A FRENCH ORMOLU, AGATE AND PORPHYRY VASE CLOCK
This lot has no reserve.
A FRENCH ORMOLU, AGATE AND PORPHYRY VASE CLOCK

19TH CENTURY

Details
A FRENCH ORMOLU, AGATE AND PORPHYRY VASE CLOCK
19th Century
The vase à peaux de bouc enclosing two concentric gilt rotating dials with both Roman and Arabic numerals, flanked to each side by drapery-swagged rams' masks and floral garlands, the flared channelled neck mounted with further patera and suspended floral garlands, the domed spreading circular socle above an entrelac and rosette collar, on a fluted circular Egyptian porphyry plinth with central vine-wrapped band and ribbon-tied laurel collar to the base, on a pearled stepped square plinth, the movement with indistinct repairer's scratch mark inurg...laitat/1880
20¾in. (53cm.) high
Provenance
Comtesse Mona de Bismarck, 34 quai de New York, Paris, sold Sotheby's Monaco, 26-27 May 1980, lot 711 (51,000 FFr.).
Literature
A. Sassoon, Vincennes and Sèvres Porcelain, Catalogue of the Collection, Malibu, 1991, no.23, fn.21.
D.Augarde, Les Ouvriers du Temps, Paris, 1996, p.184, fig.148 (Collection D. Riahi), as 'c.1780-1785'.
E. Niehüser, French Bronze Clocks, Munich, 1999, p.260, fig.1273, Ref.4,185.
Special notice
This lot has no reserve.

Lot Essay

This clock is inspired by a Sèvres porcelain model known as a vase bouc du Barry B. First introduced at Sèvres in 1771 and named in honor of the King's mistress, this model was produced in three sizes and the plaster model still survives at Sèvres. In 1777, Louis XVI purchased a hard-paste example for 360 livres, which he presented to his brother-in-law, the Emperor of Austria, and the model clearly found favour at Court, as both Louis XVI and Louis XV's daughter Madame Victoire acquired this model in 1779 (A. Sassoon, op. cit., p.116). What is probably one of these latter pairs is now in the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (70.DE.99.1-2).

Three pairs of agate vases of this design, which may originally have been conceived as the flanking vases of a clock-garniture, are recorded. The first was sold from the collection of the Countess of Craven, Sotheby's London, 20 November 1961, lot 144 (and again from the Bensimon Collection, Couturier-Nicolay, Paris, November 1981, lot 56); the second was sold at Leo Spik, Berlin, 19-21 March 1987, lot 1945; and the third was sold anonymously at Cornette de Saint Cyr, hôtel Drouot, Paris, 19 May 1999, lot 101.

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