Sold by order of the executors of THE LATE MICHAEL KROYER
THE SELBY-LOWNDES TOMPION

Details
THE SELBY-LOWNDES TOMPION
No. 217

A MAGNIFICENT WILLIAM AND MARY ORMOLU-MOUNTED EBONY GRAND SONNERIE TABLE CLOCK
THE CASE: Of bold architectural form designed in the Antique or Roman manner surmounted by a laurel-wreathed Roman General on a panel-fronted pedestal flanked by accanthus volutes and supported on an ogee-moulded dome centred with a vacant oval escutcheon with accanthus-scroll frame mounted with a winged cherubim head and linked by finely cast and chased garlands of accanthus foliage, the corners with block plinths supporting long-necked flaming-urn finials, Doric columns to the front door with a foliate satyr mask applied to the top rail the sound fret above incorporating festooned husks with vestal heads, the angles applied with lions' masks, the side panels with large central rosettes framed with accanthus foliage with end buds, the handles formed as minerva's hissing dragon heads, the base supported on flat bun feet with Minerva masks applied to the column pedestals flanking a drawer applied with a chased trophy emblematic of the sciences comprising a festive satyr mask with open mouth bearing the drawer ring flanked by lightly-clad cherubims with a clock and an orrery accompanied by a compass, rulers, set-square and parchment scrolls
THE DIAL: Signed Thomas Tompion Londini Fecit within a foliate cartouche flanked by subsidiary rings with rosette-engraved centers for regulation and four-position strike selection engraved S1 (full grande sonnerie on six bells); N6 (hours only); N1 (complete silence); S1 (grande sonnerie with quarter strike on one bell), the silvered chapter ring having a finely matted center with mock pendulum aperture, well pierced blued steel hands, elaborate foliate strap-work double-screwed spandrels with Minerva masks
THE MOVEMENT: Latched dial-feet to the massive triple fusee movement with seven latched ringed pillars, verge escapement with typical regulation supporting the steel-suspended pendulum with blued rod, pull quarter repeat on Tompion's system from either side via interconnecting blued steel single-cocked levers, the backplate engraved with scrolling foliage with acanthus strap-work centered with the repeat signature within a palm-leaf cartouche and punch-numbered 217 at the base
26¾in. (68cm.) high
Provenance
The Selby Lowndes family
Mrs Kroyer-Kielberg
M. Kroyer Esq.
Literature
Connoisseur, Current Art Notes, exhibited at the Goldsmiths and Silversmiths Co., Ltd., June, 1927, pp. 122-4, two illus.
R. W. Symonds, Masterpieces of English Furniture and Clocks, London, 1940, pp.116, figs. 80-2
R. W. Symonds, Thomas Tompion, His Life and Work, London, 1951, fig. 141, 184, pp. 163, 198 & 285

Lot Essay

Thomas Tompion, 1639-1713, was born in Northill, Bedfordshire and established in London in 1671 when he became a Brother of the Clockmakers' Company by redemption. By 1674 he established workshops in Water Lane, off Fleet Street and had met the influential mathematician and Royal Society Curator of Experiments Dr. Robert Hooke. Through him Tompion's work was brought to the notice of Charles II and from then onwards became the primary source of important clocks to the Royal Court.
The present clock was almost cetainly the first of a small series of grande sonnerie three train movements. Its closest relation is the Medici Tompion, so called because it was commissioned by William III as a gift to Cosimo III de Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany circa 1700.
Numbered 278, The Medici Tompion has the same case and mounts as the present Selby Lowndes Tompion. The main difference lies in the elaborate gilt-bronze feet present on the Medici Tompion but curiously absent on the Selby Lowndes clock which has later bun feet and might possibly have originally had the same arrangement. However the two clocks are slightly different in size, the Selby Lowndes clock is smaller and its mounts were definitely made from a seperate mould to that of the Medici clock. This being so and the fact that its first owner was probably not as important as the Grand Duke of Medici, judging by the absence of any coat of arms, it might originally have rested on simple block feet
The mystery of who first owned the present clock might have been solved by delving into the history of the Selby Lowndes family who owned it before the Kroyer-Kielberg family. The name Selby was added in 1831 by William Lowndes of Winslow and Whaddon, Bucks on his succession of the Whaddon estates. The great grandfather of William Lowndes who had the same name was a highly successful financier and most importantly was Secretary to the Tresury circa 1695. He was a member of the House of Commons and Chairman of Ways and Means; in Burke's Landed Gentry, MCMLII, p.1579, it is noted that Queen Anne conferred upon William Lowndes for his pioneering work for originating the funding system. The purchase and payment of works of art by the Royal Family would certianly have been overseen by William Lowndes's office and it would therefore be highly appropiate that he might have acquired the clock either as a gift from William III, in payment for his work to the Nation, or as a direct purchase. This possible attribution could account for the lack of any regalia on the vacant cartouche above the dial

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