- An
ébéniste (pronounced [ebenist]) is a cabinet-maker,
particularly one who
works in ebony. The term is a
loanword from
French and
translates to "ebonist"...
- or
Johann Franz Oeben (9
October 1721 – 21
January 1763) was a
German ébéniste (cabinetmaker)
whose career was
spent in Paris. He was the
maternal grandfather...
-
master cabinetmaker around 1666; in 1672 he
received the post of
Premier ébéniste du Roi and was
admitted to a
group of
skilled artists maintained by Louis...
-
Johann Heinrich Riesener; 4 July 1734 – 6
January 1806) was a
famous German ébéniste (cabinetmaker),
working in Paris,
whose work
exemplified the
early neoclassical...
- Menuisiers-
Ébénistes was a
French craft guild which was
concerned with the
profession of woodworking. "Corporation des Menuisiers-
Ébénistes |
French craft...
- François
Linke (1855–1946) was a
leading Parisian ébéniste of the late 19th and
early 20th centuries.
Linke was born on 17 June 1855 in the
small Bohemian...
- (avrvm), a
numismatic abbreviation for "gold" A.V., the ****tive mark of
ébéniste Adam
Weisweiler Aviation,
abbreviated Av in
military use
Andhra Vidyalaya...
-
Thomas Hache (1664–1747) was a
French ébéniste.
Thomas Hache was born in 1664 in Grenoble. He
learned Italian decoration in Chambery.
Hache was articled...
- (6
April 1776,
Paris - 1 May 1848, Paris) was a
French art
restorer and
ébéniste. He
studied painting under Jacques-Louis David, and
founded an art restoration...
- of Arts, Jean-Baptiste Colbert, who
described Boulle as le plus
habile ébéniste de Paris. The
Royal Decree conferring this
privilege describes Boulle variously...