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Ormolu
gilden bronze work
Boiserie
French term for carved wood panelling
Boulle work
inlay technique of Boulle using shell, brass, silver or pewter.
Contrapartite
tortoiseshell pattern on a background of pewter or brass
Bombe form
curving on the side profile of the furniture
Fauteuil
Chair with open arms
French regency
the transition period from Louis XIV style to the feminine style of Louis XV
Le Roi Soleil
Word which translates to Sun King
Nicholas Fouquet
France Finance minister who built the Chateau Vaux- Le- Vicomte as a tribute to Louis XIV
Palace of Versailles
Became the benchmark of Baroque Architecture because of its unprecedented scale and grandeur. It featured hundreds of rooms. By: Le Brun, Jules Mansart and Le Vau
Palais de Louvre
The formal seat of power in France before Louis XIV moved the Versailles in 1682. It the remained as the formal seat of government to the end of the Ancient regime
Church of Val de Grace
A church built for Queen Anne after the birth of Louis XIV. The projecting portal was made by Francois Mansard and the dome by Le Mercier.
Andre Charles Boulle
appointed master cabinet maker to Louis XIV
Premier partie
a pattern of brass and pewter on a tortoiseshell background
Marquetry
made by small pieces cut of wood to make intricate design
Scagliola
Faux painting technique imitating marble
Royal bed
set behind proscenium arch in an alcove and separated from the main body of the room by a balustrade beyond which only specified persons could step
Ruelles
spaces on each side of the royal bed
Segellione
A Louis XIV chair gilded with bronze
French Baroque
Became the official architectural style in France during the 17th-18th Century
French baroque
was conceived at the renovation at the Versailles. The first of the purely native styles
Vernis martin
dark varnish taken from Chinese lacquer
Angel bed
canopy floats above the bed with no posts