This is a fine 19th-Century Empire Directoire Mahogany Flat-top Writing Partners Desk (Bureau Plat) with leather top and rare gilt bronze woman’s bust with claw feet. This directoire desk features a one-piece leather inset top with golt gilt trimmed leather side pull-outs. On the front, there is a centre drawer, two drawers on the left and and one drawer on the right with a false front appearance of two drawers. The rear of the desk features false drawer fronts. At the top of each square tapered leg are caryatids facing forward, which finish on brass trifid feet. Popularized in France during the Napoleonic era and the Egyptian Revival movement, these cast-bronze mounts typically combine a classical maiden's bust, torso, or full body with architectural pillars, tapering legs, or stylized paw feet. A 19th-century French Directoire-style desk (often bridging into the closely related early Empire style) is an antique workspace defined by its restrained Neoclassical elegance, straight architectural lines, and minimal ornamentation compared to earlier Louis XVI furniture. While the true Directoire period was brief (1795–1799), its popular aesthetic was widely revived and manufactured throughout the 19th century. The Directoire writing desk is in amazingly well preserved condition, leather tops are firmly attached but worn, scratches and scuffing observed on mahogany top, brass caryatids and escutcheons are in good overall condition. Pullouts measure, table is . Weight is