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Empire Style, 1800–1815

Revolutionary conquests were echoed in the fine and decorative arts, in which figures of Fame and Victory abounded.
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Table, Wood, carved, painted, and partly gilded; black granite top not original to table, Italian, Rome
Italian, Rome
ca. 1775–80
Tureen, Charles Percier  French, Silver gilt, French, Paris
Multiple artists/makers
1794–1814
Washstand (athénienne or lavabo), Charles Percier  French, Legs, base and shelf of yew wood; gilt-bronze mounts; iron plate beneath shelf, French, Paris
Charles Percier
Martin-Guillaume Biennais
1800–1814
Secretary, Amboyna wood veneered on pine; gilt-bronze mounts, French
French
ca. 1804–09
Desk chair (fauteuil de bureau), Mahogany, gilt bronze, contemporary cut voided satin velvet upholstery, French
French
1804–14
Allegory of the Maréchal de Villars’s Victory at Denain, Louis Simon Boizot  French, Bronze, French, Paris
Louis Simon Boizot
Pierre Philippe Thomire
1806, modified 1818
Madame Charles Maurice de Talleyrand Périgord (1761–1835), baron François Gérard  French, Oil on canvas
baron François Gérard
ca. 1804
Les monuments d'Égypte, Oberkampf Manufactory  French, Roller-printed cotton, French, Jouy-en-Josas
Multiple artists/makers
ca. 1808
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand Périgord (1754–1838), Prince de Bénévent, baron François Gérard  French, Oil on canvas
baron François Gérard
1808
Portrait of Napoleon I, baron François Gérard  French, Wool, silk, silver-gilt thread (26-28 warps per inch, 10-12 per cm.); gilded pine frame, French, Paris
Multiple artists/makers
designed 1805, woven 1808–11
Court train, silk, metal thread, French
French
ca. 1809
Coin cabinet, Charles Percier  French, Mahogany (probably Swietenia mahagoni), applied and inlaid silver, French, Paris
Multiple artists/makers
ca. 1809–19
Evening dress, cotton, French
French
1804–5
Dress, cotton, French
French
1804–14
Cheval glass (psyché), François-Honoré-Georges Jacob-Desmalter  French, Amboyna veneered on oak; gilt-bronze mounts; glass, French, Paris
François-Honoré-Georges Jacob-Desmalter
ca. 1810–14
Pair of candelabra with Winged Victories, Pierre Philippe Thomire  French, Gilt bronze, French
Pierre Philippe Thomire
ca. 1810–15
Minerva Protecting the Young King of Rome, Joseph-Antoine Romagnési  French, Relief: plaster, painted to resemble yellowish stone; frame: green marbleized wood, French
Joseph-Antoine Romagnési
1811
Chair back and seat cover, Séguin et Cie, Brocaded silk, French, Lyons
Séguin et Cie
1811
Evening dress, silk, French
French
ca. 1810
Breakfast Service (déjeuner), Sèvres Manufactory  French, Hard-paste porcelain, French, Sèvres
Multiple artists/makers
1813
Snuffbox with miniature of the Empress Marie-Louise, the King of Rome, and Napoléon I, Gabriel-Raoul Morel  French, Gold, ivory, French, Paris
Multiple artists/makers
ca. 1815
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand Périgord (1754–1838), Prince de Talleyrand, Pierre Paul Prud'hon  French, Oil on canvas
Pierre Paul Prud'hon
1817
Monumental vase, Pierre Philippe Thomire  French, Russian malachite, composite filling material; gilt-bronze mounts; bronze pedestal, probably Italian, Florence and French, Paris
Pierre Philippe Thomire
lapidary work: early 19th century; pedestal and mounts: 1819
Fruit or flower basket (corbeille aux cygnes), Sèvres Manufactory  French, Hard-paste porcelain, French, Sèvres
Multiple artists/makers
designed 1812, manufactured 1823
Armchair, Karl Friedrich Schinkel  German, Gilded mountain ash; brass mounts and casters; modern upholstery, German, Berlin
Multiple artists/makers
ca. 1828
Table, Royal Porcelain Manufactory, Berlin  German, Hard-paste porcelain, gilded bronze, and yellow metal; iron and wood as support materials, German, Berlin
Multiple artists/makers
ca. 1833–34
Court suit, silk, metallic thread, paste, French
French
late 18th–early 19th century

The period of Napoleonic rule lends its name to the late Neoclassical style that characterizes artistic creations of the era, including the Directory and Consulate periods. Napoleon I visited French textile, porcelain, and furniture workshops to encourage their increased production for the greater glory of France, and all of the arts served to promote his regime. Revolutionary conquests were echoed in the fine and decorative arts, in which figures of Fame and Victory abounded (). Antique forms and ornament, already seen in the Louis XVI style, blended with Napoleon’s imperial symbols, which included the bee, the letter N surrounded by a laurel wreath, stars, the eagle, and exotic hieroglyphic motifs culled from the Egyptian campaign (May 1795–October 1799). Empress Joséphine was fond of swans; they decorate the chair arms, curtains, carpets, and porcelain in the state rooms of her home at Malmaison (); ().

