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 Sutton Scarsdale, Derbyshire (stucco decoration)

 Ditchley, Oxfordshire (stucco decoration)


 Refreshment Room in the Victoria and Albert Museum
 Leighton House, and Linley Sambourne House, London
 Mark Twain House, H artford, Connecticut

 New York; Chateau-sur-Mer, Rhode


Island
Peacock Room in the Freer Art Gallery, Washington
 G rand Salon, Pavilion d ’un Collectionneur, by Jacques-Emile
Ruhlm ann, 1925
 Duncombe Park, Yorkshire (stucco decoration)
 Clandon Park, Surrey (stucco ceiling in hall): 2nd Lord
Onslow
 Octagon Room, Twickenham (stucco decoration)
 Senate House, Cambridge (stucco ceiling)
 Ditchley, O xfordshire (saloon ceiling): George Henry Lee,
2nd Earl of Lichfield
 Houghton Hall, Norfolk (ceiling and frieze of Stone
 Hall): Sir Robert Walpole
 Cavendish Square, London (stucco decoration)
 Moulsham Hall, Essex (stucco ceiling of Great Room,
stucco busts and figures
 Parlington Hall, Yorkshire (stucco decoration in drawing
room, hall, and staircase
 Upton House, Banbury (stucco ceiling, statue of Apollo)
 Trentham , Staffordshire (stucco decoration in New
Library)
 Castle Hill, Devon (stucco decoration, bas reliefs in Best
Hall)
 Wimpole Hall, Cambridgeshire (stucco decoration)
 Radcliffe Camera, Oxford (stucco decoration)
 Ragley Hall, Warwickshire (stucco decoration in Great
Hall): Lord Conway
 Hunting Lodge, Schloss Falkenlust, Bruhl (stucco decoration):
Clemens August, Elector of Cologne
 Poppelsdorf Palace, Bonn (stucco decoration): Clemens
August, Elector of Cologne
 Schloss Augustusburg, Bruhl (stucco decoration in State
 Rooms and staircase figures): Clemens August, Elector of
Cologne
 Erbdrostenhof (stucco decoration): Clemens August,
Elector of Cologne
 Rubens House, Antwerp
 Leighton House, London
 Olana, Hudson River Valley, New York
 Musee Gustave Moreau, Paris
 George Kemp House, N ew York (decoration and furnishings)
 Madison Square Theater, New York (embroidered stage
 curtain; mainly executed by Candace Wheeler)
 Veterans’ Room and Library, 7th Regiment Armory, New
York (decorations and furnishings, with Stanford White)
 Union League Club, New York (grand staircase and halls,and
draperies for the main public rooms)
 William S. Kimball House, Rochester, New York (decorationsand
furniture)

 Cornelius Vanderbilt II M ansion, New York (decorationsand


furniture)
 J. Taylor Johnson House, New York (decoration of the
dining room)
 William T. Lusk House, New York (decoration of the
 dining room and parlour)
 The W hite House, W ashington, DC (decoration of thepublic
rooms, including the East Room, Blue Room, State Dining Room
and the Red Room): President Chester Arthur

Audran, Claude III:


 Chateau d ’Anet (painted decoration in the salon, grand
 &C 1733 cabinet, cabinet des muses, and cabinet des singes):
Duc de Vendome
 Versailles (petit chambre de Madam e le Princesse de Conti)
 c.1699
 Chateau Neuf, Meudon (decorations including various ceilings,
and the D auphin’s apartment): Grand Dauphin
 Chateau de la Menagerie, Versailles (decoration of the
apartment of the Duchesse de Bourgogne)
 Chateau de Fontainebleau (decorations)
 Chateau de M arly (singeries)
 Chateau de Sceaux (decoration of the apartm ent of the
Duchesse du Maine)
 Palais du Luxembourg, Paris (decorations)
 Chateau de la Muette (decorations)
 Hotel Angran de Fonspertius, Paris (decorations)
 Hotel Peyrenc de M oras, Paris (decoration and panels of
the Cabinet; with Nicolas Lancret)

Berain, Jean I :
 Versailles (decoration, furniture and fittings for the Cabinet des
Medailles and the Petite Galerie)
 Hotel de Mailly, Paris (decoration of ceilings and panelling)
 Grand Trianon, Versailles (interiors)
 Chateau Neuf, M eudon (attributed: chimneypiece and panelling
in the cabinet de Monseigneur): Grand Dauphin

Boffrand, Germain:

