A collection of French enamelled clay pipes and pipe bowls
VAT rate of 17.5% is payable on hammer price plus … Read more
A collection of French enamelled clay pipes and pipe bowls

LATE 19TH AND EARLY 20TH CENTURY

Details
A collection of French enamelled clay pipes and pipe bowls
Late 19th and early 20th century
Some modelled as various bearded heads, including a head of Sileno
Special notice
VAT rate of 17.5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer’s premium This lot is subject to Collection and Storage charges

Lot Essay

COMPARATIVE LITERATURE:
Roger Fresco-Corbu, Faces on French Clay Pipes, Country Life, Juen 14, 1962, p.1445-1446. Comparable pipe bowls were made by the French manufacturers, Fiolet, of St. Omer (est.1765), who introduced the distinctive enamel colouring to the soft white clay and produced an array of ornamental pipes, typically bearded Turk's heads. Dumeril, also from St. Omer, successfully produced a range of pipe bowls modelled as historical heads in a brown clay, finished in a flat red glaze, from 1845 to 1895. Finally, the popular firm, Gambier of Paris, became a generic name for ornamental clay pipes during the second half 19th century.

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