A PAIR OF GEORGE IV SILVER SALVERS
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A PAIR OF GEORGE IV SILVER SALVERS

MARK OF EDWARD, EDWARD, WILLIAM AND JOHN BARNARD, LONDON, 1829, RETAILED BY KENSINGTON LEWIS

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE IV SILVER SALVERS
MARK OF EDWARD, EDWARD, WILLIAM AND JOHN BARNARD, LONDON, 1829, RETAILED BY KENSINGTON LEWIS
Each shaped circular and on three openwork foliage and shell panel feet, with openwork foliage border, engraved with a band of foliate scrolls centring an engraved coat-of-arms, each marked on the reverse, further stamped 'LEWIS ST JAMES'S ST LONDON'
22½ in. (57 cm.) diam.
343 oz. (10,657 gr.)
The arms are those of Gerard, almost certainly for Sir John Gerard 12th Bt. (1804-1854). He was a colonel in the 3rd Regiment Royal Lancashire Militia. He married Monica (d.1865), daughter of Thomas Strickland Standish in 1827. He died without issue and the title passed to his younger brother Sir Robert Gerard 13th Bt. (1808-1887), who was created Baron Gerard of Bryn in 1876. (2)
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Monica Turcich
Monica Turcich

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Lot Essay

KENSINGTON LEWIS

The name Kensington Lewis is associated with some of the most innovative silver of the early 19th century. This is particularly true with the extraordinary group of silver which he supplied to Prince Fredrick Augustus, Duke of York the second son of King George III. His work anticipates the full-blown historicism of the mid-19th century.
The Duke of York and his elder brother, the Prince Regent, later King George IV, were together the most influential collectors and patrons of silver of their time. The Duke of York's silver, however, was based largely on baroque sources, and stands apart from the classical styles promoted by the Royal Goldsmiths, Rundell Bridge & Rundell and supplied to the King.

Credit for the distinctive style of the Duke of York's silver must be given to Kensington Lewis, whose passion for 17th-century silver was demonstrated by his purchases in the Duke of Norfolk's auction in 1816. There, he acquired a salver decorated with "figures of marine deities" or "sea nymphs and tritons in relief," and a tankard with "a feast of the Gods, in exquisite bas-relief . . . Alexander visiting the tent of Darius . . . the handle formed as a syren." Such objects in Lewis's possession undoubtedly influenced his designs for new silver objects, executed for him by Edward Farrell. John Culme proposed this thesis in his important study, "Kensington Lewis: A Nineteenth Century Businessman," Connoisseur, September 1975.

Lewis, an expert salesman, was able to channel the Duke of York's profligate spending toward Farrell, a talented silversmith capable of creating new designs from a variety of historical sources. It was this phenomenal collaboration of patron, retailer, and craftsman which resulted in these extravagant and highly original objects.

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