Luxury After the Terror

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When Louis XVI was guillotined on January 21, 1793, vast networks of production that had provided splendor and sophistication to the royal court were severed. Although the king’s royal possessions―from drapery and tableware to clocks and furniture suites―were scattered and destroyed, many of the artists who made them found ways to survive. This book explores the fabrication, circulation, and survival of French luxury after the death of the king.

Spanning the final years of the ancien régime from the 1790s to the first two decades of the nineteenth century, this richly illustrated book positions luxury within the turbulent politics of dispersal, disinheritance, and dispossession. Exploring exceptional works created from silver, silk, wood, and porcelain as well as unrealized architectural projects, Iris Moon presents new perspectives on the changing meanings of luxury in the revolutionary and Napoleonic periods, a time when artists were forced into hiding, exile, or emigration. Moon draws on her expertise as a curator to revise conventional accounts of the so-called Louis XVI style, arguing that it was only after the revolutionary auctions liquidated the king’s collections that their provenance accrued deeper cultural meanings as objects with both a royal imprimatur and a threatening reactionary potential.

Lively and accessible, this thought-provoking study will be of interest to curators, art historians, scholars, and students of the decorative arts as well as specialists in the French Revolution.

Author(s): Iris Moon
Publisher: Penn State University Press
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 272
City: University Park

COVER Front
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Notes to Introduction
Chapter 1: Death and Dispersal The 1793–94 Revolutionary Auctions at Versailles
Notes to Chapter 1
Chapter 2: Henry Auguste Precious Metals in the Age of Terror
Notes to Chapter 2
Chapter 3: Jean- Démosthène Dugourc Political Fantasies of the Arabesque
Notes to Chapter 3
Chapter 4: Aubert- Henri- Joseph Parent Carving in Exile
Notes to Chapter 4
Chapter 5: Alexandre Brongniart Fragile Terrains
Notes to Chapter 5
Notes
Bibliography
index