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Pair of Antique Middle Eastern Inlaid Ebony and Rosewood Armchairs

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  • Middle Eastern Mother of Pearl Inlaid Armchair
    Located in West Palm Beach, FL
    Vintage Mother of Pearl & inlaid wood Middle Eastern arm chair.
    Category

    20th Century Unknown Armchairs

    Materials

    Wood, Mother-of-Pearl

  • Vintage Middle Eastern Inlaid Mother of Pearl Folding Armchair
    Located in West Palm Beach, FL
    Vintage Mother of Pearl & inlaid wood Middle Eastern arm chair.
    Category

    20th Century Unknown Armchairs

    Materials

    Mother-of-Pearl, Wood

  • Pair of 19th Century or Earlier Middle Eastern Armchairs
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    Pair of 19th Century or Earlier Middle Eastern Armchairs Bone in laid Ebonized in the Moorish style 30 x 32 x 41
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Armchairs

    Materials

    Bone, Wood

  • Middle Eastern Moorish Walnut Savonarola Armchair
    Located in New York, NY
    Middle Eastern Moorish (19th Century) carved walnut Savonarola style armchair with a spindle and ball round back panel.
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Asian Moorish Armchairs

    Materials

    Walnut

  • Pair of William IV Rosewood and Brass-Inlaid Armchairs
    By George Bullock
    Located in New York, NY
    Each upholstered back with arched crest rail centered by a brass-inlaid shell issuing foliate sprays; the over-upholstered seat with shaped sear rail centered by a sheet sheath; rais...
    Category

    Antique 1830s English William IV Armchairs

    Materials

    Brass

  • Pair of Consulat Ebony-Inlaid Birchwood Armchairs Stamped Jacob Frères
    By Jacob Freres Rue Meslée
    Located in Kittery Point, ME
    The curved pierced back with a palmette-inlaid shaped splat terminating in dolphin supports raised on an upholstered seat, on front carved joined hairy animal legs (pieds de bîches) and hoof feet and back sabre legs; stamped: JACOB FRERES RUE MESLEE under the front rail. For a similar dolphin support, see Madeleine Jarry and Pierre Devinois, Le Siège Français, pp. 267 and 271 illustration 264 for an armchair at the Musée Marmottan stamped G. Jacob and executed in 1792. Provenance: Millicent Rogers her son, Arturo Peralta Ramos II Jacob Frères was the stamp used by brothers Georges II (1768-1803) and Francois-Honore Jacob (1770-1841) from 1796 to 1803. They were sons of Georges Jacob (1739-1814), arguably the best-known chair maker who worked for aristocracy and royalty during the reign of Louis XVI. The Jacob Frères firm's most famous client was Josephine, wife of Napoleon Bonaparte. She would have most likely seen the work of their father during the revolution in a progressive aristocrat's house. She used them to decorate various Imperial residences, such as the Tuileries palace, and remained a loyal customer, using them almost exclusively, until her death. When Georges II (the elder brother) died in 1803, Georges came out of retirement to help the remaining son, Francois-Honoré (who changed his named to Jacob Desmalter) from a new partnership called Jacob Desmalter Et Cie. (stamped Jacob D. R. Meslée, on two lines), which continued to be an influential supplier for the Imperial period and is credited with helping to define the Empire style as it is known today. Millicent Rogers, born Mary Millicent Abigail Rogers, was a Standard Oil heiress, but she wasn’t a poor little rich girl...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century French Empire Armchairs

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