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			<title><![CDATA[International Art and Antiques Fair - Hong Kong – Mai 2012]]></title>
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	     <br />
<br />
   The dragon, a mythical animal, an emblematic symbol of force and power, has always<br />
    fascinated me. In 2012, the year of the dragon, I have decided to pay my tribute to this<br />
    fascinating animal through this special exhibition entitled Dream Of The Dragon.<br />
    Being profoundly in love with Chinese art for many years ago, I have always been fascinated<br />
    by the symbol of the dragon. As a child, I dreamed that I was a dragon warrior, hunting this<br />
    powerful animal in their mythical living surrounding so far from where I lived. An unusual<br />
    meeting some time ago in Paris with an unusual person made me almost believe that my<br />
    fate is related with the dragon. I met a French dragon hunter!<br />
    He hunts dragons or rather the symbol of the dragon on furniture and art works that<br />
    were the original creations by artists who worked in the most important Parisian furniture<br />
    workshops at the end of 19th Century. I was overwhelmed by what I saw. The purpose of<br />
    this exhibition is to discover the furniture and art objects coming from the prestigious<br />
    Parisian workshops that were active from this period.<br />
    Very few works and publications on these works exist nowadays. The original documentation<br />
    is secretly guarded by a few private collectors. Some rare examples that came from the<br />
    same firms are preciously held in museums such as the Louvre in Paris and the Victoria<br />
    and Albert Museum in London. These museums were wise enough to acquire such pieces<br />
    before they were rediscovered.<br />
    This French dragon hunter, Laurent Vanlian, is the recognized expert in France furniture<br />
    and objects from these firms and it is due to him that this exhibition was born. His passion<br />
    for the dragon has driven him, for more than 20 years, to bring together original documents<br />
    and art works that we are honoured to see here.<br />
    Mr. Laurent has given me the immense pleasure by lending me the most rare specimens<br />
    from his private collection. I wish to express my gratefulness to him here. The preface to<br />
    this exhibition catalogue is written by Alain Cadeo, an old friend of mine and a passionate<br />
    writer. I wish to thank him here as well. I hope these few pages will allow you to rediscover<br />
    a morsel of the past which too often is forgotten.<br />
    Cedric CURIEN    <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   &lsquo;&rsquo;Nil humanum a me alienum esse puto&rsquo;&rsquo;<br />
    &ldquo;Nothing human can be alien to me&rdquo;<br />
    Terence:185-159 BC<br />
    &ldquo;Every idea, human or divine,<br />
    which is rooted in the past,<br />
    has foliage for the future.&rdquo;<br />
    Victor Hugo<br />
    (Beams and shadows-1839)<br />
    Business is always the result of adventure. Adventure feeds our dreams. The object, is<br />
    it not from this point on the crystallization of our human encounters? Business was and<br />
    always will be capable of capturing the minds of the people and their taste. And if these<br />
    tastes develop they can only flourish in a soil containing the grand universal myths. Jung,<br />
    didn&rsquo;t he say, &ldquo;Man without myth is like a person without roots&rdquo;?<br />
    China, &ldquo;The Middle Kingdom&rdquo;, Cathay, the golden age continent was and still is the<br />
    closed place of all our fantasies. Its inextricable forest of symbols will find troubling and<br />
    unconscious echos within everyone who approaches. From the Romans and the Greeks<br />
    to Marco Polo, from the Jesuits to the Parisian haberdasher merchants, from the middle<br />
    ages to today, China will not cease to be a mythical land for Europe and in particular,<br />
    France.<br />
    &ldquo;The Middle Kingdom&rdquo; seems to have created an insatiable curiosity, doubled by a<br />
