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Rocaille
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{{Short description|French style of exuberant decoration}}{{for|the Fabergé egg|Rocaille (Fabergé egg)}}{{use dmy dates|date=May 2023|cs1-dates=y}}File:Commode MET DP105696.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Commode decoration by Charles CressentCharles CressentRocaille ({{IPAc-en|US|r|oÊ|Ë|k|aɪ|,_|r|É|Ë|k|aɪ}} {{respell|ro(h)|KY}},AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY, rocaille, 19 August 2019, WEB,www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/rocaille, Rocaille, Collins English Dictionary, HarperCollins, 19 August 2019, DICTIONARY,www.lexico.com/definition/rocaille,web.archive.org/web/20210415182359/https://www.lexico.com/definition/rocaille, dead, 2021-04-15, rocaille, Lexico UK English Dictionary, Oxford University Press, MERRIAM-WEBSTER, rocaille, 19 August 2019, {{IPA-fr|ÊÉkÉj|lang}}) was a French style of exuberant decoration, with an abundance of curves, counter-curves, undulations and elements modeled on nature, that appeared in furniture and interior decoration during the early reign of Louis XV of France. It was a reaction against the heaviness and formality of the Louis XIV style. It began in about 1710, reached its peak in the 1730s, and came to an end in the late 1750s, replaced by Neoclassicism.Larousse Encyclopedia on-line{{Sfn|Lovreglio|2006|page=369}} It was the beginning of the French Baroque movement in furniture and design, and also marked the beginning of the Rococo movement, which spread to Italy, Bavaria and Austria by the mid-18th century.- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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Overview
Rocaille was exuberant and inspired by nature like Rococo, but, unlike Rococo, it was usually symmetrical and not overloaded with decoration. It took its name from the mixture of rock, seashell and plaster that was used to create a picturesque effect in grottos during the Renaissance, and from the name of a seashell-shaped ornament which was frequent feature of Rocaille decoration.{{Sfn|Ducher|1988|page=136}} In 1736, the designer and jeweler Jean Mondon published the Premier Livre: De forme Rocquaille et Cartel, a collection of designs for ornaments of furniture and interior decoration. It was the first appearance in print of the term rocaille to designate the style.De Morant, Henry, Histoire des arts décoratifs, p. 355Furniture
Rocaille decoration was heavily loaded with decoration modeled on seashells, cascades of leaves and flowers, palm leaves, and other natural elements. The decor on walls and furniture was usually made of carved wood or plaster which was gilded. The French designer Bernard Toro produced a book of flamboyant early Rocaille patterns in 1716, which was widely circulated in Europe. The first major craftsman in the style was Juste-Aurèle Meissonnier, followed by Jean Bérain the Elder, Gilles-Marie Oppenordt, Nicolas Pineau, and the sculptor-modelers Thomas Germain, Jacques Caffieri, and the German Jean-Claude Duplessis.{{Sfn|Lovreglio|2006|page=369}}The master cabinet makers or ébénistes of rocaille furniture included Mathieu Criaerd (1689â1776), who became a master in 1738. He was particularly known both for his fine marquetry or inlay, and for his chests with a Chinese or Japanese theme, with fine Chinese lacquer or Martin varnish, and ornaments of gilded and sculpted bronze.{{Sfn|Lovreglio|2006|page=128}}Another important figure of the rocaille style was the ébéntiste Charles Cressent (1685â1768), who was a master craftsman both in the guild of wood carvers and bronze ornament sculptors, a rare accomplishment earned respectively in 1708 and 1714. Cressent made furniture not only for Louis XV, but also for the King of Portugal and for the Elector of Bavaria. He is best known for his commodes, book cases and desks, which were often inlaid with rosewood and violet wood and equipped with particularly fine rocaille ornament of gilded bronze, including infants intermingled with birds and cascading vegetation. He introduced several stylistic innovations, including the espagnolettes à aigrette, small busts of young women, applied to the corners of his commodes and desks. This became a common decoration used by other masters of the rocaille.{{Sfn|Lovreglio|2006|page=127}}Other notable furniture craftsmen included the members of the Cresson family, Louis Cresson (1706â1761), Rene Cresson (1705â1749) and Michel Cresson (1709â1781), all of whom provided exceptionally crafted chairs, armoires, commodes and other furnishings for royal residences. Their children also became menuisiers and ébénistes during the reign of Louis XVI.{{Sfn|Lovreglio|2006|page=128}} File:Commode cintrée style Louis XV, 1ère moitié 18e, feuillage, fleur, coquille 2.JPG|Rocaille ornament of leaves, flowers and seashellFile:Louis XV armoire 1725-30.jpg|Louis XV Rocaille armoire (1725â1730) by Charles Cressent, (1725â1730)File:Writing desk - Charles Cressent - Münchner Residenz - DSC07468.JPG|Writing desk with Espagnolettes by Charles Cressent (1730â1735)File:Charles Cressent, Chest of drawers, c. 1730 at Waddesdon Manor.jpg|Commode by Charles Cressent (1730), Waddesdon ManorFile:Château de Versailles, appartement du Dauphin, bibliothèque, commode, Mathieu Criaerd.jpg|Commode for the Dauphin by Mathieu Criaerd (1748)File:Commode, Charles Cressent, Paris, 1745-1749 - Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art - DSC08841.JPG|Commode by Charles Cressent (1745â1749), Nelson-Atkins Museum of ArtWoodwork and interior decoration
