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Antiques, painting, drawing, sculpture, furniture, fine art, porcelain, ceramic, work of art, carpet, tapestry, silver are among the subject studied.
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Succeeding to the transition style, which marks the transition between the styles of Louis XV and Louis XVI, Louis XVI style developed in France and especially in Paris between 1770 and 1790. Also known as neoclassicism of the rest of Europe and particularly in Italy and Germany, the Louis XVI style is marked by a return to antiquity and straight lines as opposed to the canons of style Louis XV all in curves. Remerber that the ruins of Herculaneum and Pompeii were excavated in 1738 and 1749.
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The Musee de Sevres, opened by Alexandre Brongniard in 1824, owned a fabulous ceramic collection covering centuries of research and design. From simple earth ware to the richest porcelain, these works of art tell us the ceramic history and in particular the Sevres one.
The birth of French porcelain
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Main item from the triptych forming "the French coat" and whose 3-piece suit will be the last incarnation, the vest is a piece of menswear that it is not uncommon to discover in the trunk of old costumes and in auction.
I. From the jacket to the waistcoat.
Succeeding the doublet around 1670, the vest - which will take this name in the last third of the eighteenth century - is still called vest and worn under a coat, a sort of frock coat itself named during the Louis XVI period.
With pockets and buttonholes often fake, the jacket tails down again until mid-thigh during the Regence. Only after losing his long sleeves have been shortened to the size it becomes vest, circa 1760.
In the first part of the century, the vest or jacket, which only the visible part is "rich stuff" (the adjustable back with a lace fabric is cut in a plain linen or cotton) is most often matched with the “habit”. Velvet carved miniature or plain Gros Tours embroidery enriched with gold and silver will be long in vogue, especially for winter suits. However, the exuberance of floral fabrics in oversized gives way to 1760 for the planting of flowers and stripes.
From 1770, the fashion trend is for taffeta and Pekins with striped and more often plain satins shades lighter than the coat, greenish yellow called "merdoye" and especially ivory.
These vests delicately embroidered in polychrome silk (picture 1) constitute the vast majority of the pieces seen at auction. They are often embroidered on some parts. Their decor, selected from the boards of patterns or samples of the embroiderer, has been carefully embroidered form on the strip of uncut fabric (sometimes including the buttons) before being sent to the tailor who cut and assemble the vest to measurements required. It is also not uncommon to find these delicate gouache models that reflect the boundless imagination of quilters and coquetry of the elegant era.
Nobleman in the eighteen century is not afraid to be "bling, " he loves spun gold or silver sequins, spangles, faceted mirrors, rhinestones and other "flashy" mixed with silk embroideries, to shine a thousand lights in the glow of candlelight.
From 1780, the traditional models with swags, garlands and flowers thrown are enriched by small figurative drawings witch are very popular. If the costume is fixed in a simple way inherited from the Anglomania, the fantasy is still in the jacket with a square cut, straight without flap pockets and small embroidered collar with lapels. Striped cloth or changing, it stops at the waist and leaves clearly visible panty charms, watches, glasses that will survive the simplification of the costume.
II. The man’s vest or « l’homme paré » *
The ornamentation of the vests with short basque and small collar in Louis XVI time is full of allusions inspired from pastoral fables. They also immortalize episodes of hunting or battles (picture 2), trendy opera or the news with balloons, when they do not adorn libertine performances intended to remain hidden "under wraps".
During the revolution, the vest may prove subversive and allows the owner to display his political loyalty as Robespierre who wore a vest decorated with figures and revolutionary maxims.
Nice example, this incredible jacket (picture 3) a noble freshly converted to the revolutionary cause and whose allegiance is made known by a simple mesh vest tricolor calls to go beyond the envelope ... On pockets are embroidered "Honi soit qui mal y pense " or "the dress does not make the man" on the reverse of the collar, a caterpillar and a butterfly with clipped wings, symbolizing the abandonment of a lifestyle superficial at the time or the luxury of toilets is equated with tyranny. But it is fashionable to adopt a mode less flashy we can instead view the revolution as opposed to those royalists who paraded armed vests covered with lilies after the fall of the Bastille!
Under the Directoire and Consulate, the color palette is reduced; the decorative style is smaller with certain rigidity and stylized motifs. Downscaling neoclassical is beautifully illustrated here by a yellow satin waistcoat straw (picture 4). It is printed in ink in the manner of fine mythological engraving compositions from Angelica Kauffman. This rare vest was preempted for 4800 euros by the Musée de Bourgoin-Jallieu in 2005.
After several years of democratic simplicity, there is with the Empire a return to the formality of court dress with beautiful clothes and ceremonial vests embroidered velvet pinned. Around 1830-1840, (pic.5) vest velvet shawl collar or miniature teddy bears are worn very short. If the "Dandy" romantic does not hesitate to squeeze his waist in a corset under a bunk or more vests, this last bastion of originality in a place more devoid of luster, however, eventually disappear in the second half nineteenth century.
Late 18th century vest in satin or gros Tours are estimated between 300 and 500 euros. The Louis XV one, highlighted with gold or silver can reach 3000 to 7000 euros for the more exceptional pieces.
Séverine Experton-Dard
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The 18th century was marked by a strong passion for the exotic. Until 1775-1780, the Far East was the inspiration source in decorative arts. But with the spread of “Lumieres” in particular with Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the publication of the novel “Paul et Virginie” by Bernardin de Saint Pierre, the decorators are turning to America and especially Africa. Let us remember that the only blacks seen in France were slaves and the myth of the bon savage appeared. We also emphasize that in 1793 slavery was abolished, Napoleon restored it some years later.
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Elegant table objects, the coolers were used to keep drinks cold until the middle of the nineteenth century.
Presentation of this ancestor of champagne bucket.
"The poor have ice in winter and the rich have in summer." This old saying illustrates beautifully the fact that from antiquity to the mid-nineteenth century, the very cold dishes were strictly reserved for the powerful kingdom. Indeed, before the advent of refrigeration in the nineteenth century, natural ice collected in winter, then stored in small sealed well known as coolers, almost exclusively found in the castles. They can still be seen in the parks of Versailles or Chantilly. » More
It is always interesting to discover new creative centers. Let's look today at the art of Liege which has too often been regarded as "regional." Always close by the spirit of Paris, the artists of this state managed to shine by their own originality. Flémal Bertholet, Liege painter, painted the ceiling of the courtroom at the Tuileries for Louis XIV.
Let us have a look on the production of this region.
How to spot them ?
Any lover of antique furniture will notice in Liege furniture Louis XIV and Regence motifs. That's why it is named "Regence Liège" style that will last throughout the eighteenth century Rococo without ever really had any significant influence. One of the key particularities is the symmetry of asymmetric carving. It will be the same for the style of Louis XVI, which appears in Liege in 1780 but is still influenced by older decorative motifs.
Commode arbalète à traverse apparente en chêne sculpté à trois rangée de trois tiroirs ornés d’un cordonnet et de rocailles symétriques, pans légèrement arrondis, plateau en chêne et piétement chantourné avec des pieds en pattes de lion, Liège, vers 1750.
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During the exhibition "Mois du dessin" in Paris, the gallery Tarantino presents " Paint in Rome: pictures and drawings from the 17th and 18th centuries". Among the exposed works, a rare drawing of Giovanni Guerra uses introduction to the chronological journey. Our expert analyzes this drawing recently discovered and publishes for the first time in this exposition, opened until April 21 2011.
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