REF NO : B78090

François Linke

‘Table des Muses’ A Louis XVI Style Marquetry Centre Table, After Jean-Henri Riesener

France, Circa 1895

£58,000

‘Table des Muses’ A Louis XVI Style Gilt-Bronze Mounted Amaranth, Bois Satiné and Sycamore Marquetry Centre Table, By François Linke, After The...

Dimensions

Height: 75 cm (30 in)
Width: 100 cm (40 in)
Depth: 60 cm (24 in)
REF NO : B78090

Description

‘Table des Muses’

A Louis XVI Style Gilt-Bronze Mounted Amaranth, Bois Satiné and Sycamore Marquetry Centre Table, By François Linke, After The Model By Jean-Henri Riesener.

Index Number 251.

Signed ‘F. Linke’ to edge of top

The elaborate marquetry top depicts an allegory of Astronomy and Geometry, personified by the Muses Urania and Calliope holding a telescope and a pair of compasses, sitting beside an armillary sphere. The border is richly veneered with paterae and acanthus scrollwork. The frieze has charmingly detailed marquetry panels with putti playing with scientific instruments. The front with a central frieze drawer. The octagonal tapering legs with acanthus cast sabots.

France. Circa 1895.

This table is superb version of the famous royal example supplied by Jean-Henri Riesener in 1771 for Louis XVI and now on display at the Petit Trianon at Versailles.

The original table by Riesener is in the Petit Trianon at Versailles (© RMN-Grand Palais (Château de Versailles) / Gérard Blot).

This famous table is known to have been replicated by Beurdeley, probably in response to the public exhibition of the Riesener’s original table at the Union centrale des Beaux-Arts appliqués à l’Industrie in Paris in 1880.

François Linke’s cliché of this model. Index Number 251 (Courtesy Christopher Payne / Linke Archive)

The Linke Archive records that this model of table was first made by Linke circa 1894 under Index Number 251. It is recorded in Linke’s Blue Daybook that Linke has written beside the entry ‘moi’, indicating that he himself worked on it. Linke is also known to have made this model with a marble top in place of the marquetry which is true to the original. The time for the cabinet work is listed to have taken between 110 and 137 hours and 83 ½ hours for a simplified version.

A contemporary photograph of a ‘Table des MUses’ Index 251, in situ at the Grosvenor Square town house of Linke’s important client Elias Meyer. (Courtesy Christopher Payne / Linke Archive).

For an example by Beurdeley see Ref. No. B76553 (collection Adrian Alan). ‘Table des Muses’ – Adrian Alan

 

 

Date

Circa 1895

Origin

France

Medium

Marquetry and Gilt-Bronze

Signature

Signed ‘F. Linke’ to edge of top

François Linke

François Linke (1855 – 1946) was the most important Parisian cabinet maker of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and possibly the most sought after cabinet maker of his period.

He was born in 1855 in the small village of Pankraz, in what is now the Czech Republic. Records show that Linke served an apprenticeship with the master cabinetmaker Neumann, then in 1875 at the age of 20 he arrived in Paris where he lived until he died in 1946.

It is known that the fledgling Linke workshops were active in Paris in the Faubourg St. Antoine as early as 1881, and during this time he supplied furniture for other more established makers such as Jansen and Krieger.

The quality of Linke’s craftsmanship was unsurpassed by any of his contemporaries and reached its peak with his spectacular stand at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1900, where his Grand Bureau took the gold medal. He gambled his fortune and reputation on this stand, exhibiting several breathtaking items of furniture with sculptural mounts of the most exceptional quality and proportion. His gamble worked and his reputation was established to such an extent that Linke continued to be the pre-eminent furniture house in Paris until the Second World War.

As the Art Journal reported in 1900 on Linke’s stand:
‘The work of M. Linke … was an example of what can be done by seeking inspiration amongst the classic examples of Louis XV and XVI without in any great sense copying these great works. M. Linke’s work was original in the true sense of the word, and as such commended itself to the intelligent seeker after the really artistic things of the Exhibition. Wonderful talent was employed in producing the magnificent pieces of furniture displayed….’

The formation of Linke’s distinctive style was made possible by his collaboration with the sculptor Léon Messagé. Together Linke and Messagé designed furniture for Linke’s 1900 exhibition stand, with exuberant allegorical figures cast in high relief, that exemplified Linke’s ability to seamlessly merge the different mediums of wood carving, bronze and marquetry into a dynamic unified whole.

Today Linke is best known for the exceptionally high quality of his work, as well as his individualism and inventiveness. All of his work has the finest, most lavish mounts, very often applied to comparatively simple carcasses. The technical brilliance of his work and the artistic change that it represented were never to be repeated.

Bibliography:
Payne, Christopher. François Linke, (1855 – 1946), The Belle Époque 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; pp. 298 – 300.
Ledoux – Lebard, Denise. Les Ébénistes du XIXe siècle, Les Editions de l’Amateur, (Paris), 1984; pp. 439-43.
Revue Artistique & Industrielle, (Paris), July-August 1900.
Coral Thomsen, D. (ed), The Paris Exhibition 1900, The Art Journal, 1901; p.341.

Literature

Payne, Christopher. François Linke, (1855 – 1946), The Belle Époque of French Furniture, Antique Collectors’ Club, (Woodbridge, UK), 2003. p.490.

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