A LOUIS XV TWO-COLOUR GOLD SNUFF-BOX
A LOUIS XV TWO-COLOUR GOLD SNUFF-BOX

BY JEAN-CLAUDE GENU (FL. 1766-1785), PARIS, 1773/1774, WITH THE CHARGE AND DISCHARGE MARKS OF JULIEN ALATERRE 1768-1774, LATER STRUCK WITH TWO PARISIAN POST-1838 RESTRICTED WARRANTY MARKS FOR GOLD, THE FLANGE ENGRAVED WITH RETAILER'S NAME 'DU PETIT DUNKERKE'

Details
A LOUIS XV TWO-COLOUR GOLD SNUFF-BOX
BY JEAN-CLAUDE GENU (FL. 1766-1785), PARIS, 1773/1774, WITH THE CHARGE AND DISCHARGE MARKS OF JULIEN ALATERRE 1768-1774, LATER STRUCK WITH TWO PARISIAN POST-1838 RESTRICTED WARRANTY MARKS FOR GOLD, THE FLANGE ENGRAVED WITH RETAILER'S NAME 'DU PETIT DUNKERKE'
narrow oblong box with curved ends, the hinged cover, sides and base chased with vertical shallow flutes alternating with husk bands, the sablé borders chased with stylized acanthus
3¾ in. (95 mm.) wide
4¼ oz. (136 gr.)
Provenance
Kathryn Bache Miller, New York; (+) Christie's, New York, 17-19 April 1980, lot 1238 (to Dreesmann).
Dr Anton C. R. Dreesmann Collection (inventory no. F-126); Christie's, London, 11 April 2002, lot 827.

Brought to you by

Amelia Anderson
Amelia Anderson

Lot Essay

Henry Nocq (Le poinçon de Paris, Paris, 1927, II, p. 233) mentions the list of items made by Jean-Claude Genu between 1772 and 1777, including bracelets, snuff-boxes, oval boxes, bathtub boxes (boîtes en baignoires) - which probably refers to the present type of narrow oblong box - in vari-colour gold, but also cane handles and needle cases. Among the names of his clients one can read that of Granchet [sic], the mercier of Au Petit Dunkerque.

Carolyn Sargentson (Merchants and Luxury Markets, London, 1996, pp. 119-127) gives an excellent account on Charles Raymond Granchez, the celebrated marchand mercier whose shop flourished between 1767 and 1787 at 3 quai de Conti at the corner of the rue Dauphine. She illustrates an extremely similar snuff-box from the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum (op. cit., p. 124, pl. 72) with identical retailer's name on the flange. She points out that Granchez obviously stocked boxes which reflected current fashions and 'successful' models.

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