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  1. Georges Jacob (6 July 1739 – 5 July 1814) was one of the two most prominent Parisian master menuisiers. He produced carved, painted and gilded beds and seat furniture and upholstery work for the French royal châteaux, in the Neoclassical style that is associated with Louis XVI furniture .

  2. 2 de jul. de 2024 · Georges Jacob (born July 6, 1739, Cheny, Fr.—died July 5, 1814, Paris) was the founder of a long line of French furniture makers. He was among the first cabinetmakers in France to use mahogany extensively and excelled at carved wood furniture, particularly chairs.

  3. Stamped by Georges Jacob, who supplied much furniture to the court of Louis XVI (1754-1793), this armchair and its pair have straight, rectangular backs, which characterize them as fauteuils à la reine.

  4. (Cheny, 1739-París, 1814) Ebanista francés. Desarrolló su tarea a lo largo de los reinados de Luis XV y Luis XVI y a lo largo del Directorio y el Imperio. Fue entre los primeros en trabajar la caoba. La primordial característica de su estilo es la sobriedad, con frecuencia fundamentada en la estética grecorromana.

  5. Georges Jacob (né à Cheny le 6 juillet 1739 et mort à Paris le 5 juillet 1814), reçu maître en 1765, est le plus célèbre et aussi le plus prolifique des menuisiers en sièges du XVIII e français.

  6. Jacob-Desmalter. Georges I Jacob, a Parisian furniture maker specialized in chairs, worked for the royal household from the middle of the 18th century onwards. Towards the end of the Ancien Régime, he was one of the first to use mahogany to make chairs and beds.

  7. Georges Jacob, one of the outstanding menuisiers of the ancien régime, provided the walnut frames, which he described as “of a new shape,” possibly referring to the arched top rail or the seat shaped like a horseshoe.