A PAIR OF LOUIS XV STYLE ORMOLU-MOUNTED FLEUR-DE-PÊCHE MARBLE COVERED URNS

Details
A PAIR OF LOUIS XV STYLE ORMOLU-MOUNTED FLEUR-DE-PÊCHE MARBLE COVERED URNS
SECOND QUARTER 19TH CENTURY

Each with waisted lid mounted with bold pierced spiral scrolling foliage issuing trailing blossoming vines, the rim edged in foliate-cast banding above a baluster-shaped vessel fitted with a bold blossoming handles on a scrolling foliate base cast with C- scrolls, the mounts struck with indistinct marks-19in. (48cm.) high, 15in. (38cm.) wide (2)

Lot Essay

The mounts on these vases were almost certainly carried out to the order of the famous dealer and entrepreneur, Edward Holmes Baldock, whose business on Hanway Street flourished between 1805 and 1843. Baldock specialized in dealing in 18ÿth century French furniture and Sèvres porcelain. He also altered furniture and remounted porcelain to accomodate the tastes of his aristocratic English clientele.

The mounts are nearly identical to those on a pair of Meissen tureens in the collection of the Duke of Buccleuch at Drumlanrig Castle. Between 1830 and 1831, the 5th Duke of Buccleuch and his new wife formed a collection of primarily Sevres porcelain almost exclusively from Baldock (R. Savill, "The Sèvres Porcelain Collection of the Fifth Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch", in T. Murdoch ed., Boughton House, The English Versailles, 1992, p. 143). Baldock's chief patron was George IV and a similarly mounted pair of tureens is in the collection of the Queen in the Queen's Presence Chamber at Windsor Castle.