 Hotel d ’Argenton, Paris (building and interiors; redecoration of


the salon, 1726)
 Hunting Lodge, Bouchefort, near Brussels (building and
interiors): Elector M ax II Emanuel of Bavaria
 Hotel de Mayenne, Paris (remodelling interiors and decoration)
 Hotel de Canillac, Paris (additions and interiors)
 Petit Luxembourg, Paris (building and interiors)
 Chateau de Luneville, Lorraine (building and interiors;
 New chapel, 1719): Leopold, Due de Lorraine
 Hotel Amelot, Paris (building and interiors)
 Hotel du Premier President, Palais de Justice, Paris
(renovationand interiors)
 La Malgrange, near Nancy (building and interiors)
 Hotel de Seignelay, Paris (building and interiors)
 Maison de Elector of Bavaria, Saint Cloud (decoration): Elector
Max II Emanuel of Bavaria
 Maison du Prince de Rohan, Saint-Ouen, near Paris (building and
interiors)
 Palais Ducal, Nancy (building and interiors, including the Grand
Salon)
 Arsenal, Paris (additions and interiors, including the Salon)
Hotel de Villars, Paris (decoration of the Salon)
 Palais de Justice, Paris (decoration of the Grand Chambre)
 Pavilion of the Duchess of Maine, Arsenal, Paris (building and
interiors)
 Hotel de Soubise, Paris (oval salons and decoration of the
prince and princess’s apartments): Prince de Rohan

Buontalenti, Bernardo:
 Francesco I and Johanna of Austria Decorations for the m
arriage of: Grand Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici
 Casa di Bianca Cappello (renovation, sgraffito facade, and
interiors): Francesco I de’ Medici
 Medici villa, Pratolino (gardens, grotto, fountains, houses)
 Designs for funeral of Cosimo I (catafalque, decorations)
 Casino di S. Marco, Florence (building and interiors)
 Tribuna, Uffizi, Florence (interior, central table and cabinet)
Medici Villa, Petraia: Grand Duke Francesco I
 Baptismal font for Prince Filippo de’ Medici
 Grotta Grande in the Boboli Gardens, Florence
 Design of theatrical events for marriage of Virginia de’
 Medici and Cesare d ’Este
 Design of theatrical events for marriage of Ferdinando I
 de’ Medici and Christine of Lorraine: G rand Duke Francesco I
de’ Medici
 Cappella de’ Medici, S. Lorenzo, Florence (interior marble
decoration)

Chambers, William:
 Princess Augusta and Kew Gardens, Surrey (garden buildings
with some interiors): George III
 Casino, Marino House, near Dublin, Ireland (building and
interiors)
 The Hoo, Kimpton, Hertfordshire (interior alterations, bridge and
gateway)
 Buckingham Palace (formerly Buckingham House), London
 The saloon and the Octagon library): George III
 Charlemont House, Dublin (building and interiors including
furniture): Earl of Charlemont
 Berners Street, London (town houses, interiors and decoration
 Peper Harrow, Surrey (alterations, additions, new villa nd
interiors) 3rd and 4th Viscounts Midleton
 Gower House, Whitehall, London (building and interiors
including the hall, eating room, great drawing room and
staircase) 2nd Earl o f G ow er
 Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire (garden buildings, and internal
decorations including the grand cabinet, state bedchamber and
Duchess’s dressing room) 4th Duke of Marlborough
 Woburn Abbey, Bedfordshire (rebuilding of the South Wing and
interiors including the eating rooms and library): 4th Duke o f
Bedford
 Ampthill Park, Bedfordshire (additions and redecoration
of principal rooms) 2nd Earl of Upper Ossory
 Milton Park, near Peterborough, Northamptonshire (alterations
and interiors including the gallery, dining, tea room and green
library): 4th Earl of Fitzwilliam
 Somerset House, Strand, London (building and plan, completed
by James Wyatt): Office of Works

Cotte, Robert de:

 Hôtel de Lionne, Paris (interior remodelling)


 Château N euf, M eudon (interiors including the D auphin’s
apartments)
 Chapelle Royale, Versailles (decoration, with A. Vassé)
 Notre Dame, Paris (decoration of the choir, with A. Vassé)
 Château de Saverne, Alsace (decoration, including the
Appartement de Parade)
 Hôtel d ’Estrées, Paris (building and interiors)
 Hôtel de la Vrillière (later Hôtel de Toulouse), Paris (remodelling
o f original building by F. Mansart; interiors with A. Vassé)
 Hôtel de Gramont, Besançon (interiors)
 Buenretiro I and Buenretiro II, outside Madrid (unexecuted
 designs for the building and interiors)
 Electoral Palace, Bonn (interiors)
 Hôtel du Maine, Paris (building and interiors)
 Hôtel de Bourvalais, Paris (remodelling and interiors including
the Grand Salon)
 Palais Episcopaux, Châlons-sur-Marne (building and interiors;
unfinished)
 Hôtel de Cotte, Paris (building and interiors)
 Cabinet des Médaillés, Bibliothèque du Roi, Paris
 Palais Episcopaux, Verdun (building and interiors)
 Versailles (remodelling o f interiors, including the Chambre de la
Reine, and the Salon d’Herculle)
 Palais Rohan, Strasbourg (building and interiors including the
Chambre du Roi)

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