Center table
On View In:
Gallery 309
Artist:   Hans Daniel Sommer  
Title:   Center table  
Date:   c. 1680  
Medium:   Wood, tortoiseshell, brass, pewter, hard stone, ebony, horn  
Dimensions:   32 x 41 x 27 in. (81.28 x 104.14 x 68.58 cm)  
Credit Line:   Gift of funds from Mr. and Mrs. Atherton Bean and the John R. Van Derlip Fund  
Location:   Gallery 309  

Hans Daniel Sommer came from a family of German cabinetmakers, many of whom had worked in France and were well versed in the elaborate decorative techniques favored by the French court. Sommer established his own workshop in western Germany in the 1660s and made ornate baroque furniture for the German nobility.

Sommer specialized in marquetry--thin, decorative veneers made from various materials. He created the arabesques, or scrolling patterns, found at the center of this tabletop from pewter and tortoiseshell. Laying thin sheets of the two materials on top of each other, he cut them out together, with the aid of a paper pattern, to ensure that the designs would match when assembled. The table has a decorative border formed from pieces of hard stone, brass, and ebony, and figures made from mother-of-pearl.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Sommer, Hans Daniel  
Nationality:   German  
Life Dates:   German, 1643-1685  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:    
Classification:   Furniture  
Physical Description:   marquetry  
Creation Place:   Europe, Germany, , ,  
Accession #:   80.55  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts