Henry Dasson
An Important and Rare Louis XVI Style Centre Table
£140,000
An Important and Rare Louis XVI Style Gilt-Bronze Mounted Mahogany Centre Table, By Henry Dasson. Signed and dated 'henry Dasson. 1878' to the gilt-bronze...
Dimensions
Height: 75 cm (30 in)Diameter: 80 cm (32 in)
Weight: 74.5 kg
Description
An Important and Rare Louis XVI Style Gilt-Bronze Mounted Mahogany Centre Table, By Henry Dasson.
Signed and dated ‘henry Dasson. 1878’ to the gilt-bronze of one leg. Stamped to the wood of the underside ‘Henry Dasson 1878′.
This elegant and very rare centre table or guéridon, is designed in the ‘goût Weisweiler’ and is of exhibition quality, with superb gilt-bronze mounts. The table has its original Granito Nero top above a stiff-leaf cast gilt-bronze rim. The frieze is set to one side with a drawer. Each of the four sides has a gilt-bronze mount sculpted with trophies representing attributes of the four seasons. The top is supported on finely cast and chiselled alternating male and female term figures. The legs are joined by an interlaced stretcher centred by a thyrsus finial. Raised on spirally-fluted feet.
France, Dated 1878.
The present table is dated 1878 when Henry Dasson was complimented as ‘an artist of the best title’ for his magnificent contribution of furniture and works of art to the Exposition Universelle in Paris. Henry Dasson was especially admired for the quality of his gilt-bronze work which was so finely cast and detailed with mercury gilding that it has often been mistaken for the best 18th century work.
The Neoclassical style was much favoured by Dasson and the design of this table is inspired by the celebrated furniture of Louis XVI’s master cabinetmaker Adam Weisweiler. The fashion for the Louis XVI style and the ‘goût Weisweiler’ had been revived during the Second Empire by Empress Eugénie, who was nostalgic for the lost glory of France’s golden age before the revolution.
An example of this model of table by Dasson, dated 1867, was formerly in the collection of Pierre Lecoules, and is illustrated in D. Ledoux-Lebard, ‘Le mobilier français du XIXe siècle’. Another example by Dasson and dated 1884 was sold at Christie’s, London, 29 March 2007, lot 96. Henry Dasson purchased the stock and models of Charles-Guillaume Winckelsen in 1871. This model of table is known to have been made by Winckelsen who ceased trading in 1871 and sold his stock to Dasson. In turn the model is later recorded by Paul Sormani who almost certainly purchased it when Dasson ceased trading. In the first auction of Dasson’s models held in October 1894 a reference to this model of table could be No. 445 ‘Table Louis XVI, pied tête de femme et petit faune. Collection Richard Wallace’.

The likely entry for this model of table from the auction of Henry Dasson’s stock in 1894.
Interestingly, the catalogue is annotated with the sale price 210 to Sormani. It is also inscribed ‘fait de chic’ and ‘Gouthières La table V. Le D’ Omont’. This is a possible reference to the origins for this model as being made by the bronzier Pierre Gouthière (1732–1813), belonging to the Duc d’Aumont and later being part of Richard Wallace’s collection. A leading art patron, Louis-Marie-Augustin, duc d’Aumont (1709–1782) commissioned the architect François-Joseph Bélanger to design tables, columns and objets d’art with gilt-bronze mounts by Gouthière.
The present table is one of the finest examples of this model by Henry Dasson to have appeared on the market. Elegantly proportioned and with a stylish Granito Nero top, this table is a masterclass in the art of mounting furniture with gilt-bronze. In the detailing of the gilt-bronze trophies of the four seasons and the modelling of the figural legs, Dasson shows himself to be the 19th century equal of Louis XVI’s great bronze maker, Pierre Gouthière. This is a rare opportunity for a collector to acquire a definitive example of Henry Dasson’s art furniture in immaculate condition.
Date
Dated 1878
Origin
France
Medium
Mahogany and Gilt-Bronze
Signature
Signed and dated 'henry Dasson. 1878' to the gilt-bronze of one leg. Stamped to the underside 'Henry Dasson 1878'.
Henry Dasson

M. Henry Dasson, Fabricant de Bronzes d’Art, in 1883.
In the nineteenth century Henry Dasson was one of the finest makers of gilt-bronze mounted furniture, clocks, candelabra and other works of art. Renowned for the quality of his gilt-bronze, Dasson was no mere foundryman, but an artist in bronze, and his mastery of the medium was such that he was called a nineteenth century Benvenuto Cellini.

