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Filing Cabinet

Attributed (French, ca. 1670 - 1732)
Additional Title(s)
  • Cartonnier
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Date1720-1732
Mediumsolid oak; purplewood veneer, bronze mounts; boxes of modern papier mache (carton), paper, and leather hide.
Dimensions16 x 31 3/16 x 10 3/16 in. (40.6 x 79.2 x 25.9 cm.)
DescriptionSmall filing cabinet with five drawers
InscribedTyped paper label in proper left drawer, "From the Collection of the Comte de la Riboiserie Paris".
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Label TextAlthough many 18th-century desks survive, their filing systems usually do not, which has often led to a focus on their decorative, rather than utilitarian, nature. In the 18th century, the bureau plat was a highly functional piece, made to facilitate clerical tasks. Its form had developed alongside a growing culture of bureaucracy that took shape as early as the 16th century, when the French crown established a network of offices to administer its domestic policies.
Status
On view
Object number11.47
Writing Desk
Etienne Doirat
1720-1732
Object number: 11.27
Writing Desk
André-Charles Boulle the elder
1700-1705, with later alterations
Object number: 25.12
Small Upright Writing Cabinet
Pierre Roussel
1760-1770
Object number: 27.101
Writing Desk
Charles Cressent
1723-1730
Object number: 27.18
Fall-Front Desk
Pierre Roussel
ca. 1760
Object number: 78.20.63
Photography © 2015 Fredrik Nilsen
Adam Weisweiler
1785
Object number: 27.21
Photography © 2015 Fredrik Nilsen
Pierre Garnier
1762-1765
Object number: 11.28
Writing Table
Bernard Molitor
ca.1788-1796
Object number: 16.12
Photography © 2015 Fredrik Nilsen
Charles Robert Ashbee
ca. 1895
Object number: 2006.11
Mechanical Writing Table
Jean-François Oeben
1755-1765
Object number: 27.185
Fall-front Secretary
Bernard Molitor
secretary: 1812-1816; plaques: center:1783, left:1774, right:1777
Object number: 27.22
Writing Desk
Le Maitre aux Pagodes
ca. 1730
Object number: 13.4