The Bordeaux pieces of furniture
In the eighteenth century, Bordeaux is a wealthy city with an open port on the sea, which promotes trade with Africa, the Caribbean and America.
Bordeaux Shipowners, slave traders and merchants owned big beautiful mansions sumptuously furnished.
To accomodate and decorate their houses, they needed rich and lush furniture.
It is through the development of trade in precious woods that emerged solid mahogany pieces of furniture, a wood that came from Cuba, the Caribbean and Central America.
Recovered by local artisans, enormous quantities of mahogany ball thrown on platforms will be most often used in solid, not veneer.
Taking advantage of this, cabinetmakers created elegant "meubles de Port" furniture for the refined and discreet luxury palaces of Bordeaux.
Common characteristics of Bordeaux pieces
The style of furniture is often Louis XV as elsewhere in most regional centers.
The forms are strongly curved, richly carved and molded but there is a virtual absence of marquetry. The ornamentation is mostly floral with fluting and tendrils of foliage. The legs are scrolled.
The art of metalwork is flourishing in the eighteenth in Bordeaux, found on furniture.
* Musée des arts décoratifs de Bordeaux, hôtel de Lalande
* Le meuble de port, Louis Malfoy, Les éditions de l'amateur