A FINE GERMAN GOLD-MOUNTED PUDDINGSTONE SNUFFBOX
A FINE GERMAN GOLD-MOUNTED PUDDINGSTONE SNUFFBOX

DRESDEN, CIRCA 1750

Details
A FINE GERMAN GOLD-MOUNTED PUDDINGSTONE SNUFFBOX
Dresden, circa 1750
The carved puddingstone box formed as a figure of a crouching leopard, over an oblong puddingstone base with hinged gold mounts, the leopard's face set with diamond eyes and teeth and a gold tongue, the body and cover mounts each struck with French control mark
3¾ in. (9.5 cm.) long
Provenance
Christie's, Geneva, November 11, 1986, lot 443

Lot Essay

Saxony's abundance of colorful hardstones provided inspiration for the lapidaries of Dresden, and this specimen of puddingstone, with its spotted pattern, was naturally enough carved in the form of a leopard. Three similar animal-form boxes from Dresden, two lions and one stag, are in the collection of the Hermitage. All three are set with diamond eyes and teeth similar to those on the present example (Kenneth Snowman, Eighteenth Century Gold Boxes of Europe, 1966, figs. 495-497).