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Important furniture, sculpture & works of art sale to be held at Sotheby's in Paris
A very rare carpet from “La Manufacture Royale de Tapisseries de Turquie et autres Ouvrages du Levant”, called Savonnerie, Simon Lourdet Workshop at Chaillot, Louis XIII, circa 1630-1632. Cardinal Giovanni Francesco Guidi di Bagno (1578- 1641). Estimate : 1 800 000-2 500 000 €. Photo: Sotheby’s / ArtDigital Studio.
PARIS.- The sale of Important Furniture, Sculpture & Works of Art to be held at Sotheby’s Paris on April 20 comprises to some 220 lots, including lacquered furniture; a rare carpet from the Manufacture de la Savonnerie; superb furniture from the Empire period; ivories; and exceptional medieval and Renaissance stained glass.

Furniture, Tapestries & Bronzes
Two items hail from the former Collection of Baron Gustave de Rothschild: a rare Paris tapestry portraying the Triumph of Leda (c.1700), from the Grands Dieux series made by Gilles Bacor in Paris (estimate €80,000-120,000 / $106,000-160,000);* and a pair of Louis XVI giltbronze fire-dogs in the form of greyhounds, remarkable for the quality of their chasing (est. €15,000-20,000 / $20,000-27,000).

A very rare Savonnerie carpet (c.1630-32) commissioned by Cardinal Giovanni Francesco Guidi di Bagno, ambassador of the Holy See, will delight Savonnerie aficionados (est. €1,800,000-2,500,000 / $2,400,000-3,300,000).

A carved, giltwood, rococo two-panelled screen from southern Germany, dating from the first half of the 18th century and upholstered in its original fabric, was designed by François de Cuvilliès (1695-1768), acknowledged as one of the leading architects and decorators of German rococo. As court architect in Munich from 1728 he was renowned for his exuberant interpretation of the French rocaille style (est. €100,000-150,000 / $133,000-200,000).

The selection of gilt-bronzes includes two sets of four wall-lights from the Louis XV (est. €100,000-150,000 / $133,000-200,000) and Empire periods, the latter designed by Edme-Jean Gallien and Pierre Bureaux (est. €120,000-180,000 /$160,000-240,000).

Among items of cabinet-making we find a Louis XV marquetry jewel casket (c.1760-70) stamped L. Boudin, P. Denizot and JME. Such caskets were made for prestigious clients, hence their tremendously creative design (est. €30,000-50,000 / $40,000-67,000). From the same period comes an exuberant armoire à encoignures with floral marquetry by Christophe Wolff (est. €30,000-50,000 / $40,000-67,000), and a pair of kingwood and rosewood marquetry corner-cupboards stamped BVRB (est. €70,000-100,000 / $93,000-133,000).

The sale’s superb array of Empire furniture ranges from a rare elm and porcelain guéridon (1817), painted (and signed) by Queen Charlotte of Wurtemberg (est. €60,000-80,000 / $80,000-106,000), to a brace of items by Jacob-Desmalter – a mahogany desk lent by Elisa Bonaparte to Napoleon during his captivity on the island of Elba (est. €150,000-250,000 / $200,000-333,000), and a secrétaire en cabinet in plum-pudding mahogany (est. €150,000-250,000 / $200,000-333,000).

Lacquered Furniture
The sale’s noteworthy selection of lacquered furniture begins with a rare cabinet (Paris c.1680) with vernis européen (est. €15,000-25,000 / $20,000-33,000); a Louis XV slope-front secrétaire with a blue ground and vernis parisien, stamped Migeon (est. €250,000-350,000 / $333,000-466,000); a red ground Louis XV slope-front secrétaire in vernis parisien, stamped JME and BVRB (est. €60,000-100,000 / $80,000-133,000); and a German casket (c.1730) with European lacquer and gilt-bronze mounts (est. €20,000-30,000 / $27,000-40,000).

Medieval & Renaissance Stained Glass & Enamel
The sale will commence with two important Gothic stained-glass panels, portraying Judas’ Kiss and the Crucifixion (Strasbourg, c.1260). These panels come from the Dominican church in Strasbourg (destroyed in 1870), and are the only examples still in private hands (est. €50,000-70,000 / $67,000-93,000 apiece). They entered the local workshop of glazier Albert Sigel in 1850 for restoration, and were acquired by the grandmother of the current owners in 1909. The other windows of the series can be found in the Burrell Collection in Glasgow, the Württembergisches Landesmuseum in Stuttgart, the Musée de l’Œuvre Notre-Dame in Strasbourg, and some reemployed in the Chapelle St-Laurent in Strasbourg Cathedral.

