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A PAIR OF FRENCH DIRECTOIRE MAHOGANY AND EBONISED WOOD FAUTEUILS EN CURULE ATTRIBUTED TO JACOB, CIRCA 1800height 35 ?in.; width 25 ?in.; depth 20 in.90 cm; 64 cm; 51 cm This form is referred to as a curule chair, based on the the antique Roman sella curulis (said to derive from currus, ‘chariot’), a curved X-frame seat reserved for magistrates and other high-ranking officials, and thus an appropriate design to project power and status. It became extremely popular in the context of the the more archaeologically-inspired neoclassicism of the Consulat and early Empire periods, influenced by the continuing excavations at Herculaneum and Pompeii and Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign, recorded visually by the Baron Vivant-Denon in his Voyage dans la Basse et la Haute Egypte published in 1802. An early drawing for a chair of this design, attributed to the architect Charles Percier, is in a private collection, and several chairs of this model by or attributed Georges Jacob (1739-1814, ma?tre in 1765) including two in the French National collections, are illustrated in J-P Samoyault, Le Mobilier Fran?ais Consulat et Empire, Paris 2009, p.27 figs. 25-28. A set of four curule armchairs of identical design and attributed to Jacob were formerly with Maurice Segoura, Paris, sold Christie’s New York, 19 October 2006, lot 204 ($84,000). A related set of four chairs stamped Jacob Frères Rue Meslée was in the collection of the Prince and Princesse Henry de La Tour d'Auvergne-Lauraguais, sold Sotheby’s London, 3 May 2012, lots 54-55 (GBP 84,100).