Courts across Europe adopted the Empire style, especially in Russia, where it became a staple. In Germany and Austria, it coexisted with the gentler Biedermeier associated with modest domestic interiors. Charles Percier (1764–1838) and Pierre François Léonard Fontaine (1762–1853) were the two most influential figures in the field of Empire decoration and furnishing. Official architects to the court of Napoleon, their main responsibility was the renovation of the various royal residences. Their Recueil de décorations intérieures (1812) was an essential handbook of the Empire style.

Egyptian elements and themes were imported and distributed principally by Baron Dominique Vivant Denon (1747–1825), the archaeologist to the Middle East expedition. In 1802, he published Voyage dans la Basse et la Haute Égypte pendant les campagnes du Général Bonaparte, in which drawings and etchings of herms, palm leaves, mummified Egyptians, caryatids, and other exotica are copied directly from temples, funeral columns, and royal tombs. Later appointed director of the Central Museum of Arts (Louvre), Denon was instrumental in associating the future emperor with Egyptianized design in France, though Egyptomania already had became à la mode in the eighteenth century (); (); (); ().

Neoclassical and Egyptian images enlivened Empire objects of every description, including wall decorations (), silver (), papiers peints (wallpaper) by Jean Zuber and Joseph Dufour, fabrics from Jouy and Lyon (); (), Gobelins tapestries (), Sèvres and Dagoty china (); (), and furniture (); (); (); (); 19.182.5). Usually made of mahogany from Cuba and the Antilles (which replaced the variety of precious woods previously used), and fitted with brass and ormolu figurines drawn from myth and history, Empire furniture was largely austere and geometric. Goldsmith Pierre Philippe Thomire (1751–1843) drew recognition as a skilled maker of bronze mounts for such pieces (); (); (). Henri Auguste (1759–1816), Jean-Baptiste Claude Odiot (1763–1850) (), and Martin Guillaume Biennais (1764–1843) () crafted elegant services, nefs, jewels, and snuffboxes in precious metals for the emperor and empress, sometimes after Percier and Fontaine designs.

Painting was enlisted in the commemoration of Napoleonic triumphs. Jacques Louis David, who had used his paintbrush to magnify the heroic and civic virtues of the ancients, now dedicated himself with equal fervor to the service of the conquerer who personified the empire. To David we owe such monumental spectacles as Bonaparte Crossing the Saint Bernard Pass (1801; Malmaison), The Distribution of the Eagles (1810; Versailles), and Napoleon in His Study (1812; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.). His group portrait, The Coronation of the Emperor Napoleon I and the Crowning of the Empress Joséphine at Notre-Dame on December 2, 1804 (1805–7; Louvre), records Napoleon’s imperial ascendancy and shows the dazzling costumes and jewelry fashionable at his court (); ().

François Gérard’s (1770–1837) portrait of Madame de Tallyrand depicts her wearing the iconic white gown evocative of the classical world, a garment that came into vogue during the Directory and became the height of Empire fashion (). In December 1803, Jérôme Bonaparte (1784–1860), brother of Napoleon, married Elizabeth Patterson, a young American woman, who probably wore such a wedding gown of Indian muslin and lace (). According to a contemporary, it “would fit easily into a gentleman’s pocket.” In France, a ban was placed on the importation of the popular Indian muslins in an effort to promote French-made materials. Silk fabric was produced in great quantity at Lyon to meet the demands of Imperial fashion ()

Two leading painters in the Napoleonic period were Antoine Jean Gros (1771–1835) and Jean-Baptiste Isabey (1767–1855). Gros was official artist to the army and eyewitness to some of the most famous battles of the Imperial epoch. His masterpieces include General Bonaparte at Arcola (1796), Napoleon in the Plague House at Jaffa (1804), and the Battlefield of Eylau (1808) (all in the Louvre). Isabey was chief painter to Empress Joséphine and chief decorator and director of Imperial festivities to her successor, Marie-Louise. He is known for his court portraits and miniatures (), especially those on the celebrated Austerlitz Table designed by Percier and decorated in bronze by Thomire.


Contributors

Cybele Gontar
Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2004


Further Reading

DeLorme, Eleanor P., ed. Joséphine and the Arts of the Empire. Los Angeles: Getty Museum, 2005.

Feigenbaum, Gail, ed. Jefferson's America & Napoleon's France: An Exhibition for the Louisiana Purchase Bicentennial. Exhibition catalogue. New Orleans: New Orleans Museum of Art, 2003.

Humbert, Jean Marcel, et al. Egyptomania: Egypt in Western Art, 1730—1930. Exhibition catalogue. Paris: Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1994.

Kenny, Peter M., et al. Honoré Lannuier, Cabinet Maker from Paris: The Life and Work of a French Ébéniste in Federal New York. Exhibition catalogue. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998. See on MetPublications

Le Bourhis, Katell, ed. The Age of Napoleon: Costume from Revolution to Empire, 1789–1815. Exhibition catalogue. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1989. See on MetPublications

Olson, Roberta J. M., and Margaret K. Hofer. Seat of Empire. Exhibition catalogue. New York: New-York Historical Society, 2002.

Percier, Charles, and P. F. L. Fontaine. Recueil des décorations intérieures. Paris: Chez les Auteurs, 1812.

Rosenberg, Pierre, et al. Dominique-Vivant Denon: L'oeil de Napoléon. Exhibition catalogue. Paris: Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1999.


Citation

View Citations

Gontar, Cybele. “Empire Style, 1800–1815.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/empr/hd_empr.htm (October 2004)