An important champlevé enamel casket in Limoges, circa 1220, illustrates the History of St Thomas à Becket (est. €50,000-70,000 / $67,000-93,000). The cult of St Thomas Becket (c.1118-70), the martyred Archbishop of Canterbury, saw a number of enamel caskets made in 13th century Limoges to contain his relics. The one here has been in the former François Baverey Collection in Lyon since 1960.

From the same collection, and formerly owned by Georges Chalandon and Albin Chalandon, comes a large, painted enamel plaque from Limoges (c.1475) portraying the Deposition of Christ. This rare enamel is typical of the work of the Pseudo-Monvaerni Master, active in Limoges 1465-85. It was presented at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1900 (est. €20,000-30,000 / $27,000-40,000).

Ivories
Highlights include a large wedding casket in wood marquetry and ivory, made in the Embriachi workshop active in Northern Italy and Venice during the 15th century (est. €7,000-10,000 / $9,300-13,300) ; and an 18th century Christ at the Column in ivory, metal and wood, the eyes incrusted with glass, made in the workshop of the renonwed Austrian-born Simon Troger (1638-1768) in 1730 (est. €12,000-15,000 / $16,000-20,000).

French 18th & 19th Century Works
Sotheby’s has made the discovery of a hitherto considered to be lost portrait bust of François Quesnay by Louis-Claude Vassé (est. €300,000-500,000 / $400,000-666,000 ). This virtuoso rendering of the physician and economist whom Louis XV dubbed his royal ‘Thinker’ dates from 1770, when Quesnay was at the height of his fame. The bust is signed, dated and dedicated, and was exhibited by Vassé at the Salon of 1771. Its naturalistic skill tellingly captures the Physiocratic Economist’s larger-than-life personality. Quesnay trained as a surgeon before being appointed Madame de Pompadour’s Physician-in-state in 1749. He was raised to the nobility by Louis XV in 1752 and devoted the rest of his career to the study of Economics. Louis-Claude Vassé was a member of Edme Bouchardon’s studio, he lived at the Villa Medici in Rome from 1740-45, and was admitted to the Académie Royale de Peinture et Sculpture in 1751.

Pétrus et Arrie (Paris c.1753), an important bronze group by Laurent Hubert (1749-86), was formerly in the Sir George Burns Collection at North Mumm’s Park, and has been exhibited at the Académie de St-Luc in Paris in 1753 and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. This impressively large bronze and manierist subject stands 52cm tall and, with its superb, translucent brown patina, is distinguished by its finesse and delicate casting (est. €80,000-120,000 / $107,000-160,000).

Further notable works include a terracotta clock design entitled La Fidélité (1799) by Philippe-Laurent Roland, best known for his role, alongside his master Augustin Pajou, in the great decorative schemes at the Palais-Royal in Paris and the Opera House in Versailles. The final, bronze version of this clock was probably made by the great bronzier Pierre-Philippe Thomire (est. €30,000-40,000 / $40,000-53,000).

Finally, the sale will include the rare marble model of the Three Graces by Albert Ernest Carrier-Belleuse — friend of Carpeaux, teacher of Jules Chéret and Auguste Rodin, and director of the Sèvres Porcelain Factory from 1876-87 (est.

Viewing
Saturday 14 April 10am-6pm
Monday 16 April 10am-6pm
Tuesday 17 April 10am-6pm
Wednesday 18 April 10am-6pm
Thursday 19 April 10am-6pm

* estimates do not include buyer’s premium



Last Week News

April 3, 2012

Skulls, sharks and polka dots in new Damien Hirst show at Tate Modern in London

Evidence inside Wonderwerk cave in South Africa proves our ancestors used fire a million years ago

Photographer Herb Ritt's extensive career examined in Getty Museum exhibition

Asheville Art Museum presents The Essential Idea: Robert Motherwell's Graphic Works

Wish You Were Here: The Buffalo Avant-garde in the 1970s opens at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery

Sotheby's Orientalist Sale to present important works depicting Turkey, The Middle East and North Africa

A new museum and a new design for a historic interior: Musée Toulouse-Lautrec opens

Rare and antique arms & armor on the auction block at Bonhams in San Francisco this June

