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François Linke 1855 - 1946 A unique and magnificent gilt-bronze mounted kingwood, satiné and embroidered silk decorated bed Paris, circa 1920's, index number 709, very possibly made for Albina Rodriguez Patiño
Description
- François Linke
- kinwood, bois satiné, silk, bronze
- height 7 ft. 1 in.; width 7 ft.; length 7 ft. 9 in.
- 216 cm; 213 cm; 241 cm
Literature
Ledoux-Lebard, Denise, Le Mobilier Français du XIX Siècle, Les Éditions de l’Amateur, Paris, 2000, p. 442, illustrated
Condition
In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective qualified opinion.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING CONDITION OF A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE PRINTED IN THE CATALOGUE.
Catalogue Note
An extended version of this suite in which the present lot was included, was delivered to the Patiños with a side chair, two night tables and a baldaquin for the bed. The canopy (baldaquin) had matching tapestry with the present lot centered by the initials ‘ARP” for Albina Rodriguez Patiño, wife of Simon Iturri Patiño, the Bolivian tin magnate who set up his own bank, the Banco Mercantil in 1906 with a capital equivalent to over $1,500,000. As well as exploiting his hard won tin reserves he opened up Bolivian rail and river transportation and was a supporter of many charities. After establishing his headquarters in Hamburg in Germany, Patiño purchased a house, number 32 on the fashionable Paris’s Avenue Foch and ordered some two hundred and forty items of furniture and decorations from Linke in 1913, listed in the Linke accounts as Commande 1860. Subsequent Patiño orders are dated 1916, 1918 and 1919 and through to the 1920s and ‘30s. Verbal corroboration between Simon Patiño’s daughter-in-law, Christina de Bourbon and Christopher Payne indicates that the first floor of the Avenue Foch house, was furnished by Linke in a way that confirms Linke’s order book.
There is an implication that Linke’s important client Antonio Devoto, who ordered the same bedroom suite as Patiño but with a marquetry bedhead instead of the woven silk of the present lot as seen in the invoice, dated 27th September 1913, (see Payne, plate 278) had to wait much longer for Linke to complete the work and that the main part of the suite was diverted to Patiño, despite having been ordered earlier by Devoto. The amount of changes on the Devoto invoice suggest that it was only a rough copy or draft and not the one presented to the client. The total of 295,000 French francs has been crossed out and marked ‘a reporter’ – meaning ‘to be revisited’, no doubt due to pressure from the client. The bed is more fully described than the price list description, confirming that the woods are kingwood (bois de violette) and the untranslatable ‘satiné’. Linke also underlines the quality of the bronzes on the present lot by adding in the invoice that the bronzes are chased and gilded. There is no record of the silk ordered for the present lot which is thought to be a unique commission.
The Devoto bedroom was in stock according to an estimate, dated 27th September 1913 with the marquetry version of the bed listed as70,000 francs, the armoire number 716 at 85,000, a ‘commode assortie’, 35,000 and a chaise longue at 13,500 francs, numbers 2567 and 2568 respectively. The total sale price of these four items was 203,500 francs against a cost price estimated at 86,667 francs 50 and it is imagined that the special weaving of the silk for the present lot would have been more expensive than the ‘standard’ marquetry.
The sub contracted outside sculptor, Derivry, is recorded to have carved unspecified parts of the bedroom suite but it may be presumed that these were models for the innovative three-dimensional bronze mounts after designs and original plans by Linke’s principle sculptor Léon Messagé who had died in 1901 but whose legacy underlined Linke’s success. The innovative style of this suite and more specifically the present lot, are clearly inspired by Messagé with his genius for merging traditional Louis XV rococo themes with a contemporary feel of the “belle époque’ . Apart from the sculptural, three-dimensional figures on the head and footboard, typical of Messagé, the central apron on the footboard with its asymmetric foliage and cascading water come directly from the work and designs of Messagé for Linke’s mentor, Joseph-Emmanuel Zwiener.
Patiño and Devoto were two of Linke’s most important clients in the second decade of the twentieth century. Both men were wealthy entrepreneurs who, having made their fortune wanted to buy the best quality luxury furniture from the best maker, François Linke.
Footnote courtesy of Christopher Payne