. . . . . . . . . . . . "0.43920001387596130371"^^ . "0.47900000214576721191"^^ . . . "0.51330000162124633789"^^ . "0.40360000729560852051"^^ . . . . . . . "0.42789998650550842285"^^ . . . . . . "0.47510001063346862793"^^ . "0.59700000286102294922"^^ . . . . . . "0.62680000066757202148"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Long recognized as one of Jean-Fran\u00E7ois Oeben's masterpieces, this table (ca. 1761\u201363) was made for his frequent and most important client, Madame de Pompadour. The main charge of her coat of arms, a tower, appears at the top of the gilt-bronze mount at each corner. The marquetry of the top\u2014one of the finest panels in all of Oeben's furniture\u2014was designed to reflect her interests in the arts and depicts a vase of flowers as well as trophies emblematic of architecture, painting, music, and gardening. The table, completed after Oeben's death by his brother-in-law Roger Vandercruse, demonstrates Oeben's talents, not only as a creator of beautiful furniture but also as a mechanic: an elaborate mechanism allows the top to slide back at the same time as the larger drawer moves forward, thereby doubling the surface area."@en . . . . . . . . . . "0.58740001916885375977"^^ . "0.57319998741149902344"^^ . "0.58160001039505004883"^^ . . "1982.60.61" . . . . "0.73940002918243408203"^^ . . . "1761~ / 1763~, France" . . . . . . . . . . "1761~ / 1763~, France" . . . "Long recognized as one of Jean-Fran\u00E7ois Oeben's masterpieces, this table (ca. 1761\u201363) was made for his frequent and most important client, Madame de Pompadour. The main charge of her coat of arms, a tower, appears at the top of the gilt-bronze mount at each corner. The marquetry of the top\u2014one of the finest panels in all of Oeben's furniture\u2014was designed to reflect her interests in the arts and depicts a vase of flowers as well as trophies emblematic of architecture, painting, music, and gardening. The table, completed after Oeben's death by his brother-in-law Roger Vandercruse, demonstrates Oeben's talents, not only as a creator of beautiful furniture but also as a mechanic: an elaborate mechanism allows the top to slide back at the same time as the larger drawer moves forward, thereby doubling the surface area."@en . . . . . "0.3977000117301940918"^^ . . "0.39869999885559082031"^^ . . . . "0.50429999828338623047"^^ . . .