Normandy
Elaborate carving is a distinctive feature
of Norman furniture pieces, especially in the region's most
representative piece, the armoire. Themes of love and prosperity were
widely used in the 18th and 19th centuries with hearts, arrows, and
lovebirds conveying the former, while cornucopia, grapes, wheat sheaves,
and flowers symbolized the latter. Other typical designs included
acanthus leaves, geometric patterns, farm implements, musical
instruments, and anchors.
Cornices were generally flat and by the
late 18th century began rounding upward in a chapeau de gendarme, or
policeman's hat shape, usually decorated with deep three- dimensional
carving. A significant characteristic of the armoire doors is the
richly carved central traverse, with an elliptical medallion, either
vertical or at an angle, as its most prevalent motif. The Normandy
armoire features decorative metalwork of wrought iron, copper, or brass
and the feet are usually curved ending in snail shells and small sabots.
The Norman people were particularly
attracted to the symbols of the Louis XVI era, which extolled the ideals
of marriage, family, and conjugal happiness. These themes carried
through in the majority of their furniture pieces for the home except
for the Norman table, which favored straight lines, stout construction,
and utility of service.
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Brittany
The Celtic roots of Brittany are manifest
in the furniture produced in this region. The Breton style is as
distinctive as its special culture. Overall it combines magnitude with a
square ness of shape and richness in decoration that brings in
geometric, floral, animal or human motifs in an original an imaginative
country style. The Bretons have displayed a great love of
ornamentation, and often they have been unable to resist adding their
chiseled details to a piece made for them by a local woodworker. The
results can be delightfully naive yet at the same time practical and
whimsical in style.
Carvings tend to be in light relief with
mainly rectilinear edges. The influence of the Louis XV style is much
less prevalent in Brittany than in other regions of France. In fact,
apart from the curved feet, the square shape and straight lines
predominate.
The Breton armoire is either very simple
or ornately decorated with allegorical scenes or motifs. The Breton
carvers preferred stylized floral bouquets and branches, interlacing
geometrical patterns, religious emblems, animals, human figures, village
scenes, marriages, dances or episodes from the histories of the saints.
A departure from the square outline Breton
form can be found in the furniture pieces from the city of Rennes. The
double chapeau de gendarme cornice with intricate carving and
distinctive brass escutcheons readily identifies the work of this city.
The Bretons, like the Normans, embrace a
simple, no nonsense approach to their tables of sparse decoration with
emphasis on function.
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Loire Valley
The Loire Valley is France's fairytale
country. The Loire River Valley is home to the summer castles of the
French kings and court. Furniture of the Loire was greatly influenced
by the style of the Parisian court with Louis XV having the most
dramatic impact. In the furniture of this region we see the urban
influences of the court modified to impart a country feel. Armoires and
buffets from this region are known for their sophisticated style and
finish with a discreet use of ornamentation. The tables from this
region are typically rectangular with turned legs connected by H- or
X-shaped stretchers.
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Poitou, Vendée and Saintonge
This large region is regarded by some as
the spiritual home of classic provincial furniture. For here, more than
anywhere, the craftsmen, carpenters, joiners, and artisans achieved a
subtle balance between the fashionably stylish and the basically rustic,
while retaining local characteristics.
This large region is known for an enormous
selection of woods used to make furniture with cherry, ash, pear, white
walnut, chestnut, and burr elm being the woodworker's favorites.
Armoires and buffets alike sport chantourné (turned on all sides) panels
and highly decorative brass escutcheons providing dramatic visual
impact. This region's size and location caused it to be influenced
stylistically by both the north and the south, adding to the mix of
inventive touches paired with traditional themes. One peculiar aspect
of armoires from this region is the elimination of the decorative door
transverse. The long door panels accentuate the height of the piece
thus giving more emphasis to surrounding moldings and intricacy of the
traditional exaggerated escutcheons.
