The Napoleon III style (1852-1870)
Published by Galerie Atena on 07.07.22
An era of decadence, the Second Empire (1852-1870) sought to impose prestige prestige through pomp, festivities and luxury, in contrast to the bourgeois reign of the discreet Louis-Philippe. The Napoleon III style is the last to bear the name the name of a sovereign, that of Louis Napoléon Bonaparte, first elected president by universal male suffrage, then prince-president before being crowned emperor in December 1852.
Considered eclectic, this style is based on a revival of styles styles of the past. Everything is borrowed from the styles that preceded it. At draw their inspiration from a single era, cabinetmakers and decorators of the of Second Empire drew indiscriminately, with joyful exuberance, from all sources.
This mixture of styles manifests itself in the decorative arts not successively but simultaneously. The result is a richness, an abundance, an eclecticism that is sometimes excessive but which gives an impression of research and fertility.
PASTICHES AND NOSTALGIA
Pair of ewers in the Renaissance style (left)
Pair of Louis XVI style marble cassolettes (right)
This taste for
l'
historicism takes on the forms of all periods. From Louis XIII
from Louis XIV, Boulle furniture with its brass and tortoiseshell marquetry
Boulle furniture with its brass and tortoiseshell marquetry, sometimes replaced by
with stained leather or dark wood, from
Louis XV, rococo curves, and Louis XVI, fluted legs finer than the originals. The work of
Viollet le Duc also brought
the Middle Ages back into fashion. Reference to earlier styles became
the rule.
Cylinder desk after Riesener attributed to Beurdeley
These numerous copies or adaptations of 18th century furniture, come with a desire to refurbish the national palaces: the Tuileries, Saint-Cloud, Compiègne, etc. The Garde-Meuble impérial bought back old furniture which were put up for sale to refurnish the royal houses.
TheEmpress
Eugenie
played a major role in this historicist craze. She particularly
Louis XVI styles because of her admiration for the
character of
Marie-Antoinette. The crown commissioned rigorous copies
of antique furniture by
Jean-Henri Riesener (1734-1806), notably Louis XV's secrétaire à cylindre in the Château de Versailles. On the other hand, the
Grohé brothers created a set to furnish the Galerie François Ier, and
Jeanselme, who had taken over the Jacob firm, made eighteenth-century armchairs for the
Château de Saint-Cloud. The style is even referred to as "Louis XVI - Empress". The
pastiche specialists are
Louis-Auguste-Alfred Beurdeley (1808-1882),
Alexandre-Georges Fourdinois (1799-1871) and Henri Dasson (1825-1896).
Pair of Louis XVI style consoles stamped Guillaume Grohe
But this return to styles is done
for political purposes. By returning to the forms of the Ancien Régime, the Second
Empire identifies with this court and with the established royalty, which gives it a certain
legitimacy. By reorganising French industries, Napoleon III gave a new impetus to the decorative arts that transformed production.
FURNITURE, A REFLECTION OF A CHANGING SOCIETY
At the same time,
the bourgeoisie, the dominant class of the mid-19th century, sought a certain
comfort, with a multiplicity of small pieces of furniture within easy reach. We
a desire for an intimate, welcoming decor with functional features:
rag stands,
secretary, games table, pedestal tables. New categories of furniture
light, easy-to-move furniture were created: nesting tables
tilting pedestal tables, the charivari chair and a host of velvet or brocade upholstered
velvet or brocade, usually red, with braided bangs to hide the wood
to hide the wood (confident, boudeuses, bornes, poufs...).
Napoleon III period sideboard in blackened wood and gilt bronze
We're fond of pomp and wealth
with a taste for contrast that gives the appearance of luxury. The
ebony or blackened pearwood furniture is adorned with gilded bronzes
marble and Boulle-type
Boulle-type marquetry with red scales. Theinlay
precious woods, mother-of-pearl, ivory and brass flourished thanks to the
which enabled them to be cut with extreme finesse. This enabled
precision and perfect appearance, unlike 18th-century furniture
18th-century furniture, which shows tool marks. For example, the
Rivart
developed an incredible porcelain marquetry inlaid into the veneer
furniture.
Detail of a Boulle marquetry game table, Napoleon III period
Increasingly large-scale production
is favoured by the mechanisation of the craftsmen's workshops. There is a
will to reduce costs in order to make fashion more accessible to the bourgeoisie fond of multiple inspirations. This division of labour can explain the lack of innovation in forms.
However, the Exposition Universelle in Paris from 1855 onwards led to new thinking on the status of the decorative arts.
the status of the decorative arts. Manufacturers were determined to elevate them to the status
art by designing furniture as works of art. This led to
to the increasingly frequent appearance of stamped signatures on the invisible faces of
faces of furniture. Such is the case with
our Louis XVI chests of drawers stamped GROHE under the marble top.
Stamped by Grohé under the marble of a Louis XVI-style chest of drawers.
NEW TECHNIQUES
One of the distinctive features of the Napoleon III,
which stands out for its originality, is the use of papier-mâché
mâché
with a black background. Originating in England, this technique relies on an amalgam of paper
amalgam of paper, glue and plaster, heat-solidified and molded. This material, then
as hard as wood is then varnished, lacquered and decorated. This process, often
often inlaid with mother-of-pearl, was adopted by French furniture makers
from 1860 onwards.
Detail of "burgauté" marquetry on a tilting pedestal table in wood and lacquered cardboard
It was then that the fashion for " burgauté " furniture spread.
their pearly ornamentation from a shell called a burgau, whose interior
is lined with pearly surfaces, iridescent with blue, green and purple reflections. This technique, already used for the
King of Rome's cradle, donated by the City of Paris in 1811 and now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, was completely rethought to suit new tastes.
Furniture and seating
burgundy " furniture and seating is one of the
of the Napoleon III
Napoleon III style.
CONCLUSION
When Charles Garnier presented the Opéra Garnier project to
Garnier to Louis Napoléon Bonaparte, the emperor was quoted as saying, "It's not
gothic, it's not Renaissance, it's not classical, but what style is it?
is it?" To which the architect is said to have replied "Napoléon
III". Perhaps he was right in asserting that this style actually had
its own identity, perfectly recognizable despite its many
quotations.
Bibliography
- French furniture, Napoleon III 1880s, Odile Nouvel Kammerer, 1996
- Recognizing stylish furniture, Pierre Faveton, 2014
- Le guide des styles, Musée des arts décoratifs, Jean-Pierre Constant, Marco Mencacci, 2018