messagé (Private Collection).

The charming figure of the Mandolin player to the stretcher is inspired by the Rococo painting by Jean-Antoine Watteau (1681-1724) ‘Mezzetin’, circa 1718-20,  now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Inv. No.34.138.  Mezzetin, a stock comic character of the Italian commedia dell’arte, became an established archetype on the Paris stage, but was an innovative subject for painting in Watteau’s lifetime.

Mezzetin, or The Mandolin Player, painted by Antoine Watteau, circa 1720 (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Inv. No.34.138 / Public Domain).

Date

Circa 1890

Origin

France

Medium

Mahogany and Gilt-Bronze

Signature

Incised marks 'FL' and 'LF' for François Linke to the back of the gilt-bronze mounts.

François Linke

 

François Linke (1855–1946)

 

François Linke was the most celebrated ébéniste of the late 19th and early 20th-century Belle Époque period. His furniture is highly prized for its exceptional craftsmanship and refined design. Like many of his contemporaries, Linke produced pieces reviving the French historical styles of Louis XIV, Louis XV, and Louis XVI. However, he also pioneered entirely new designs in collaboration with the sculptor Léon Messagé. Described as Le Style Linke, these creations blend Rococo exuberance with the fluidity of Art Nouveau and were unveiled to great acclaim at the 1900 Paris International Exhibition.

 

François Linke’s gold medal winning stand at the 1900 Paris Exhibition (courtesy Christopher Payne / Linke Archive).

Born on 17 June 1855 in the small village of Pankraz, now in the Czech Republic, Linke served an apprenticeship with the master cabinet maker, Neumann, which he completed in 1877. By the age of eighteen, he was in Vienna, where he likely visited the 1873 International Exhibition. There, he would have admired the luxurious furniture of leading Parisian firms such as Beurdeley, Dasson, Grohé, and Fourdinois.

Linke arrived in Paris in 1875, reportedly on Christmas Day. Though not certain, it is believed he worked for the renowned German cabinetmaker Emmanuel Zwiener, whose innovative designs undoubtedly influenced Linke’s style. In 1878, he would have witnessed the third major International Exhibition in Paris, a symbol of France’s recovery following the Franco-Prussian War.

By 1881, Linke had established his own workshops in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, supplying furniture to prominent firms such as Jansen and Krieger. The 1889 World’s Fair in Paris, marked by the unveiling of the Eiffel Tower, further fuelled his ambition. He was particularly inspired by Emmanuel Zwiener’s exhibits at the fair, especially a jewel cabinet designed by Léon Messagé and purchased by Empress Maria Feodorovna of Russia (1847-1928).

(Frontispiece to Léon Messagé’s compendium of designs titled ‘Cahier des Dessins & Croquis Style Louis XV’).
Léon Messagé (1842-1901) was the design genius behind Linke’s furniture for the 1900 exhibition. He sculpted the figural bronzes and created a new design vocabulary which fused the rococo with the Art Nouveau which became known as “Le Style Linke”.

As early as 1892, the French government announced plans for another grand exhibition at the century’s end, partly to pre-empt Berlin from staging the last great show of the century. Victor Champier, one of the commissioners for the 1900 Paris Fair appealed “Create in the manner of the masters, do not copy what they have made.” Linke rose to this challenge against mere reproduction with bold originality. His pièce de résistance was Le Grand Bibliothèque, an astonishing bookcase that embodied his new style.

Linke’s masterpiece ‘La Grande Bibliothèque’ illustrated in ‘La Décoration et l’ameublement à l’Exposition de 1900’, v. 1, by Armand Guèrinet, Paris, 1900, page p. 8, pl. 1.

‘La Grande Bibliothèque’  shown on Adrian Alan’s stand at the Olympia Art & Antiques Fair.

Perhaps the most remarkable chapter in Linke’s career was his decision to produce such extravagant and luxurious furniture for the 1900 Exhibition without any commission or guaranteed buyer.

François Linke’s official exhibitor’s pass for the 1900 exhibition (courtesy Christopher Payne / Linke Archive).

While long-established houses like Beurdeley and Dasson were closing, Linke risked everything on this ambitious display. He recognized the need to attract an international clientele, particularly the emerging nouveau riche who were amassing wealth at an unprecedented scale. Had his gamble failed, bankruptcy would have been almost certain. In this sense, Linke was arguably the greatest furniture entrepreneur of the Belle Époque, and perhaps of any era.

The Grand Bureau made for the 1900 Paris Exhibition. The desk represents the “Productivity of France and Man”. Its iconography symbolises the power and confidence of human achievement, the crowning glory of the fin de siècle. As such it reflects the whole ethos of the 1900 exhibition – to look forward to a new age.

Linke’s notebooks record visitors from across the globe to his stand, including royalty, aristocrats, and industrialists: the King of Sweden; the King of Belgium (who visited three times); Prince Radziwill; the Prince d’Arenberg; Comte Alberic du Chastel; American heiress Anna May Gould; distinguished furniture makers; and French President Émile Loubet.

Solly Joel (Solomon Barnato Joel), (1865-1931), financier and ‘King of Diamonds’was reported as the major buyer of Linke’s furniture at the 1900 Exhibition. Linke’s delivery book records four pieces, the Grand Bureau, index number 550, the associated armchair, number 703, the inkwell, number 709 and the Mars and Venus Cabinet, number 701. The following year Joel also bought the Grand Bibliothèque.

His gamble was a resounding success. With his reputation firmly established, Maison Linke became the pre-eminent furniture maker until the outbreak of the Second World War. The technical brilliance of his work and the artistic change that it represented was never to be repeated. Linke expanded his showrooms to prestigious premises in Paris, including the Place Vendôme and the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, where his workshop had been established.

F. Linke signature.

In the years leading up to World War I, Linke undertook many major commissions for leading international industrialists and financiers. He is also reputed to have supplied furniture to the Kaiser. After the war, Linke was commissioned to furnish the Ras al-Tin Palace in Alexandria for King Fuad of Egypt, possibly the largest single furniture commission ever attempted, even eclipsing Versailles.

Linke flourished and remained active well into the 1930s and passed died in 1946. His legacy endures as a master of his craft and a visionary who reshaped the art of furniture-making for the modern age.

Linke’s life and work are comprehensively documented by Christopher Payne in ‘François Linke 1855-1946: The Belle Epoque of French Furniture’.

View our stock of available items by François Linke

 

Bibliography:
Ledoux – Lebard, Denise. Les Ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Les Editions de L’Amateur, (Paris), 1984; pp. 440-444.
Payne, Christopher. François Linke 1855-1946: The Belle Epoque of French Furniture. Antique Collectors’ Club, (Woodbridge, UK), 2003.
Meyer, Jonathan. Great Exhibitions – London, New York, Paris, Philadelphia, 1851-1900, Antique Collectors’ Club, (Woodbridge, UK), 2006.
Mestdagh, Camille & Lécoules, Pierre. L’Ameublement d’Art Français, 1850-1900, Les Editions de L’Amateur, (Paris), 2010.
Payne, Christopher. Paris Furniture – the luxury market of the 19th century, Éditions Monelle Hayot (Paris), 2018; pp.436-456

 

Literature

Payne, Christopher, ‘François Linke, (1855 – 1946), The Belle Époque of French Furniture’, Antique Collectors’ Club, (Woodbridge, UK), 2003; p. 55, pl. 145.

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