Sotheby's exhibits highlights from its forthcoming sale of Contemporary Turkish art in Istanbul

One World Trade Center reaches a milestone: 100 floors; expected to be finished by next year

Bertoia's May 12 auction features Dick Claus Nautical Toy & Boat collection, Part I

The Collectors House features works from Mircea Pinte Collection and from the Dutch G+W Collection

Strong sales and attendance at Japanese art exhibitions and events during Asia Week 2012

New mobile platform for smart investments in emerging Contemporary art

Sotheby's Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian Paintings sale achieves US$12.3 million

Exhibition maps the continued influence and diverse potential of TV as a social tool and new art form

Fourth Master Paintings Week announced

Delaware Art Museum presents "Painted Poetry: The Art of Mary Page Evans"

'Monumental' G.J. Dennis Elizabeth II caviar server expected to bring $70,000+ at Heritage Auctions

Menu from Titanic's last lunch sells at UK auction

April 2, 2012

LACMA presents groundbreaking cultural investigation of the legend of Quetzalcoatl

The Saint Anne, Leonardo da Vinci's ultimate masterpiece, on view at the Louvre

The Madoura Collection: The ultimate 20th century ceramic collecting opportunity

Art Gallery of New South Wales announces Tim Storrier's self-portrait wins Archibald Prize 2012

Government of Turkey asks J. Paul Getty Museum and other museums to return antiquities

Jorinde Voigt: Winner of the 2012 Drawing Prize of the Daniel & Florence Guerlain Contemporary Art Foundation

International group exhibition examines the synthesis between image and sound

Mosby & Co. to auction fine and decorative art, Chinese soapstone collection, hundreds of early posters

Whitney Houston memorabilia sale in Los Angeles totals $80,187 at Julien's Auctions

Retrospective of the works on paper by Fanny Sanín at Frederico Sève Gallery

Ohio's Dayton Art Institute receives $45,000 gift for repairs in Galleries & Italian cloister

Chrysler Museum of Art Board of Trustees approves extensive expansion and renovation plan

Sotheby's Hong Kong two-day Spring Wine Sale Series achieves US$8.2 million

Kirsten Hassenfeld: Cabin Fever opens at the Hunterdon Art Museum

San Francisco artist Joshua Pieper's "Nothing In Particular" on view at Romer Young Gallery

Titanic's legacy: A fascination with disasters

Exhibition of new works by Eli Hansen opens at Maccarone

Scott of the Antartic's dying letter sells for £163,250 at Bonhams

National identity is topic in Aleksandra Domanović's exhibition at Kunsthalle Basel

April 1, 2012

"Renoir Between Bohemia and Bourgeoisie: The Early Years" at Kunstmuseum Basel

A rediscovered pastel by the most important pastellist of the 18th century offered at Sotheby's in Paris

Feds: Connecticut man knows something about stolen art from Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Abstract-Expressionist painter Adolph Gottlieb's mature work on view at The Pace Gallery

Indonesia's shipwrecks mean riches and headaches; for historians, the wrecks are time capsules

Rarely seen ceramics of a vast and impressive variety by Lucio Fontana at Karsten Greve Gallery

The Art of the Enlightenment: Finissage in Beijing, more than 450,000 visitors saw the show

Exhibition of paintings by Minimalist artist Jo Baer opens at Gagosian Gallery in Geneva

British Museum celebrates success of Hajj exhibition receiving over 80,000 visitors

National Gallery of Canada exhibition celebrates recipients of 2012 Governor General's Awards

International mix of artists exhibit new paintings, drawings & prints at the Architect's Gallery

Brains! Exhibition at London's Wellcome Collection looks to understand what's inside our skulls

Resounding success for the Library of R. & B. L. at Sotheby's, world record for La Prose du Transsibérie

CAC Malaga presents the most important exhibition on Marcel Dzama held to date in Spain

New NEA research report shows potential benefits of arts education for at-risk youth

National Gallery of Victoria ranks with world's most popular galleries

Large-scale paintings crowded with spirited and seductive colors by Stanley Whitney at Team Gallery

National Museum Gemaeldegalerie features second part of solo exhibition Botticelli/Grey

Sun Pavilion construction on Nelson-Atkins grounds nearly complete

David Chipperfield Architects selected to renovate the New National Gallery

March 31, 2012

Paul and Lulu Hilliard University Art Museum plays April Fools' joke on prolific forger