Rocaille decoration was common in the wooden wall panels and other interior decoration between 1730 and 1750. The trim was usually made of carved and gilded wood or stucco against a white background. The panels in the frames often also had decorative painting, usually of arabesques or colorful floral patterns, and often featured animals or exotic subjects, set in China, Japan, or Turkey.Silver, porcelain and metalwork
Besides its use in furniture, the style appeared in porcelain and metalwork. In 1738, the Manufacture de Vincennes was founded thanks to the support of Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour, in order to compete with the manufactories at Chantilly and Meissen.Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory | People | Collection of Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum In 1756, the manufactury was moved to a building in Sèvres, built at the initiative of Madame de Pompadour, near her château.The most remarkable rocaille metal work included the cast iron and gilded fences and gates created by iron maker Jean Lamour for the new Place Stanislas in Nancy between 1750 and 1758 as the Duchy of Lorraine was attached to France. The square was completed with an ensemble of buildings whose balconies and suspended lamps matched the grillwork of the fence and gates.{{Sfn|De Morant|1970|page=376}}File:Juste-aurèlie messonier, candelabro d’argento, Parigi, 1734-1735 , 02.JPG|Silver candelabra by Juste-Aurèle Meissonnier (1734â1735)File:Wall clock (cartel) MET DP109787.jpg|Frame for a wall clock by Jacques Caffieri (1745â1750)File:Nancy Place Stanislas Grilles R03.jpg|Gilded cast-iron fence of Place Stanislas in Nancy (France) by Jean Lamour (1750â1758)File:Place Stanislas, Nancy.jpg|Gilded cast-iron lamp post of Place Stanislas in Nancy, France by Jean Lamour (1750â1758)Gate - Residence Square Würzburg - DSC02894.JPG|Gate with two statues and elaborate wrought-iron grilles, in Würzburg (Germany), grilles by Johann Georg Oegg (1752)File:Vincennes soft porcelain 1749 1750.jpg|Vincennes soft porcelain with rocaille design and a Chinese scene (1749â1750)File:Vase Duplessis Vincennes 1753.jpg|Vase of Vincennes porcelain by Jean-Claude Duplessis (1753)File:Pendule astronomique de Passemant (25).JPG|Astronomical clock of gilded bronze by Jacques Caffieri (1754), Museum of VersaillesBustelli Weihwasserbecken BNM.jpg|Two Nymphenburg porcelain holy water fonts, model probably by Franz Anton Bustelli (around 1760)Rudnyánszky mansion. R 15. Rococo faience stove, 18th c. - Budapest.JPG|Hungarian tiled faience stove, in the Baroque Rudnyánszky mansion from Budapest (18th century)Influence and decline
The Rocaille influenced the Chippendale style in England, and the work of the Belgian-born Bavarian decorative artist François de Cuvilliés. The style also became very popular for a time in Italy, particularly in Venice, and spread to Austria, Bavaria and Spain, where it took on a more exuberant and overcharged form.The discovery of Greek antiquities beginning in 1738 at Herculanum and especially at Pompeii in 1748 turned French architecture in the direction of the more symmetrical and less flamboyant neo-classicism and the Louis XV style. Furniture and decoration became more geometric; furniture legs became straight, resembling Roman or Grecian columns, and the ornate carving on the exterior of furniture was increasingly replaced by fine inlays of multicolored wood.See also
- {{ill|LiègeâAachen Baroque furniture|de|Aachen-Lütticher Möbelstil}}
- {{ill|Baroque in Prince-Bishopric of Liège|nl|Barok in het prinsbisdom Luik}}
Notes and citations
{{reflist}}Bibliography
- BOOK, De Morant, Henry, Histoire des arts décoratifs, fr, Librarie Hachette, 1970,
- BOOK, Ducher, Robert, Caractéristique des Styles, fr, Paris, France, Flammarion, 1988, 2-08-011539-1,
- BOOK, Renault, Christophe, Les Styles de l’architecture et du mobilier, fr, Paris, France, Gisserot, 2006, 978-2-877-4746-58,
- BOOK, Wiegant, Claude-Paul, Le Mobilier Français- Transition Louis XVI, Paris, France, Massin, 1995, fr, 2-7072-0281-9,
- BOOK, Lovreglio, Aurélia and Anne, Dictionnaire des Mobiliers et des Objets d’art du Moyen Ãge au XXIe siècle, fr, Paris, France, Le Robert, 2006, 2-84902-079-6,
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