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French Jacques Adnet Brass Mounted Black Lacquered Writing Desk
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
French Jacques Adnet Brass Mounted Black Lacquered Writing Desk
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
About Jacques Adnet
Jacques Adnet (1900-1984) was a renowned French furniture and decorative arts designer. Born on April 20, 1900, in Chatillon-Coligny, France, Adnet was known for his innovative and elegant designs that seamlessly blended traditional craftsmanship with modern aesthetics.
Adnet's interest in design developed at an early age, and he pursued his passion by studying at the Municipal read more..
Bureau
A desk popular in late 17th-century England and France distinguished by its sloping fall-front. Derived from the French word bureau or office, the original form, the bureau plat, was a flat covered table with drawers below the top. The flap is hinged at the base and rests on lopers when open, folding up at an angle when closed. Over time, the bureau as a form evolved into a kneehole desk with sets of drawers on each side and a single center drawer. Many renditions of the bureau were used in combination with bookcases or highboys. In America, the term bureau is also used to describe a bedroom chest-of-drawers.
Bureau
A desk popular in late 17th-century England and France distinguished by its sloping fall-front. Derived from the French word bureau or office, the original form, the bureau plat, was a flat covered table with drawers below the top. The flap is hinged at the base and rests on lopers when open, folding up at an angle when closed. Over time, the bureau as a form evolved into a kneehole desk with sets of drawers on each side and a single center drawer. Many renditions of the bureau were used in combination with bookcases or highboys. In America, the term bureau is also used to describe a bedroom chest-of-drawers.
Bureau
A desk popular in late 17th-century England and France distinguished by its sloping fall-front. Derived from the French word bureau or office, the original form, the bureau plat, was a flat covered table with drawers below the top. The flap is hinged at the base and rests on lopers when open, folding up at an angle when closed. Over time, the bureau as a form evolved into a kneehole desk with sets of drawers on each side and a single center drawer. Many renditions of the bureau were used in combination with bookcases or highboys. In America, the term bureau is also used to describe a bedroom chest-of-drawers.