Open Tuesday to Saturday from 10am to 1pm and from 2pm to 7pm
14 avenue Matignon, 75008 Paris
https://toboganantiques.com/
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Le prix de vente est indiqué sur les factures. Une fois que le prix de vente a été accepté par le client, ce dernier est tenu de régler la facture selon les conditions fixées avec Tobogan Antiques dans les 7 jours de la conclusions de la vente.
Si le client demande à Tobogan Antiques d’organiser le transport, l’intégralité du règlement de l’emballage et du transport devra être effectué avant tout envoi des marchandises, à l’exclusion des éventuels taxes et droits de douanes qui pourront être facturés à l’arrivée des marchandises à destination.
La marchandise reste la propriété de Tobogan Antiques jusqu’au versement intégral du règlement.
Dans le cas d’un transport assuré par Tobogan Antiques (option sur demande avec cotation préalable) :
Le client devra ouvrir le ou les colis en présence du livreur et vérifier l’état de la marchandise avant de signer le bon de livraison et noter en cas de dommage toutes les réserves.
Le client devra notifier à Tobogan Antiques dans un maximum 48 heures suivant la date et l’heure de livraison les éventuels accidents, photos à l’appui, et en gardant les éléments d’emballage.
Dans le cas contraire, les assureurs pourraient exclure toute couverture.
Emile Colin
Rocaille" chandelier, by E. Colin & Cie, France, Circa 1890
Signed E. Colin & Cie Paris
France
Circa 1890
Gilt bronze with patina
Height: 110 cm; Diameter: 72 cm
A beautiful "rocaille" chandelier in chased and gilded bronze with nine arms. It features a baluster shaft adorned with a patinated bronze sphere with twisted flutes, surrounded by three uprights richly embellished with acanthus leaf scrolls.
This chandelier was most probably created by the sculptor and ornamentalist Léon Messagé (1842-1901), who favored rocaille asymmetry in his ornamental designs, as seen in the collections of ornamentalists by Nicolas Pineau or J. A. Meissonnier, in the first half of the 18th century. He did, however, display originality, even extravagance, as shown by some of the drawings in his "Cahier des Dessins et Croquis style Louis XV". He worked with a large number of drawings on gray paper, before moving on to the execution of a reduced or life-size model in relief, wax or terracotta. From 1885 onwards, Léon Messagé worked with two leading Parisian cabinetmakers: Joseph-Emmanuel Zwiener (1849 - active until 1895) and François Linke (1855-1946), as well as bronzemaker E. Colin (?-1900).
Biography:
Emile Colin, a famous foundryman established since 1843 at no. 29, rue de Sévigné in Paris, produced bronzes from 1855 onwards for the greatest masters of French sculpture, such as A.E. Carrier-Belleuse (Le Zouave), J. Pradier (Les Trois Grâces, Vénus consolant l'Amour) or J.B. Carpeaux from 1875 onwards (L'Enfant au cor), and the Parisian goldsmith Christofle. He marks his bronzes with the words "E. Colin & Cie" from 1882 to 1898. The brand evolved to become "M. Colin & Cie" from 1898 to 1906, then "Ancienne Maison Colin, Jollet & Cie" from 1906 to 1923. Internationally renowned, Emile Colin sent bronze works to the Chicago World's Fair in 1893, including mounted marble vases and a large bronze clock. At the end of the 19th century, Colin was one of the world's leading bronzemakers, alongside Barbedienne, Susse and Siot-Decauville. When Emile Colin died in 1900, his old models were sold to Doistal, on Avenue Daumesnil in Paris, a company that has since disappeared. The Colin firm was once again honored at the 1900 Paris Exposition Universelle, with stylish lighting fixtures modeled by Léon Messagé.
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