Null CHEST OF DRAWERS WITH CENTRAL PROJECTION AND TWO DRAWERS WITHOUT CROSSBAR, …
Description

CHEST OF DRAWERS WITH CENTRAL PROJECTION AND TWO DRAWERS WITHOUT CROSSBAR, STAMPED D.DELOOSE FOR DANIEL DELOOSE ( - 1788) WITH PUNCH OF JURANDE, TRANSITION OF THE PERIODS LOUIS XV AND LOUIS XVI in veneer of violet wood, rosewood, sycamore and green tinted sycamore, inlaid with reserve fillets and reserve frames decorated with Medici vases with falling garlands and fleurons on a diamond background alternating with rectangles in perspective. It opens with three drawers in the front, rounded uprights with simulated flutes decorated with triglyphs, tapered legs also with simulated flutes with toupie shoes, veined white marble top. (Restoration of the whole) Transition of the Louis XV and Louis XV periods, commode by Daniel Deloose, stamped 91,50 x 129 x 60 CM - 36 x 50,8 x 23,6 IN. - - Daniel Deloose was received as a master in 1767. He settled in rue Saint-Nicolas before transferring his workshop to rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine. His works, some in the Louis XV style, but mostly in the Transition and Louis XVI styles, include secretaries, chests of drawers, corner cabinets, bookcases and a large number of small pieces of furniture. His productions are very careful, he uses mahogany, lemon, rosewood and satinwood veneers and decorates his furniture, always with great sobriety, with marquetry of flowers, trophies, geometric designs and often landscapes, all very finely chiseled. We can mention a beautiful Louis XVI secretary, with a flap in satin veneer, amaranth and yew burr tinted green, decorated with gold bronzes, or a happiness of day, lemon wood inlaid with mosaics to tile. A Deloose transitional chest of drawers can be found at the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon and a small Louis XVI table at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

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CHEST OF DRAWERS WITH CENTRAL PROJECTION AND TWO DRAWERS WITHOUT CROSSBAR, STAMPED D.DELOOSE FOR DANIEL DELOOSE ( - 1788) WITH PUNCH OF JURANDE, TRANSITION OF THE PERIODS LOUIS XV AND LOUIS XVI in veneer of violet wood, rosewood, sycamore and green tinted sycamore, inlaid with reserve fillets and reserve frames decorated with Medici vases with falling garlands and fleurons on a diamond background alternating with rectangles in perspective. It opens with three drawers in the front, rounded uprights with simulated flutes decorated with triglyphs, tapered legs also with simulated flutes with toupie shoes, veined white marble top. (Restoration of the whole) Transition of the Louis XV and Louis XV periods, commode by Daniel Deloose, stamped 91,50 x 129 x 60 CM - 36 x 50,8 x 23,6 IN. - - Daniel Deloose was received as a master in 1767. He settled in rue Saint-Nicolas before transferring his workshop to rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine. His works, some in the Louis XV style, but mostly in the Transition and Louis XVI styles, include secretaries, chests of drawers, corner cabinets, bookcases and a large number of small pieces of furniture. His productions are very careful, he uses mahogany, lemon, rosewood and satinwood veneers and decorates his furniture, always with great sobriety, with marquetry of flowers, trophies, geometric designs and often landscapes, all very finely chiseled. We can mention a beautiful Louis XVI secretary, with a flap in satin veneer, amaranth and yew burr tinted green, decorated with gold bronzes, or a happiness of day, lemon wood inlaid with mosaics to tile. A Deloose transitional chest of drawers can be found at the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon and a small Louis XVI table at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

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