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   » » Wiki: Adam Weisweiler
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Adam Weisweiler (c.1750 — after 1810Francis J.B. Watson, The Wrightsman Collection, II; 1966:561f.) was a pre-eminent master ( ébéniste) in the Louis XVI period, working in Paris.

Weisweiler is said to have been born at and to have received his early training in 's workshop.Watson 1966:561. He was in Paris before 1777, when he married Barbe Conte,She died in 1809 (Watson 1966:561). and was received maître 26 March 1778. Thus all pieces bearing his stamp post-date that event.

Weisweiler worked notably for the , who alone could supply him with the panels that, combined with and refined gilt-bronze, characterise some of his finest work. Through Dominique Daguerre he supplied the writing table of steel, lacquer and ebony and gilt-bronze for at the château de Saint-Cloud in 1784. Writing table: Musée du Louvre , cat. no 80. Through Daguerre again he provided furniture for the at Carlton House, London. Weisweiler specialised in small refined pieces, with fine lines, delicate legs with light interlaced stretchers, and gilt-bronze low-relief plaques and mounts, some provided to him by Pierre Gouthière through Daguerre, often decorated with panels of Japanese lacquer and Sèvres porcelain plaques, even panels of . Pictorial is not found in his output. Alvar González-Palacios, in demonstrating that the Weisweiler lacquer suite consisting of a pair of drop-front secretary desks and a commode, from the Wrightsman collection now at the Metropolitan Museum, had been sold by Daguerre c1790 for the king of Naples' cabinet at , observes that it would be more accurate to say that they are in the manner of Daguerre rather than that they are typical of Weisweiler.González-Palacios, "Daguerre, Lignereux and the King of Naples's Cabinet at Caserta", The Burlington Magazine 145 No. 1203 (June 2003):431-44)

Unlike other luxury furniture makers of the Ancien Régime, Weisweiler weathered the Revolution. In 1810 he was supplying Queen Hortense and collaborating with Pierre-Philippe Thomire. After his retirement, his son Jean Weisweiler continued the workshop until 1844.Denise Ledoux-Lebard, Les ébénistes Parisiens du dix-neuvième siècle 1965.


Mark
The letters "A.V." incised on the bottom tray of a workbench are attributed to Weisweiler.


Collection
Secrétaire
*Secrétaire, 1785-1820, V&A, UK


See also
  • Louis XVI furniture


Notes

Further reading
  • (1979). 9780870991868, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. .
    (see index: p. 127-128; illustration: p. 69)


External links

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