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Pair of Folding Stools
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Possibly after Gilles-Paul Cauvet, designer; frames by Jean-Baptiste-Claude Sené, menuisier; carved by Nicolas Vallois, carver
French, Paris, about 1786
Gessoed, painted, and gilded beechwood; modern upholstery


71.DA.94

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These stools were part of an order of sixty-four for the French queen Marie-Antoinette's salles de jeux (gaming rooms) at the palaces of Fontainebleau and Compiègne. Originally covered with painted satin, they were delivered with twelve matching fixed-leg stools ( tabourets ), a folding screen, and a fire-screen. Their carved decoration consists of typical Neoclassical motifs: oak wreaths, scrolling ribbons, beading, and rosettes.

The wooden X-frame base, a traditional design that originated in classical antiquity, allowed each stool to fold easily once its cushion was removed. Thus they could be easily transported from room to room.