- Ébéniste
"Ébéniste" is the French word for a
cabinetmaker , as "menuisier " denotes a woodcarver or chairmaker. The English equivalent would be "ebonists", never commonly used. An ébéniste originally was one working inebony , a favoured luxury wood for mid-seventeenth century Parisian cabinets, in imitation of elite furniture being made inAntwerp . Early Parisian ébénistes often came from theLow Countries themselves: an outstanding example isPierre Golle , who worked at the "Manufactory of the Gobelins".Ébénistes make case furniture, which may be
veneer ed or painted. From the mid-nineteenth century the two trades tended to be assembled under the single roof of a furnisher: chairs and other seat furniture had used veneering techniques formerly the guarded privilege of ébénistes since the relaxation of guild rules of theAncien Régime with theFrench Revolution 's abolition of guilds in 1791ome Parisian ébénistes
*
Pierre-Antoine Bellange
*André-Charles Boulle
*Martin Carlin
*François-Honoré-Georges Jacob-Desmalter
*Antoine Gaudreau
*Pierre Golle
*Roger Vandercruse Lacroix
*Louis Majorelle
*Jean Oppenord
*Jean-Henri Riesener Ébénistes in other centres
*
Charles-Honoré Lannuier (New York)
*Abraham Roentgen (Neuwied)
*David Roentgen (Newwied)References
*Pierre Verlet, 1963. "Les Ébénistes Du XVIII Siecle Francais"
*Pierre Verlet and Penelope Hunter-Stiebel, 1991. "French Furniture of the Eighteenth Century"
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