    mysterious fascination. In his anthology of classic Chinese poetry, Paul Demi&eacute;ville<br />
    (Gallimard, 1982), gives us probably one of the most important keys when he tells us<br />
    &ldquo;this great people, on one hand the most down to earth and on the other hand the most<br />
    subtle...&rdquo; capable through their poetic nature to reconcile the pragmatism of a Confucius<br />
    and the imagination of Taoism.<br />
    This desire for freedom instilled by China has been seen since the Renaissance by curiosity<br />
    buffs. But, through important objects, earthenware, porcelain, furniture, paintings,<br />
    gardens, but also philosophic and religious ideas, it would captivate the french 17th and<br />
    18th centuries.<br />
    In 1697, Leibniz, mathematician and philosopher, in the foreword of his work Novissima<br />
    sinica marvelled &ldquo;But who would have ever believed that on this globe there would be a<br />
    people whose culture, often more refined, would surpass ours, we who thought were on<br />
    the summit of urbanity?&rdquo;<br />
    To understand the european impregnation of this far away Paradise the quantity of written<br />
    works by the christian missionaries and the jesuits such as Matteo Ricci (1552-1610),<br />
    Johann Adam Schall (1592-1666), Martin Martini (1614-1661) must be considered.<br />
    Well before them, during the 14th century, there were the stories of Odoric of<br />
    Porderone or of Giovanni of Marignoli or even closer to us, those thirty four volumes<br />
    published between 1703 and 1776 written by the &ldquo;Good fathers&rdquo; and titled &ldquo;Instructive<br />
    and curious letters written by foreign missions&rdquo;.<br />
    The talent of the Parisian haberdasher, &ldquo;sellers of everything and makers of nothing&rdquo; as<br />
    Diderot called them, in the 18th century was to spread and &ldquo;embellished&rdquo; by adapting<br />
    chinese objects and furniture to the french taste.<br />
    The &ldquo;Chinoiserie&rdquo; was born. They spread through the salons of Madame de<br />
    Pompadour, of Madame du Barry, and then of Marie Antoinette to become, under the<br />
    second empire, a craze of Eug&eacute;nie and the important people of this world.<br />
    The first part of the 19th century would see the keen interest of the public slip away,<br />
    as history often requires, towards Egypt and the Orient.<br />
    If the second Empire was ruled by big banks and industry, the dandies, postromantics,<br />
    and the symbolists felt foreign in this new world, exiled. From Baudelaire to<br />
    Mallarm&eacute;, from de Nerval to Victor Hugo, for everyone it was all about &ldquo;flight, only flight!&rdquo;<br />
    The sky-blue and the clouds, invitations to voyage, breeze of the irrational, everything is<br />
    done to lead us to ecstasy. The far east returns to haunt the poet&rsquo;s dreams. Jules and<br />
    Edmond de Goncourt, Pierre Loti, Claudel, Proust...The perfume of lotus spread all over<br />
    Paris. Exoticism is here!<br />
    A certain &ldquo;intellectual nomadism&rdquo; and affection needs to feed from unusual forms.<br />
    An article written by Baudelaire on the World Fair of 1855 attempts to define this ambiguity<br />
    in front of a beauty coming from distant horizons &ldquo;The beautiful is always strange. I don&rsquo;t<br />
    want to say that it is willingly, coldly strange, because in this case, it would be a monster off<br />
    the rails of life. I say that it always contains a little bit of strangeness, a naive strangeness,<br />
    unwanted, unconscious and it is this strangeness which make it especially beautiful.&rdquo;<br />
    How can we not recognize here the amazing creations of these master cabinetmakers,<br />
    sculptors, goldsmiths, and decorators who tirelessly presented their &ldquo;Chinoiseries&rdquo; in the<br />
    World Fairs in the second half of the 19th century. The poets, like these artists, all need to<br />
    reinvent this &ldquo;far away&rdquo;, to feed from &ldquo;dragons magots&rdquo; and chimeras.<br />
    Gabriel Frederic Viardot (1830-1904), Perret and Vibert and The Bamboos House,<br />
