A PAIR OF LATE LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED BLUE JOHN VASES
PROPERTY OF A NEW YORK COLLECTION (LOTS 143-165)
A PAIR OF LATE LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED BLUE JOHN VASES

CIRCA 1770

Details
A PAIR OF LATE LOUIS XV ORMOLU-MOUNTED BLUE JOHN VASES
CIRCA 1770
Each with turned baluster-form body flanked by foliate handles, the socle set with a berried laurel wreath, on a square foot
10¼ in. (26 cm.) high
Sale room notice
There is additional provenance for this lot. This pair of vases were sold anonymously at Druot, Paris, 13 May 1927, lot 47.

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Lot Essay

This pair of sumptuous ormolu-mounted urns of richly veined blue-john reflect the taste for precious hardstones among enlightened collectors in the 1780's such as the duc d'Aumont and Marie Antoinette. Blue-john, a rare fluorspar deposit from the Castleton area of Derbyshire, England, has been prized since Roman times. Although ormolu-mounted blue-john objects of this era are almost synonymous with the work of Matthew Boulton, (d. 1802), a pair of Louis XVI vases and a ewer in the Wallace Collection (P. Hughes, The Wallace Collection, Catalogue of Furniture, London, 1996, Vol. III pp.1390-3, F345-7) indicate that the Parisian marchands-merciers also exploited this uniquely English material. It is still undocumented if the marchands-merciers obtained finished blue-john pieces directly from Castleton or if they were supplied by Boulton, who had an essential monopoly on the material in England as well as a flourishing trade in France.

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