Christie's New York to offer the most important collection of Abstract Expressionism

Graffiti artist Banksy £400,000 triumphs as seventeen art works sell at Bonhams Urban Art Sale

Ernest Hemingway shows soft side in newly public letters at the Kennedy presidential library

Sotheby's to launch its new state-of-the art Hong Kong Gallery space on 19 May 2012

1823 William Stone printing of The Declaration of Independence could bring $250,000+ at Heritage Auctions

Titanic: The artifact exhibition opens at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan

University of Richmond Museums presents "Woman as Image: Museum Studies Seminar Exhibition"

Elizabeth Taylor's gold Cleopatra cape brings $59,375 at Heritage Auctions in Dallas

Birmingham Civil Rights Institute opens exhibition featuring photos of lesbian couples

"Making History: Twentieth Century African American Art" opens at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

New York artist Zoe Leonard transforms Camden Arts Centre into a 'camera obscura'

Antiques 'fit for royalty' to be auctioned April 14-15 at Don Presley's California gallery

Alejandro Zaera-Polo selected as the next dean of Princeton University's School of Architecture

Exhibition of new works by Agathe Snow opens at Maccarone

Exhibition by Latifa Echakhch and David Maljkovic opens at Kunsthalle Basel

"Beryl Korot: Selected Video Works: 1977 to Present" on view at bitforms gallery

What's old is new again: Original glass furnace reconstructed

March 30, 2012

Women: Pablo Picasso, Max Beckmann, Willem de Kooning exhibition opens in Munich

Guggenheim announces out-of-print John Chamberlain exhibition catalogue now a free e-book

First comprehensive exhibition of Lyonel Feininger's photographs makes final stop at Harvard Art Museums

Russian works of art, Fabergé & icons for sale at Sotheby's in New York this April

Art from the 20th century and cutting-edge contemporary art on view at the National Gallery of Denmark

A visual history of the impact of the ideas of the early Avant-Gardes opens at the Juan March Foundation

Sculpture exhibition at Nassau County Museum of Art also features portfolio of Jim Dine's Pinocchio Illustrations

Eddie Rickenbacker's pub in San Francisco Tiffany lamps coming to New York City auction

New site-specific wall sculpture by Ellsworth Kelly to be installed at new visual arts center at Dartmouth

Photographer Nick Brandt, "On This Earth, A Shadow Falls" opens at Hasted Kraeutler

Artist Eugene Lemay's first exhibition with Mike Weiss Gallery opens in New York

Looking South: Mingei Museum sends part of permanent collection south of the border

Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery marks the 150th anniversary of the Civil War with exhibitions

Egypt artists "reopen" street by graffiti protest

Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum receives Buzz Lightyear flown in space

Sanford Biggers and Jennifer Zackin video installation opens at the Jewish Museum

Lorax statue taken from home of Dr. Seuss's widow

Smithsonian showcases replica of monster snake

March 29, 2012

Getty Villa exhibition on Aphrodite extends beyond goddess of love and beauty

The real da Vinci code: Louvre unlocks last work after18-month-long restoration

Exhibition of recent paintings by Chicago-born artist Ron Gorchov opens at Cheim & Read

Greek policemen recover ancient illegally excavated marble statue from goat pen

Asia Week New York 2012 sales ends nine-day run exceeding $170 million in sales

Keith Haring: Shine on, a selling exhibition at Sotheby's S/2 Galleries in New York

Christie's announces appointment of Jinqing Caroline Cai Managing Director, China

Bonhams builds on Canadian success with Suzanne Davis appointment as Deputy Chairman

R.M.S. Titanic: 100 years of fact & fiction at Bonhams with wide variety of rare Titanic memorabilia for sale

Solo exhibition of 10 new paintings by the artist Nir Hod opens at Paul Kasmin Gallery

Former New York Times chief art critic and New Criterion magazine founder Hilton Kramer dies at 84

Success blooms at Bonhams salon jewelry auction achieving an impressive $1,021,875 million

Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona Libraries acquires the Lynn Stern archive

Amsterdam's Stedelijk Museum to reopen permanent location on Museum Square on Sept. 23

Masterworks from renowned collections to highlight Christie's Spring photographs sale

Von Lintel Gallery presents exhibition of new paintings by Catherine Howe

New York fight over Astor's estate ends; millions freed

MFAH life trustee and former Chairman, Isabel Brown Wilson, has died

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