Pier table

Charles-Honoré Lannuier American

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 726

The gilded caryatids on this example make it the most overtly Grecian of Lannuier's square pier tables. Based on the carved marble figures of the Erechtheum on the Acropolis in Athens, the caryatids were cast in lead and treated with a gilded surface. They may have been made in a mold taken from a French bronze lighting device of a type similar in quality to the imported bronze clocks that Lannuier is known to have sold in his store. The gilded surface of the paw feet, brass ornaments along the apron, and rosettes along the base complement the figures in a pleasing manner.

Pier table, Charles-Honoré Lannuier (France 1779–1819 New York), Rosewood veneer, gilded
gesso, brass, white metal, marble, glass with
mahogany, ash, white pine, yellow poplar, American

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