Adam Weisweiler
A Fine Louis XVI Style Gilt-Bronze Gueridon
£34,000
A Fine Louis XVI Style Gilt-Bronze Gueridon With a Green Breccia Marble Top, After the Model by Adam Weisweiler. Of very fine quality, this elegant...
Dimensions
Height: 70 cm (28 in)Diameter: 51.5 cm (21 in)
Description
A Fine Louis XVI Style Gilt-Bronze Gueridon With a Green Breccia Marble Top, After the Model by Adam Weisweiler.
Of very fine quality, this elegant gueridon has a circular green breccia marble top within a pierced anthemion cast gallery above three pairs of simulated bamboo columns headed by classical Egyptian mascarons, the columns are united by a tripartite stretcher surmounted by a circular dish and terminating in cast bun feet.
French, Circa 1890.
Date
Circa 1890
Origin
French
Medium
Gilt-Bronze
Adam Weisweiler (1744-1820), was a pre-eminent cabinet maker working in Paris from 1777. He became a maître-ébéniste in 1778, and set up his workshop on the rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine.
Weisweiler worked mainly for the marchands-merciers, who alone could supply him with the Japanese lacquer panels that, combined with ebony and refined gilt-bronze, characterise some of his finest work. Through Dominique Daguerre he supplied the writing table of steel, lacquer and ebony and gilt-bronze for Marie Antoinette at the château de Saint-Cloud in 1784. Also through Daguerre he provided furniture for the Prince Regent (later George IV) at Carlton House, London.
Weisweiler specialised in small refined pieces, with fine lines, delicate legs with light interlaced stretchers, and gilt-bronze low-relief plaques and mounts, some provided to him by Pierre Gouthière through Daguerre, often decorated with panels of Japanese lacquer and Sèvres porcelain plaques, even panels of pietra dura.
Unlike other luxury furniture makers of the Ancien Régime, Weisweiler weathered the Revolution. In 1810 he was supplying Queen Hortense and collaborating with Pierre-Philippe Thomire.