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French Rococo Revival Black Marble Vanity, c. 1930–1945

A commanding and theatrical French Rococo Revival vanity, likely produced between 1930 and 1945, blending Baroque-inspired opulence with the dark romanticism of early 20th-century European craftsmanship. The piece is constructed from solid hardwood with dense carving, later finished in a deep satin black lacquer that amplifies the sculptural curves and shadow play across its serpentine frame.

The vanity’s original marble top—a rich Belgian black with white and umber veining—is shaped in a soft serpentine edge with corner bevels, exhibiting the kind of hand-cut stonework typical of pre-war continental furniture ateliers. Its mirror, framed in exuberant scrolls of acanthus and shell motifs, features a beveled triptych form with subtle age marks along the silvering, suggesting authentic mid-century patina rather than reproduction aging.

Drawer fronts are hand-molded in the Rococo manner, with gilt-trimmed, square green quartz or aventurine pulls mounted in brass bezels — a later c.1960 designer replacement that complements the marble tones while adding a jewel-like contrast to the black finish.

The proportions (approximately 72” wide × 34” high to tabletop × 80” total height) and double pedestal form point to French or Italian workshop origin, possibly Lyon, Florence, or Parisian Art-Deco crossover production, where Rococo detailing met streamlined symmetry before the postwar modernist shift.


Notable Features

→ Era: c. 1930–1945 (interwar to early mid-century)
→ Origin: Continental Europe, likely France or Northern Italy
→ Materials: Solid carved wood, natural marble slab, gilt metal mounts, semi-precious stone pulls
→ Finish: Hand-lacquered satin black with subtle patination
→ Mirror: Beveled tri-panel with shell and scroll crest
→ Condition: Excellent restored condition; natural wear on marble edge consistent with age; mirror shows desirable light foxing
→ Dimensions: ~72" W × 34" H (surface) × 80" H (mirror top) × 21" D


Historical Context

During the 1930s revival period, ateliers across France and Italy reinterpreted Louis XV and Louis XVI motifs for the modern home — heavier, darker, more sculptural, often pairing ornate forms with materials like black lacquer and marble. This piece reflects that aesthetic: a bridge between 18th-century Rococo exuberance and 20th-century drama, particularly favored in Hollywood Regency and Art Deco interiors after 1935.

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