Jean-Baptiste Sené
French, 1748 - 1803
Sené's fame as a furniture maker grew steadily in the late eighteenth century, culminating in his appointment as a royal cabinetmaker in 1784. As part of the network of artisans that created royal furniture, Sené was tasked with crafting the "heavy woods" (hardwoods, like beechwood, walnut) and the assemblage of furniture pieces, while specialized carvers created ornamentation.
In the last years of France's monarchy, Sené became one of the regular suppliers of furniture for royal residences, decorating Marie-Antoinette's bedroom at Fontainebleau and cabinet de toilette at Saint-Cloud. One of Sené's final royal commissions was to create the throne on which Louis XVI would sit at the meeting of the Estates-General in 1789.
After the dissolution of the monarchy and the creation of the French Republic in 1792, Sené continued to find work, despite his monarchist past. He worked as an administrator for the Republican government and received government commissions for utilitarian objects, like desks. Sené continued to work until his death in 1803.
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