    Georges and Henri Pannier and The Crystal Staircase, Beurdeley, Barbedienne, Dai Nippon<br />
    all continue the work of the 18th century haberdashers merchants. They are the creators<br />
    and promoters of this fantasy around China and thus allows an entire generation to travel<br />
    within the magic of symbols.<br />
    &ldquo;To suggest, here is the dream. This is a perfect use of this mystery which<br />
    constitutes symbol...&rdquo; (Mallarm&eacute;)<br />
    The workshop of these houses became famous, enriched by sculptors and<br />
    cabinetmakers, bronze smiths, wood turners and other companions.<br />
    Aesthetes and collectors are seduced by the refinement of this Far East adapted<br />
    to French taste. The artist composers such as Debussy and Ravel, the writers such as<br />
    the Goncourt brothers, J.K. Huysmans, the senior civil servants, the bankers, a Proustian<br />
    aristocrat, the actors, all of them have a fascination for this &ldquo;elsewhere&rdquo; that we can<br />
    transplant into our living rooms and palaces and greenhouses and winter gardens in the<br />
    soft light of lanterns, in the shadow of quivering reeds.<br />
    Yes, the talent of these creators of furniture and objects happened just at the right<br />
    moment to erase a little bit of the detestable image of Europeans considered &ldquo;civilized&rdquo;,<br />
    having participated in the sad China Expedition.<br />
    How can we not understand the importance of the Chinese civilization when reading<br />
    Victor Hugo&rsquo;s letter to Captain Butler on the 25th of November, 1861. The anger of the poet<br />
    was immense. &ldquo;In a corner of the world there was a marvel of the world; this treasure is<br />
    called Summer Palace. Two principles comprise art, the idea which produces European<br />
    art and the chimera which produces Oriental art. Summer Palace was to chimeric art what<br />
    the Parthenon is to ideal art... this wonder has disappeared...&rdquo;<br />
    Since then, to appropriate a little of this destroyed magic through the &ldquo;Chinoiseries&rdquo;<br />
    is probably also an entrance into the regions of minds conveying a kind of mysterious,<br />
    religious poetic.<br />
    As the poet-prophets such as Viardot, Perret and Vibert and others workshops had<br />
    sensed, it is the eternity of a bewitchment, the mystery of a continent having always hung<br />
    over the European soul.<br />
    Alain CADEO March 17th, 2012    <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   &nbsp;Gabriel-Fr&eacute;d&eacute;ric VIARDOT (Paris, 1830 - Paris, 1904)<br />
    Gabriel Viardot began his career as a woodcarver at the age of eleven and four years later<br />
    he was appointed the highest position in the workshop of the Jeanselme company which,<br />
    at that time, already had one hundred employees.<br />
    At 19, he set up his own business and during the same year, at the Horticultural Exhibition,<br />
    Gabriel Viardot was rewarded with a bronze medal.<br />
    At the World Fair of 1855 in Paris a bronze medal was awarded to him again.<br />
    He took advantage of the Chinese and Japanese furniture coming to France and better<br />
    adapted them to European tastes and usages, all the while conserving the asian style.<br />
    He began to create again in 1870 and at the World Fair of 1878 in Paris, he won a silver<br />
    medal, his furniture was a huge success.<br />
    Gabriel Viardot perfected his work in the style and gave his furniture a special signature<br />
    by employing lacquered relief panels, which were sent to him from China and Japan, as<br />
    well as Tonkin inlaid pearls.<br />
    He also improved his bronze furniture models which he conceived himself.<br />
    In 1884 he was awarded a gold medal in Nice.<br />
    He was elected as a member of the jury that same year by the Central Union of Decorative<br />
    Arts and again for the 1885 exhibition in Antwerp.<br />
    At this time his company employed one hundred workers such as sculptors and<br />
    cabinetmakers without counting the twenty people outside of the workshops who took<br />
