VANDERCRUSE, Roger - b. 1728 Paris, d. 1799 Paris - WGA

VANDERCRUSE, Roger

(b. 1728 Paris, d. 1799 Paris)

Roger Vandercruse (also Roger Lacroix), French cabinetmaker. He became a maitre-ébéniste in 1755 and about this time he took over the workshop of his father, François Vandercruse. He was related to the cabinetmakers Jean-Henri Riesener, Martin Carlin, Etienne Levasseur, Pioniez, Nicolas-Jean Marchand and the brothers Jean-François Oeben and Simon Oeben. He stamped his work R.V.L.C.

He was very successful and worked for Louis-Philippe, 4th Duc d’Orléans, the Comtesse Du Barry and the Garde Meuble de la Couronne through Gilles Joubert and Riesener. He moved with ease from the Louis XV to the Neo-classical style and mastered all types of marquetry: geometric, floral (e.g. secrétaire à abattant, c. 1770; Petit Palais, Paris) and a trellis design known as ‘à la Reine’ on a citrus-wood ground (Victoria and Albert Museum, London). He also used mahogany veneering (Musée Carnavalet, Paris) and porcelain from the factory of Sèvres to embellish some secrétaires (e.g. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) and many small tables (e.g. work-table, c. 1760; Wallace Collection, London). His furniture, while often ingenious, displays great rigour and elegance.

Bonheur du jour
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Bonheur du jour

This late Louis XV gilt-bronze marquetry bonheur du jour is stamped RVLC. A bonheur du jour (French, meaning “daytime delight”) is a type of lady’s writing desk. It was introduced in Paris about 1760.

Cabaret table
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Cabaret table

This small table with porcelain top is a notable work by Roger Vandercruse.

Cabinet
Cabinet by

Cabinet

Numerous new types of furniture appeared in France in the 1700s with varied and specialized functions. This bedside cabinet was decorated on all four sides so that it could be placed wherever it was needed in the room. The tambour door at the top slides back, revealing a marble lined shelf that would have been used to hold a chamber pot. The doors below conceal two sets of drawers. At the right side is a drawer that once contained writing materials: a gilt bronze inkpot, a pot for sand, and a sponge box.

Commode
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Commode

This is a commode of breakfront form, on tall cabriole legs, veneered with floral and trellis marquetry, with gilt-bronze mounts and Spanish brocatelle marble top. It is veneered with tulipwood and parquetry of various woods. The mounts are gilt bronze.

This form of commode or chest of drawers, with a ‘breakfront’ or projection section in the middle, was particularly favoured by the Parisian cabinet-maker Roger Vandercruse, although his was not the only workshop to produce them. A number of commodes stamped on the carcase with his ‘R V L C’ mark are known, and some are known to have been made for members of the court. The combination of trellis marquetry and marquetry of flowers was another feature of Vandercruse’s work.

The design of the lower part of the central panel was copied from a series of engravings of baskets and vases of flowers, published by L. Tessier. It was common practice for cabinet-makers and specialist makers of marquetry to use engravings to create their designs, combining elements from two or more engravings to create a new composition.

Commode 'à la Grecque'
Commode 'à la Grecque' by

Commode 'à la Grecque'

This late Louis XV gilt-bronze mounted paduk commode ‘à la Grecque’ is stamped RVLC. It was inspired by the famous model designed by Jean-Fran�ois Oeben who delivered seventeen pieces of it to Madame de Pompadour for her Château de M�nars.

Secrétaire à abattant
Secrétaire à abattant by

Secrétaire à abattant

This ormolu-mounted and marquetry ‘secr�taire à abattant’ (drop-front secretary) is of transition style.

Table en chiffonnière
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Table en chiffonnière

This late Louis XV table en chiffonni�re (work and writing table) is stamped RVLC.

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