Description:

LOUIS XVI STYLE ORMOLU MOUNTED MAHOGANY REGULATOR CLOCK, BY FRANCOIS LINKE, INDEX #852, THE DIAL SIGNED BERTHOILD A PARIS, CIRCA 1900, AFTER A MODEL BY JEAN-HENRI RIESENER the circular enameled dial with Roman and Arabic numerals signed Berthoild in a conforming case encompassed by billowing ormolu clouds applied with putti over a chamfered rectangular tapering case applied with foliate scrolls and trailing vines centering a sun ray mask and fitted with a door on canted paw feet over a conforming similarly mounted plinth on toupie feet; inscribed on right hand side moulding mount F Linke, lockplate inscribed CT Linke Serrurerie Paris;

François Linke (1855-1946) was undoubtedly the most important cabinetmaker in Paris at that time. As an apprentice from his hometown of Pankraz in Bohemia, Linke arrived in Paris in 1875 and founded his own studio in 1881 at 170 rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine, later creating an atelier at 26 place Vendôme. Linke's international reputation was already well established when the 1900 World's Fair was held in Paris, his talent and creativity remaining unparalleled: the Exposition crowned his success and strengthened the financial stability of his company, allowing him to conquer new markets abroad.

Like his contemporaries such as Zwiener and Dasson, his production included copies and pastiches inspired by the successive styles of the eighteenth century or the most famous royal furniture, but was also illustrated in the design of exuberant works, mixing Louis XV style and Art Nouveau. Linke collaborated with a famous sculptor, Leon Messagé. In 1904 he became an Officer of Public Instruction, and participated in the Exposition of St. Louis in the United States. In 1905, he was appointed juror of the Liège Exhibition and, on October 11, 1906, received the Legion of Honor.

The present régulateur de parquet is a copy of the model attributed to Jean-Henri Riesener (reçu Maître en 1768), executed in 1785, and now in the permanent collection of the Musée du Louvre. This was one of the most popular of the eighteenth century models admired and copied by the finest cabinetmakers of the late nineteenth century. Interestingly, a barometer version of the clock, also in the Louvre, was made by the cabinetmaker Guillaume Grohé circa 1860, whose work was described at the 1867 Exposition Universelle as 'supéieurs à ceux de Riesener et Gouthière'. François Linke also made model, archive number 852. - h:87 w:19 d:11.75 in.

Provenance: Private French Furniture Collection from a Château in France

  • Condition: Condition reports are provided upon request but not included in the object description above. Kindly contact Potomack for condition notes.

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