    care of the cutting, molding, wood turning, and bronze. The workshops were led by three<br />
    foremen one of which was his assistant for twenty-five years.<br />
    Gabriel Viardot had lots of students and many of them established themselves in the<br />
    industry and were prosperous; his collaborators were his students, some of whom worked<br />
    with him for twenty-seven years.<br />
    He was known for his quality and the high refinement of his creations and he quickly<br />
    acquired a huge notoriety among a clientele of aesthetes and collectors from the world of<br />
    art, finance and senior management.<br />
    At the World Fairs of 1889 and 1900 in Paris, Viardot was again awarded a gold medal for<br />
    his Japanese furniture.<br />
    &nbsp;    <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   &nbsp;PERRET et VIBERT Maison des Bambous<br />
    In 1872, Ernest Vibert opened the &ldquo;House of Bamboo&rdquo; in Paris at 33 rue du Quatre-<br />
    Septembre which offered bamboo furniture decorated with lacquer and created exotic<br />
    decors adorned with large draperies and old pots.<br />
    This firm, also known for its natural rattan creations, offered a large choice of seats and<br />
    small furniture (chairs, sofas, deck chairs) made from rattan, bamboo and cane enamelled.<br />
    This furniture of great fantasy and harmonious lines was intended to furnish conservatories,<br />
    verandas, terraces of town houses and to decorate hotels and the most prestigious yachts.<br />
    He participated in major international exhibitions with lots of success, including those<br />
    of Paris in 1889, where he presented rattan seats, and in 1900, where he presented fine<br />
    lacquered and inlaid bamboo furniture. His work was rewarded by two silver medals.<br />
    His influence was then international and he attracted orders from the most extravagant<br />
    wealthy sponsors.<br />
    After the First World War, Gaston Vibert, son of Ernest Vibert, and his partner Robert Perret<br />
    settled at 170 boulevard Haussmann in a luxurious building with rooms in the basement<br />
    conceived by Ruhlmann.<br />
    Gaston Vibert made long stays in the Far-East from where he brought back Khmer<br />
    sculptures, Coromandel screens and ceramic wares from the East India Company.<br />
    The three floors of the store were filled with trinkets of ivory, jade, and lacquer directly<br />
    imported from the Far- East.<br />
    Outside their specialty, the firm of Perret and Vibert offered their customers a wide selection<br />
    of furniture and antiques: silks, fabrics, ceramics, and bronzes.<br />
    The Perret- Vibert house was frequented by Debussy and Ravel but also writers and<br />
    important collectors.<br />
    After World War II tastes had changed and gallery director Louis Bidreman proposed<br />
    architectural furniture with multiple sliding doors, wooden or black lacquer coffee tables,<br />
    as well as animal bronzes.<br />
    The gallery Perret- Vibert closed in 1994.    <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   BEURDELEY<br />
    Beurdeley was one of the largest woodworking art companies of the mid-nineteenth<br />
    century.<br />
    Three generations followed one another:<br />
    - Jean (1772-1853), modest craftsman, settled in Paris under the First Empire and opened<br />
    a curiosity shop where he sold fine furniture and art objects purchased or consigned from<br />
    the finest craftsmen. Located first at 355 Rue Saint Honore in 1818, his store was then<br />
    transferred to 364 in 1820.<br />
    Around 1830, he bought the Pavillon de Hanovre at the corner of Rue Louis Legrand and<br />
    Boulevard des Italiens.<br />
    - Alfred-Louis-Auguste (1808-1882), took over the business from his father in 1840 and<br />
    moved the shop and the workshop into the Pavillon de Hanovre<br />
    He added a furniture restoration workshop to his business of selling furniture, art objects,<br />
    and paintings and this helped to grow the company which his father had started.<br />