Detail showing the exceptional quality of the gilt-bronze to the ‘Table des Arts’ by Henry Dasson (Collection Adrian Alan).
From humble beginnings as the son of a shoemaker, Dasson’s first master was Arnoux, a clockmaker of great merit. Dasson refined the quality in making bronze clock casings, rose to become manager and, by 1858, is listed as a clockmaker in his own right. In 1866 Dasson took over the business of Carl Drechsler who had himself succeeded from Charles Crozatier, who had established a celebrated reputation for casting bronze statuary. Most famously Crozatier cast the statue of Napoleon atop the Vendôme Column.
Crozatier and Drechsler also made furniture, notably for the fourth Marquess of Hertford, for whom, amongst other pieces, they crafted the first copy of Louis XV’s Bureau du Roi (Wallace Collection Inv: F460). Interestingly, Dasson himself made the next replica for the 1878 Paris Expostion Universelle. Dasson’s transition to furniture maker was further facilitated in 1871 when he purchased for 15,000 francs the flourishing business and remaining stock of Charles-Guillaume Winckelsen. Dasson’s ability to master metalwork, furniture and even the intricacies of clocks, means that his output is of the most consistent quality. Only Beurdeley’s production would go on to equal the breadth and quality of Dasson’s craft.
It was said that Dasson was a modern master and more than the equal of Boulle, Caffieri, Risener and Gouthière. Dasson advertised as a ‘sculpteur et bronzier’ making ‘meubles d’art’. With a workshop at 106 rue Vieille-du-Temple, Dasson specialised predominantly in the production of Louis XIV, XV and XVI style furniture using the very finest gilt-bronze mounts.

By 1883 it was recorded that:
“thanks to the talent, inventive spirit and the tireless activity of Mr. Henry Dasson, the establishment on the rue Vieille-du-Temple and rue Thorigny has regained its place of honour at the head of Parisian bronze-making” (Le Panthéon de L’Industrie, Paris, No. 438 9 September 1883).
Dasson cemented his reputation at the 1878 Paris Exposition Universelle where he exhibited a number of pieces in the Louis XV and XVI styles, as well as pieces of his own modified eighteenth-century design, such as the ‘Table des Quatre Saisons’, which was purchased by Lord Dudley. His copy of the celebrated Bureau du Roi sold at the same exhibition sold to Lady Ashburton for 90,000 francs. Dasson went on to exhibit in all the major exhibitions including Paris in 1889 and Moscow in 1891. He was awarded the Légion d’Honneur in 1882 and made an officer in 1889.

The Bureau du Roi by Henry Dasson shown at the 1878 Paris Exhibition. It was copied from the original preserved at the Louvre which is known as “the most beautiful piece of furniture in the world”. So perfect was Dasson’s replica that experts could scarcely distinguish from the original. It was bought by the Scottish art collector and philanthropist Louisa Baring, Lady Ashburton (1827-1903).
Advantaged by his medal winning exhibitions at the World Fairs, Dasson reached a global cliental. In addition to the aforementioned members of the British aristocracy, clients included titans of America’s Gilded Age such as Henry T. Dortic, who was born in Augusta, Georgia and of French descent, and members of the fashionable Parisian elite such as Mademoiselle de Lancey.

Mademoiselle de Lancey painted by Charles Durand in 1876. Her collection was revealed to include many pieces by Henry Dasson when sold at Drouot auctions in Paris in 1889. Alice de Lancey was born in Baltimore in 1851 under the name of Julia Tahl. She was one of the great courtesans of Paris during the Belle Epoque era and infamous for her liaison with Count Nissim de Camondo. Read more: https://www.petitpalais.paris.fr/en/oeuvre/mademoiselle-de-lancey

Henry Dasson (1825–1896), ‘cabinet à colonnes’, from the Russian Imperial collection at the Anitchkov Palace © State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg
Dasson ceased production in 1894 and sales of his remaining stock and models were held. The sale catalogues list “drawings for art bronzes, style furniture and important decoration with rights of reproduction by Henry Dasson et Cie, manufacturer of art bronzes and cabinetmaker as a result of cessation of production”.
The records from this sale show that Paul Sormani, as well as Emmanuel Zweiner, Maison Millet and Beurdeley acquired certain drawings and models by Dasson. The Art Magazine recorded in 1896 that “M. Henry Dasson, the well-known connoisseur, sculptor, and manufacturer of art-bronzes, has died at the age of seventy-one. He was an officer of the Legion of Honour, and general secretary of the Amis des Arts, of which Society he was one of the founders”.

Dasson marqué au fer (branded mark).

Dasson signature
Bibliography:
Ledoux-Lebard, Denise. Les Ebénistes du XIXeme siècle, Les Editions de l’Amateur, (Paris), 1984; pp. 146 – 151.
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.307-317.
With paper label to underside of the marble top: ‘SIR H C BANNERMAN AUG 3 1904’.

Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, by Alexander Bassano, half-plate glass negative, c.1895. © National Portrait Gallery, London.
Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (1836-1908), was a British statesman and Liberal politician and served as Prime Minister of Great Britain from 1905 to 1908. He spoke French, German and Italian fluently, and had a deep appreciation for French culture. The Campbell-Bannerman’s spent time each year in France, maintained a richly furnished townhouse at 6 Grosvenor Place, Belgravia and Belmont Castle in Perthshire which they had bought and refurbished in the late 19th century.
1ère Vente H. DASSON et Cie, Les Mardi 9, Mercredi 10, Jeudi 11, Vendredi 12 Octobre 1894. Modèles pour Bronzes d’Art, Meubles de Style et Grande Décoration. Avec droit de reproduction. Provenant De la Maison H. DASSON et Cie (Source gallica.bnf.fr / Bibliothèque nationale de France).
Ledoux-Lebard, Denise. ‘Le mobilier français du XIXe siècle’, Les Editions de l’Amateur, (Paris), 1989; p. 148.















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