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Basque and Béarn
Furniture from this region is strongly
influenced by its proximity to Spain. Decorative metalwork is reduced
to a minimum, with no elaborate or elongated escutcheons. Pieces from
this region rely on religious emblems, folk themes and diamond point
carving in deep relief as ornamentation. Tables are large and
rectangular with double-T stretchers or ironworks for stability.
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Languedoc and Roussillon
The Languedoc has long been overshadowed by
its neighbor Provence., but the furniture from this region around the
city of Nimes is as rich in materials and design as those across the
border in Arles. Here too, influences of the heavier Spanish Catalan
style may be found, but richly curved and rounded pieces in the Louis XV
style are prominent. One can find the panetière here but not the
pétrin. Commodes were produced in great numbers and in a variety of
styles from rustic to bourgeois. The elaborate shell cartouche provides
a focal point of design in buffet, commode, and armoire, alike with
carving running the full length of the lower traverse.
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Auvergne
The isolation of this region of mountains
and forests resulted in a rugged individuality of the augergnat pieces.
Carving is deep and straight. Typical decorations of the region
include zigzags, lozenges, rosettes, checkers, stars, and geometric
patterns. Although fruitwood was preferred, red walnut was most often
chosen for furniture-making along with chestnut. The area around Velay
is noted for cherry, apple, pear, and lime. Beech was reserved for
chair-making.
Buffets are numerous in this region, both
single and a deux corps. The low ceilings of the Auvergnat homes often
meant that proportions were adjusted to give more width and less height
in the armoires of the region. The stylistic influences of the court
were late in their assimilation by the local artisans. Thus the pieces
of the region are dominated by the regional geometric ornamentation and
supplemented by Louis XV feet, fluted Louis XVI columns, and a large
protruding Louis XIII cornice.
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Provence
The prosperity of the region led to an
opulence at all levels of society that demanded richly decorated
furniture to match. The furniture from Provence is among the most
appealing to come out of France. The Louis XV style was met with
exuberance by the local artisans and their unrestrained yet skilled
furniture-making is found in their range of buffets and armoires as well
as in their numerous smaller pieces with specific functions.
The pieces from Arles are elaborate with
ornate carvings, curved lines, and rich details. Low-relief carving of
garlands, roses, flower, buds, and olive branches abound. The style of
Fourques is less decorated and more architectural in appearance.
The wood of the region had a rich,
glowing, honey-toned patina which would only improve with age. Light,
golden walnut was favored along with local exotic woods such as olive
wood, pear, willow, cherry, chestnut, and mulberry.
The armoires of Provence are richly
decorated with two or sometimes three panels per door and lavishly
carved borders. Ornate metalwork ran from top to bottom of the doors
and lacy, symmetrical escutcheons were placed one on top of the other
along the length of doors and drawers.
The furniture of Provence includes pieces
that were unique to this part of France. The buffet a glissant is a two
tiered buffet from Haute Provence and features a traditional buffet
base topped by a small, separate upper section with two sliding doors.
This design was conceived so that glasses could be taken out of the top
part without disturbing vases or containers sitting on the buffet top.
The encoignure is a tall, narrow, three-sided cabinet, sometimes bow
fronted, made specifically to be placed in the corner of a room.
The Provencal kitchen held many unique
pieces of furniture. The manjadou or garde-manger is a one-piece
cupboard with a single door. The top half of the door has elaborately
turned spindles to allow the air to circulate inside around the food
stored inside. The panetière, or bread box, is a richly ornamented
little cupboard on small legs, with escargot feet. Its front has turned
spindles similar to the manjadou. Its purpose is to hold freshly baked
bread and it is usually hung on the wall. The pétrin, or dough table,
is a trough shaped chest with a hinged top and carved legs. Its role in
life is to store kneaded bread while rising. The elaborately
hand-carved salière was used for storing salt and the farinière for
flour. Small shelves were also popular such as the verrier for glasses
and the estagnié for pewter, and the coutelière for knives. All were
self-contained units with bordered shelf fronts.
The commode from Provence is distinguished
by its curved front and elaborate carving. The radassié is a rush
seated banquette built like three or four chairs side by side with arms
at either end. It was generally placed near the fireplace.