    He specialized in furniture designs inspired by those of the eighteenth century and<br />
    especially of Louis XVI. He quickly became, with quality of his manufacturing, the most<br />
    famous cabinetmaker in Paris in his discipline. Among his customers were the Duke of<br />
    Nemours, Napoleon III and the Empress Eugenie. He participated in the World Fairs of<br />
    1855 and 1867 where he won a bronze and a gold medal.<br />
    -Alfred-Emmanuel-Louis (1847-1919), son of Louis-Auguste-Alfred, he became his assistant<br />
    and then his successor in 1875 and kept the shop in Hanover. He maintained the high<br />
    reputation of the Pavillon and knew how to give it a new shine through his leadership and<br />
    his enlightened taste.<br />
    He specialized in the manufacture of luxury furniture, faithfully copied from the beautiful<br />
    antique furniture of the Garde-meuble, and excelled in this discipline.<br />
    He did not create a lot of original furniture.<br />
    He participated in the International Exhibitions of Paris in 1878 and Amsterdam in 1883<br />
    where he was awarded a gold medal, and was a member of the jury in Paris in 1889 where<br />
    he presented, in a large stand, many pieces of furniture and objects.<br />
    He closed his workshop in 1895 and sold his collections.   <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   MAISON DE L&rsquo;ESCALIER DE CRISTAL (1804-1923)<br />
    The retail firm L&rsquo;Escalier de Cristal was founded in 1804 in Paris at the Palais Royal, at 162-<br />
    163 Galerie de Valois, by the widow Desarnaud, born Marie-Jeanne Rosalie Charpentier,<br />
    who had acquired some fame because she was the first seller to offer clocks, candelabras<br />
    and ornamental vases combining cut crystal and gilded bronze.<br />
    The name of the firm referred to the crystal balusters of the staircase linking the floors of<br />
    the shop and the Valois gallery and indicated the first specialty of the house, cut crystal. By<br />
    1830, the firm was taken over by Boin, a tailor and engraver, but he failed to maintain the<br />
    reputation.<br />
    After a slump, the company returned to the center stage in the 1840s thanks to its new<br />
    owner Lahoche Pierre-Isidore (1805-1882), the instigator of the neo-Rococo. In 1852<br />
    Lahoche joined his son Emile Augustine Pannier (1828-1892) under the name &laquo;Soci&eacute;t&eacute;<br />
    Lahoche and Pannier&raquo; which became &laquo;Pannier Lahoche &amp; Cie&raquo; in 1867 when Isidore<br />
    Lahoche stopped all professional activity. An intuitive Businessman, Emile Pannier moved<br />
    the store in 1872 to the city&rsquo;s most prosperous neighborhood, l&rsquo;Op&eacute;ra, at the corner of rue<br />
    Scribe and rue Auber near the Grand Hotel, which was frequented by rich clients avid for<br />
    novelties.<br />
    The gallery offered a large choice of lamps, clocks and vases dominated by neo-Louis XV<br />
    style and Chinese taste. In 1885 Georges (1853-1944) and Henri Pannier (d. 1935), son of<br />
    Emile Pannier, founded the company &laquo;Pannier Fr&egrave;res et Cie&raquo; and embarked on creating<br />
    furniture. They worked in collaboration with lacquer artists, bronze smiths, carpenters,<br />
    painters and decorators.<br />
    Leading designers such as Louis Majorelle, Edward Hare and Gabriel Viardot were<br />
    associated with the far eastern creations of L&rsquo;Escalier de Cristal. Always concerned with the<br />
    quality of materials and the refinement of execution, the firm immediately found itself in<br />
    the tradition of the most luxurious productions of Parisian cabinetmaking. Their ambition<br />
    was to deliberately recreate an imaginary Orient, but along the lines of Western tastes.<br />
    L&rsquo;Escalier de Cristal played the role of merchant-editor, like a smart intermediary between<br />
    the manufacturer and the customer such as the 18th century haberdasher. They were<br />
    propagators of taste. They participated in all exhibitions of its time and won many medals:<br />
