Card table 1817 Charles-Honoré Lannuier This superlative card table is one of a pair in the Museum's collection documented to the workshop of New York's resident French ébéniste of the Federal period, Charles-Honoré Lannuier. The tables are remarkable not only for their exquisite beauty but also because they are signed and dated masterpieces descended in the family of their original owner, Stephen Van Rensselaer IV of Albany. Commissioned by the New York City merchant William Bayard, the table was part of a larger purchase that included a nearly identical pair of card tables and two pier tables with gilded swan supports, wedding gifts for his daughters Harriet and Maria, who in 1817 married Stephen Van Rensselaer IV and Duncan Pearsall Campbell. The invoice for the Campbell pieces survives, revealing how expensive furniture from Lannuier's Broad Street shop was. The pair of card tables was priced at $250 and the pier table at $300--astonishing sums at a time when a journeyman cabinetma

Card table 1817 Charles-Honoré Lannuier This superlative card table is one of a pair in the Museum's collection documented to the workshop of New York's resident French ébéniste of the Federal period, Charles-Honoré Lannuier. The tables are remarkable not only for their exquisite beauty but also because they are signed and dated masterpieces descended in the family of their original owner, Stephen Van Rensselaer IV of Albany. Commissioned by the New York City merchant William Bayard, the table was part of a larger purchase that included a nearly identical pair of card tables and two pier tables with gilded swan supports, wedding gifts for his daughters Harriet and Maria, who in 1817 married Stephen Van Rensselaer IV and Duncan Pearsall Campbell. The invoice for the Campbell pieces survives, revealing how expensive furniture from Lannuier's Broad Street shop was. The pair of card tables was priced at $250 and the pier table at $300--astonishing sums at a time when a journeyman cabinetma
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Card table 1817 Charles-Honoré Lannuier This superlative card table is one of a pair in the Museum's collection documented to the workshop of New York's resident French ébéniste of the Federal period, Charles-Honoré Lannuier. The tables are remarkable not only for their exquisite beauty but also because they are signed and dated masterpieces descended in the family of their original owner, Stephen Van Rensselaer IV of Albany. Commissioned by the New York City merchant William Bayard, the table was part of a larger purchase that included a nearly identical pair of card tables and two pier tables with gilded swan supports, wedding gifts for his daughters Harriet and Maria, who in 1817 married Stephen Van Rensselaer IV and Duncan Pearsall Campbell. The invoice for the Campbell pieces survives, revealing how expensive furniture from Lannuier's Broad Street shop was. The pair of card tables was priced at $250 and the pier table at $300--astonishing sums at a time when a journeyman cabinetma by Piemags/PL Photography Limited is available for licensing today.
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Image Number: 6145-29832795Royalty FreeCredit Line:Piemags/PL Photography Limited/SuperStockCollection:PL Photography LimitedContributor:PiemagsModel Release:NoProperty Release:NoResolution:3143×3722
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