Writing Desk
Attributedattributed to
André-Charles Boulle the elder
(French, 1642 - 1732)
Additional Title(s)
- Bureau Plat
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Date1700-1705, with later alterations
Mediumsolid oak and walnut carcase veneered with purplewood; brass stringing; gilt bronze mounts; modern leather top
Dimensions30 1/8 x 74 1/4 x 35 5/16 in. (76.5 x 188.6 x 89.7 cm.)
DescriptionLouis XV Kingwood with gilt bronze.
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Label TextThe fact that this desk has a relatively simple decoration suggests that it was probably commissioned or purchased by an aristocratic or professional patron rather than the royal crown. Strongly associated with masculine pursuits like business, writing, and study, bureaux plats like this often appear in portraits of men, and to a lesser extent of women, who sought to identify themselves as learned, worldly, and competent. Their sheer size, compared to the smaller, more delicate “women’s” desks (like the highly decorative mechanical table nearby), also endowed their users with a degree of monumentality.Status
On viewObject number25.12
Bernard Molitor
secretary: 1812-1816; plaques: center:1783, left:1774, right:1777
Object number: 27.22