Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
German cabinetmaker Heinrich Ludwig Rohde worked in Mainz, a prosperous university town on the Rhine River. As court cabinetmaker to Elector Lothar Franz Schönborn, Archbishop of Mainz and Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, Rohde was responsible for much of the decoration at the Schönborn’s sumptuous palace at Pommersfelden, from the marquetry floors and mirrored cabinets to the porcelain-decorated rooms. The marquetry incorporates varieties of wood that would have been readily available in Germany, like maple, walnut, spruce, and oak, as well as costly imported materials like mahogany and amaranth. They are finely pieced together in geometric and naturalistic patterns; at the center of the fall front is a salamander, a creature able reputed by myth to be invulnerable to fire. An unusual motif, it probably held some kind of significance for the desk’s original owner. — About This Object, European Decorative Arts LaunchPad app
Be the first to share your thoughts.
Sign in to join the discussion.
China, for Export Market — Harlequin Table
J. & J.W. Meeks — Sofa Table
Artist unknown — Card Table
Charles-Honoré Lannuier — Card Table
Thomas Scott — Dressing Table
Artist unknown — Card Table
Jacques Dubois — Slant-Front Desk
Artist unknown — Pembroke Table
England — Sofa Table
Artist unknown — Dressing Table
Artist unknown — Dressing Table
Maison Alphonse Giroux — Work Table