logo-xls

French Decorative Bookbinding - Eighteenth Century

Luc-Antoine Boyet


click to enlarge


(click on this image to see an enlargement)


click to enlarge


(click on this image to see an enlargement)


Comparative Diagram 1 - Boyet winged cherub head motif examples


In Comparative Diagram 1, we see some examples of the imprint found in the corners of the large dentelle on the boards of the 1698 Berviarium. I have managed to find two other examples, the black and white reproduction is from a 1728 Office, suggesting that Boyet was using this tool up to the later part of his career, the other example is from a random search of the internet, truly just a chance finding, it was reproduced in a Bibliophile blog, in 2013 where it was a eBay news item, and thus so far I do not have any details about this very low resolution picture, however enlarging even this minimum image clearly shows that this is another Boyet imprint of this type.


click to enlarge

(click on this image to see an enlargement)

Comparative Diagram 2 - Bindings with Boyet winged cherub head motif

I was looking for something that would give me a better fix on the production date for the 1698 Breviarium. A search for examples of Boyet bindings with this winged cherub head soon revealed that he did not use this tool very often, and when I finally found it on the 1728 office, this gave me second thoughts about when the 1698 Breviarium might have been made. Now this third eBay example AUX ARMES DE FRANÇOISE-MARIE DE BOURBON (1677-1749) appears to be another dentelle closer in style to our 1698 Breviarium.




click to enlarge



Françoise Marie de Bourbon,

"Je ne me soucie pas qu'il m'aime, je me soucie qu'il m'épouse"

("I care not that he love me, but that he marries me")



"Françoise Marie de Bourbon, légitimée de France (4 May[2] 1677 ­ 1 February 1749) was the youngest illegitimate daughter of Louis XIV of France and his maîtresse-en-titre, Françoise-Athénaïs, Marquise de Montespan. At the age of 14, she was wed to her first cousin Philippe d'Orléans, future Regent of France during the minority of Louis XV. Not long after their marriage, Philippe openly ridiculed his wife's bad temper, nicknaming her Madame Lucifer. Her mother-in-law said that during the early years of the Chartres marriage, Françoise was as "drunk as drunk" three to four times a week."


I have included this history of Françoise Marie de Bourbon trying to establish when she might have received this book, she was married in 1692. In theory the arms that we see on this binding could date from anytime after 1692. This example of the armes of Françoise Marie de Bourbon with the large upswept palm leaves is unusual (surmontant deux palmes nouées frappées au centre des plats) Below I show a 1708 example from Bukowskis Auctions. This maybe another Boyet dentelle and shares characteristics with yet another Boyet.


click to enlarge

(click on this image to see an enlargement)

Paris 1708 from www.bukowskis.com (armories may be 2567 in Olivier-Hermal-Roton?)


click to enlarge

(click on this image to see an enlargement)


Look closely at the dentelle shown above it is almost certainly the same dentelle that we can barely see with the armes of Françoise Marie de Bourbon in Comparative Diagram 2, this dentelle is composed of some of the same elements as we see in the 1708 Bukowski example. We do not know when this binding was made (click here for more details) but we see inside some brocade paper that may be similar to our 1698 Breviarium example, the same production technique, motifs in gold, but a different design.



click to enlarge


(click on this image to see an enlargement)





click to enlarge

(click on this image to see an enlargement)

Comparative Diagram 3 - Boyet winged cherub head reconstruction


click to enlarge

(click on this image to see an enlargement)

Winged Cherub head example from the second website of Bob Speel Winged cherub head sculpture


You have to look very closely at this winged cherub head imprint to even see the head, it is only barely visible magnified. However as you can see by the example at the top of this page the cherub can appear rather demonic after 3 centuries of errosion. I decided to try and reconstruct what the original head may have looked like in Comparative Diagram 3, after I did this reconstruction, that I was then calling a flying cherub head, I decided to search the internet for such a thing and discovered the most complete web site on the subject that you are ever likely to encounter, Bob Speel's second website (click here to see it). I chose one of his examples that I think gives an impression of what the Boyet exmple might be trying to emulate. However you have to bear in mind that the head itself is not really visible to the naked eye, being only about 2 mm in size.


click to enlarge


(click on this image to see an enlargement)




Click here to see the next page...




Click here to see a page INDEX




Click here to see a page view INDEX





click here to return to the HOME page.




click here to see an INDEX of the 2017 pages.

see below links to previous work






Atelier I B 31/10/2014





Icons of the Renaissance 06/02/2014





Atelier au trefle 22/12/2014




Atelier Royal 1518 - 1524 09/11/2014





Unraveling G. D. Hobson's book on fanfares 27/11/2014





16c fanfare on eBay 23/11/2014




another Padeloup binding on eBay 07/12/2014


the last Padeloup fanfare?


Rare Padeloup binding on eBay 15/11/2014



Pierre-Paul Dubuisson's work attributed to Derone le jeune 23/10/2014 (unfinished work now finished)


Pierre-Paul Dubuisson's work attributed to Douceur 22/10/2014 (an under contruction page finished at last)


Louis-Marie Michon - the 1956 Disaster 19/10/2014 (an unfinished page finished at last)


Louis XII Dolphins motif 03/02/2014


Aristophanes Binder 1543 02/02/2014


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - Atlas Catalan 12/01/2014


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - FRANÇOIS Ier - Linacre bindings 05/01/2014


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - FRANÇOIS Ier c. 1500-1520


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - FRANÇOIS Ier - Chronology 16/01/2014


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - FRANÇOIS Ier - Inventory - binding No. 29 19/01/2014


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - FRANÇOIS Ier - Inventory - binding No. 39 19/01/2014


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - FRANÇOIS Ier - The mysterious disappearance of François Tissard d'Amboise 23/01/2014


Atelier des reliures LOUIS XII - FRANÇOIS Ier - The Simon Vostre fiasco 18/01/2014


L'Atelier Simon Vostre 1486-1521 01/01/2014


L'Atelier de Pierre Roffet 1511-1533 - TOOL CATALOGUE 26/01/2014


L'Atelier de Pierre Roffet 1511-1533 27/12/2013


Pierre Roffet - fleur-de-lis binder 28/12/2013


Fleur-de-lis Binder 1525-1540 27/11/2013


Du Saix Master 02/12/2013


Atelier Étienne Roffet 1538-1549 12/12/2013


Atelier Jean Picard 1538-1547


Imitative Binder c.1540 15/12/2013


Salel Binder 1540 17/11/2013


Atelier Ruette 1606-1669 INVENTORY


Atelier Macé Ruette 1606-1644


Atelier du Maitre Doreur 1622-1638


Atelier Antoine Ruette 1638-1669


Atelier des Caumartin 1652-1715


Atelier de Charenton 1670-1685


Atelier Luc-Antoine Boyet 1685-1733


Atelier Antoine-Michel Padeloup. dit Le Jeune 1685-1758


Atelier Louis Douceur 1721-1769


Atelier Pierre-Paul Dubuisson 1746-1762


Atelier Nicolas-Denis Derome, dit Derome le Jeune 1761-1788


Atelier Jean-Pierre Jubert, 1771-1793?


Atelier MM binder, 1770-179-?





A word of Caution

Even experts are sometimes wrong, before you spend thousands on a book, please do your own research! Just because I say a certain binding can be attributed to le Maitre isn't any kind of guarantee, don't take my word for it, go a step further and get your own proof. In these pages I have provided you with a way of doing just that.

Virtual Bookings, created by L. A. Miller return to the Home page of VIRTUAL BOOKBINDINGS

l.a.miller@mail.pf