    a bronze medal at the World Fair in London in 1851, a silver medal at the exhibition in New<br />
    York in 1853 and Paris in 1855, bronze medals at the World Fair in London in 1862, in Paris<br />
    in 1867 and 1878 and a gold medal at the Paris World Fair of 1900. L&rsquo;Escalier de Cristal<br />
    closed in 1923.    <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   &nbsp;Ferdinand BARBEDIENNE (1810-1892)<br />
    Ferdinand Barbedienne started working at the young age of 12 with Dumas, a wallpaper<br />
    manufacturer in Paris.<br />
    In 1838 he began a new career as a founder, in association with Achille Collas (1795-<br />
    1859), inventor of a process of reproduction of statues on a smaller scale. A year later they<br />
    founded the firm &ldquo;A. Collas and Barbedienne&raquo; located at 30 Boulevard Poissonniere which<br />
    specialized in reproductions of Greek and Roman antiquities.<br />
    In 1859, Collas died leaving Ferdinand Barbedienne as head of the company which became<br />
    &laquo; F. Barbedienne. &raquo;<br />
    Present in all the major World&rsquo;s Fairs of the nineteenth century, the Barbedienne firm won<br />
    numerous awards:<br />
    - London, 1851, two medals (Council Medals)<br />
    - Paris, 1855, an honorary medal and eleven cooperative medals for the work of the<br />
    engravers and assemblers. Its shipments included bronze reduction sculptures and<br />
    furniture, vases, bowls, candlesticks and other decorative objects as well as pieces in the<br />
    Greek Revival style.<br />
    - London, 1862, medals in three different classes: art furniture, bronzes and jewelry.<br />
    Barbedienne exhibited some enamels called cloisonn&eacute;s.<br />
    - Paris, 1867, ineligible because of membership and his roll as jury recorder. He again<br />
    presented the cloisonn&eacute; enamels, which were highly acclaimed.<br />
    - Vienna, 1873, two honorary diplomas, the Medal of Progress and 25 cooperative medals.<br />
    -Paris, 1878, grand prize, gold medal, honorary diploma, and 28 cooperative medals.<br />
    The successes of the Barbedienne firm during these expositions earned him many<br />
    official commissions such as the production, between 1850 and 1854, of Renaissancestyle<br />
    furniture for the Hotel de Ville in Paris and 1855 the bronze furnishings for Prince<br />
    Napoleon&rsquo;s Pompeian house and the imperial residences.<br />
    Barbedienne surrounded himself with the greatest artists of his time: the enamel-painters<br />
    Andr&eacute;-Fernand Thesmar (1843-1912) and Alfred Clamp (1837-1906), the sculptor Ferdinand<br />
    Levillain (1837-1905), the ornamental sculptor Constant Sevin (1821-1888), who was his<br />
    main partner from 1855 until his death in 1888, or the sculptor-decorator Attarge Desire<br />
    (circa 1820-1878).<br />
    In 1867 Bardedienne was named an officer of the L&eacute;gion d&rsquo;Honneur and then commander<br />
    in 1878.<br />
    After his death in 1892 his nephew and associate, Gustave Leblanc-Barbedienne, succeeded<br />
    him as head of the company.<br />
    From 1860 to 1890, Barbedienne experimented with new techniques in the field<br />
    of champlev&eacute; and cloisonn&eacute; enamels to compete with oriental imports then in vogue.<br />
    Following the example of the enamel workshop from the production at S&egrave;vres, Barbedienne<br />
    introduced enamel into its manufacture of art objects: &laquo;Byzantine&raquo; champlev&eacute; enamel<br />
    (from the late 1850s) and then Neo-Renaissance painted enamels and enamels of far<br />
    Eastern influence.<br />
    No other company would succeed to such an extent to integrate the use of enamel in an<br />
    industrial-scale production.   <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   <br />
    DA&Iuml;-NIPPON<br />
    Dai-Nippon was a French company which made Chinese and Japanese style furniture at<br />
    its workshop in Paris using imported materials.<br />
    It was created in Paris in 1889; its stores were located at 3 and 5 Boulevard des Capucines<br />
    in the 2nd arrondissement near the Opera.<br />
