Commode thumbnail 1
Commode thumbnail 2
+7
images
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Not currently on display at the V&A
On display at Sewerby Hall and Gardens, Bridlington

Commode

1750-1760 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The commode was a French innovation of the late 17th century. In essence a chest of drawers, the function of the commode in fashionable interiors was primarily decorative and it played an essential role in interior decoration throughout Europe during the following century. Placed against a wall in a formal room, it formed a receptacle for lavish surface decoration of marquetry or lacquer, and was generally topped with a slab of decorative marble.

A commode of very similar proportions by Mattieu Criaerd, the maker of this commode, but with a surface of blue and white imitation lacquer, was supplied for Louis XV's mistress Madame de Mailly at the Château de Choisy in 1742. That commode is now in the Louvre Collection, Paris.

This object is on loan to Sewerby Hall.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Marquetry of kingwood, tulipwood and other woods, gilt brass mounts, marble slab.
Brief description
Commode, French, 1750-1760, kingwood, marquetry
Physical description
Commode, (decorative chest of drawers), decorated with marquetry of kingwood, tulipwood and other woods, with gilt-brass mounts, and a pink and grey marble top. The serpentine (curving) front contains two long drawers with a marquetry design of flower sprays against diagonally-placed wood grain which spreads across both drawers without a break. There is a downward curving apron at the front and on both sides. In the centre of the front apron there is a gilt brass plaque in rococo style. Each side is decorated with matched veneers and marquetry of flower sprays. Each of the four feet has gilt brass mounts.
Dimensions
  • Height: 88cm
  • Without marble top height: 85cm
  • Marble top width: 154.3cm
  • Carcase width: 149cm
  • Marble top depth: 67cm
  • Depth: 66cm
Marks and inscriptions
CRIAERD (initial letter illegible) (Maker's mark, impressed twice in the wood of the top near the front corners. For Antoin? Criaerd, or his brother Mathieu Criaerd (1689-1779))
Credit line
Part of the Arthur James Collection, bequeathed by his wife
Object history
Mrs Arthur James bequeathed 52 pieces to the V&A including French and English 18th century furniture, mirrors, ceramics and silverware which were received by the museum in July 1948. The bequest was conditional on the collection being called ‘The Arthur James Collection, bequeathed by his wife.
Acquisition RP (Nominal File, James, Mrs Arthur, MA/1/J150) records negotations over the bequest, which include 9 pieces of furniture, W.36 to W.43A-1948. Mrs James lived at Coton House, Rugby and 3 Grafton Street, London.

The commode is stamped 'Criaerd' on the top of the left front leg (underneath the marble slab), probably Mathieu Criaerd, who was the most prominent cabinetmaker (ébéniste) of this name. He become a master in the Corporation des Menuisiers-Ébénistes in 1738, and set up his workshop in the rue Traversière-Saint-Antoine, in the heart of the furniture-making district in Paris. Criaerd specialised in furniture veneered with lacquer or with floral marquetry, with rococo mounts. There is physical evidence that the commode was substantially reworked before being acquired by the museum, including the surface decoration and mounts.
Summary
The commode was a French innovation of the late 17th century. In essence a chest of drawers, the function of the commode in fashionable interiors was primarily decorative and it played an essential role in interior decoration throughout Europe during the following century. Placed against a wall in a formal room, it formed a receptacle for lavish surface decoration of marquetry or lacquer, and was generally topped with a slab of decorative marble.

A commode of very similar proportions by Mattieu Criaerd, the maker of this commode, but with a surface of blue and white imitation lacquer, was supplied for Louis XV's mistress Madame de Mailly at the Château de Choisy in 1742. That commode is now in the Louvre Collection, Paris.

This object is on loan to Sewerby Hall.
Collection
Accession number
W.38-1948

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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