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Lyons, Dauphiné, and Savoy
The artisans of Lyon directed their
attention to small tables in various forms, including bedside tables,
work tables, games tables, and reading tables. An Italian influence is
seen in the very decorative two drawer commode. Walnut is the most
popular wood.
A specialty of the dauphinois region worth
noting is the black varnish used to accentuate moldings and other key
lines of a piece
The Alpine pine trees of the Savoy region were used to produce rustic, primitive furniture with simple outlines.
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Burgundy, Bresse, and Franche-Comté
The Burgundy region, world-renown for its
wines, is a dichotomy in its furniture design. To the North, the lines
are more architectural with geometrical patterns while to the South,
some marquetry and the use of contrasting woods display a more vibrant
approach.
The Burgundy armoire often has bun feet. In
Bresse, three panels per door were used and were made from contrasting
woods such as walnut and burr ash. Buffets are often tall and sometimes
in Burgundy have a clock positioned under the cornice. A region known
for eating well, the buffet vaisselier is more popular than the armoire.
The pivoting table was also widely made in Burgundy. The base often
had a lyre shape. It is sometimes called a vendange table due to its
use for outdoor meals during the grape harvest. This type of table was
a space saver as it could be placed out of the way against a wall when
not in use.
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Alsace and Lorraine
Louis XV is the dominant influence on the
local furniture in this picturesque region near the German border.
However, the emphasis is less on ornamentation than on mixed woods,
interesting graining and burr finishes. The Lorraine decoration is
marquetry which was used to highlight motifs such as stars, crosses,
rosettes, swastikas and garlands. Armoires were normally made with two
doors and two drawers.
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Ardennes and Champagne
Furniture from the Ardennes and Champagne
has a robust quality emphasized by the widespread use of oak in
preference to walnut. Narrow door panels were favored and decoration
was kept to a minimum. Straight lines were preferred to curved ones and
carving was normally in light relief.
Armoires were well proportioned with
double doors and a large drawer at the base. Simple marquetry was used
for decoration, often featuring a star or stars as in the Lorraine
pieces.
The dresser, called le ménager in this
region, is a popular piece of furniture and is made of fruitwood in
Champagne and oak in the Ardennes. The base contains three molded doors
with three drawers above. Above it the rack has three shelves
supported by turned balustrades and edged by a molded rim to hold the
plates.
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Picardy and Flanders
The furniture of France's northeastern-most
corner is distinguished by a taste for rich Gothic and Renaissance style
ornamentation. The carving of the pieces here was influenced by the
work of their neighbors in Belgium and Germany. The pieces of furniture
particular to this region include the ribbank, a two-door cupboard, the
spinder, a food cupboard, and the dresche, a type of buffet. The
traite is a long buffet, sometimes with eight doors, that is found in
Picardy. The armoires here are known as presses. Farmhouse tables
featured heavily turned legs in the Renaissance styles, and circular
drop-leaf tables were also made in Flanders. Another specialty piece of
the region is the égouttoir, an open trough on four feet sometimes with
a shelf underneath. It is a combined draining board and decorative
display unit intended for large kitchens.
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Ile-de-France
This region is sometimes described as "the
garden of Paris" because this area surrounding Paris supplied the
capital city were food and goods over many centuries. The local
artisans were greatly influenced the the styles and techniques of the
cabinet makers in nearby Paris. The result was a degree of perfection
in construction, shape and finish which was remarkable when compared to
the craftsmen in more isolated provinces. The goal was to produce
strong, honest furniture that could survive in the more modest homes and
farmhouses of the region. The furniture of the Ile-de-France is the
hardest to distinguish since all types of furniture were made here and
in a range of fruit and forest woods. Louis XV influences predominated,
and the skill of the artisans is seen in a touch of additional
sturdiness that singles out a good country piece. What we find here is
an urban influence with a provincial execution.
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| Source: Ruddy, Robin. French Provincial Furniture. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 1998. |
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