    It specialized in fine art and furniture of China and Japan which was imported directly<br />
    via the many export outlets: Shanghai, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Yokohama, Kobe and<br />
    Nagasaki and then the pieces were reworked in the workshops to suit European tastes like<br />
    its competitors and colleagues from the same period Viardot-Perret and Vibert had done.    <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   &nbsp;BACCARAT<br />
    In 1764, king Louis XV gave permission to the bishop of Metz, Monseigneur de<br />
    Montmorency-Laval (1761-1802), to found a glass workshop in the village of Baccarat, in<br />
    the eastern French region of Lorraine.<br />
    After the French Revolution, the company began to decline until its bankruptcy in 1806,<br />
    when it was auctioned to a merchant of Verdun. The activities of the workshop then<br />
    continued with difficulty until 1816.<br />
    In 1816, the workshop was purchased by a manufacturer, Aime-Gabriel Artigues (1773-<br />
    1848).<br />
    On November 15th of the same year the first crystal oven was switched on and more than<br />
    300 people worked on the site.<br />
    The real start-up date began with its acquisition in 1823 by a wealthy Parisian, Pierre-<br />
    Antoine Godard-Desmarest, who entrusted the management of the company to Jean-<br />
    Baptiste Toussaint.<br />
    Baccarat received its first royal commission in 1823 from King Louis XVIII. This was the<br />
    beginning of a long series of commands for royalty and heads of state from around the<br />
    world.<br />
    In 1855, Baccarat participated in the Paris World Fair where it was rewarded with a gold<br />
    medal.<br />
    From 1860, Baccarat put its mark on all its products. The crystal production gained a lot of<br />
    importance during this period and Baccarat became a world renowned manufacturer of<br />
    high quality glasses, candlesticks, vases and perfume bottles.<br />
    In 1867, Baccarat participated again at the Paris World Fair and won a gold medal. Japan<br />
    was in the spotlight and presented, for the first time, a selection of objects with simple<br />
    shapes and decorations, breaking with the prevailing eclecticism, charmed the Europeans.<br />
    These objects sparked a craze for Asian art and contributed to the renewal of creation<br />
    particularly in the decorative arts which had a great influence on the work of Baccarat<br />
    In 1878, Baccarat again won a gold medal at the Paris World Fair. A new technique<br />
    appeared in Baccarat, the taille gravure.    <br />
<br />
        <br />
<br />
   &nbsp;   <br />
]]></description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 20:41:05 +0200</pubDate>
	</item>
<item>
			<title><![CDATA[New address]]></title>
	<link>http://www.art-asiatique.com/en/actualites/id-38-new-address</link>
	<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.art-asiatique.com/en/actualites/id-38</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[<br />
<br />
33 quai Voltaire - 75007 Paris<br />
<br />
T&eacute;l. : 0033 1 42 61 81 34]]></description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 25 Apr 2012 19:31:20 +0200</pubDate>
	</item>
<item>
			<title><![CDATA[We have moved]]></title>
	<link>http://www.art-asiatique.com/en/actualites/id-35-we-have-moved</link>
	<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.art-asiatique.com/en/actualites/id-35</guid>
	<description><![CDATA[		<div class="gauche">
		<a href="http://www.art-asiatique.com/upload/wnubsnubpn.jpg" rel="lightbox[g-35]" title="We Have Moved">		<img src="http://www.art-asiatique.com/upload/gqqokbvnlc.jpg" alt="We Have Moved - 67&nbsp;Ko">
		</a>			</div>
	<br />
Cedric Curien and Asian Art Gallery are now at 34 rue Saint Jacques 13006 Marseille.<br />
<br />
We welcome you all day, Monday through Saturday, in this vast new space, designed to magnify the exhibits.<br />
<br />
<br />
We are also available by appointment: 04 91 81 49 57.<br />
]]></description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 25 Sep 2008 09:47:29 +0200</pubDate>
	</item>
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