Boulle (pronounced bool)
(1) In woodworking, furniture design, cabinet making and
bibelots, denoting or relating to a type of marquetry of patterned inlays of
brass and tortoiseshell (and occasionally other metals such as pewter or
silver), widely used in French (and later Italian) furniture from the late-seventeenth
century.
(2) Something ornamented with such marquetry; furniture
having ornamentation of this kind.
Circa 1680s: Named after André Charles Boulle
(1642–1732), the French cabinet-maker much associated with the style although Boulle
was noted also for his work in the intarsia
(an Italian form of decorative wood inlaying (and (in knitting) a design
resembling a mosaic)) of wood. The
alternative spellings are buhl and the less common boule; Boulle (and buhl) are
the common short forms for the product (often with an initial capital letter) but
among historians of furniture, antique dealers et al, boullework, boulle work &
boulle-work are all used as descriptors.
Boulle is a noun & proper noun and an adjective, the verb form
usually spelled bouled; the noun plural is boulles.
Armoire (circa 1700) by André-Charles Boulle, Royal Collection Trust, London.
Variation of the type of marquetry which came to be known as boulle work had been around for centuries before it was brought to an extraordinary standard fineness and intricracy by French cabinetmaker André Charles Boulle (1642–1732). His most memorable creations were veneered furniture with tortoiseshell inlaid primarily with brass, pewter and silver, his elaborate designs often incorporating arabesques. The large pieces by Boulle and his imitators are a staple of museums and the high-end of antique market but the technique was used also on countless bibelots. Those personally crafted by Boulle are the most prized but because (1) the sheer volume of the eighteenth and nineteenth century imitations and (2) Boulle not signing or imposing some verifiable marking, it can at the margins be difficult definitively authenticate the works. For this reason, the sign “attributed to André-Charles Boulle” is often seen in museum collections and is not unknown in antique shops.
Pair of oak cabinets by Pierre Garnier (circa 1726-1806) a Master Ébéniste, veneered with ebony and boulle marquetry in brass, pewter and tortoiseshell, representing a later neoclassical rendering of the Boulle technique, Royal Collection Trust, London.
Boulle was appointed furniture-maker, gilder and sculptor to Louis XIV (1638–1715; le Roi Soleil (the Sun King), King of France 1643-1715) and his work adorned the palaces and other royal places of the L'Ancien Régime but most of the furniture in the Royal Collection made by, or
attributed to, Boulle was later acquired by George IV (1762–1830; King of the
UK 1820-1830). A Francophile and noted
for the extravagance of his tastes, the king had been furnishing the royal
palaces with French furniture since the 1780s and this habit he was able to
indulge more and more after the French Revolution (1789) because, for a variety
of reasons, in the aftermath of that and during the Napoleonic years, much more
fine French furniture came onto the market, much of it shipped to England.
A boulle tortoise shell inkwell with brass inlays, circa 1870.
Marquetry is the use of small pieces of different materials (including burl
timber, tortoiseshell, pewter, silver, brass, horn, mother-of-pearl) to create
elaborate designs inlaid upon furniture. So skilled was Boulle at pictorial marquetry he
became known as a “painter in wood” but
it was his use of tortoiseshell and
brass that made his reputation and established him as a favourite of royalty
and the nobility. Pewter or brass inlay
on tortoiseshell was known as premier-partie, while tortoiseshell inlay on
brass or pewter was contre-partie but the most sumptuous pieces included mother-of-pearl,
stained horn and dyed tortoiseshell.
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