A LOUIS XV MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN-MOUNTED ORMOLU AND TOLE PEINTE MANTEL CLOCK
A LOUIS XV MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN-MOUNTED ORMOLU AND TOLE PEINTE MANTEL CLOCK
A LOUIS XV MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN-MOUNTED ORMOLU AND TOLE PEINTE MANTEL CLOCK
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A LOUIS XV MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN-MOUNTED ORMOLU AND TOLE PEINTE MANTEL CLOCK
5 More
A LOUIS XV MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN-MOUNTED ORMOLU AND TOLE PEINTE MANTEL CLOCK

THE DIAL AND MOVEMENT SIGNED BENOIST GERARD / À PARIS, THE PORCELAIN AND ORMOLU CIRCA 1740, THE FLOWERS LARGELY 18TH CENTURY

Details
A LOUIS XV MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN-MOUNTED ORMOLU AND TOLE PEINTE MANTEL CLOCK
THE DIAL AND MOVEMENT SIGNED BENOIST GERARD / À PARIS, THE PORCELAIN AND ORMOLU CIRCA 1740, THE FLOWERS LARGELY 18TH CENTURY
The circular enamel dial with Roman and Arabic chapters within a foliate and C-scroll case surmounted by a youth with fruit and set within a bocage with two pastoral figural groups, on a C-scroll and foliate base, the dial and movement signed 'Benoist Gerard À Paris/No. 526', with twin spring barrels and strike on a bell, restorations to extremities of porcelain groups
21 in. (53.5 cm.) high, 15 in. (38.1 cm.) wide, 6 ¾ in. (17 cm.) deep
Provenance
Comtesse de Rochefort, Paris.
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, Monaco, 18 June 1999, lot 73.
With Partridge, London.
Partridge; Christie's, New York, 17 May 2006, lot 201.

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Lot Essay

During the 1740's through the end of the 1750's, these porcelain-mounted French clocks were popular throughout Europe. Their success was due primarily to the efforts of the Parisian marchands-merciers such as Lazare Duvaux, who ordered porcelain pieces to be fitted into the bronze mounts, most notably the figures and flowers from the Meissen and Vincennes factories. The Vincennes factory was established in 1745 to compete with Meissen, and these flowers were one of their earliest and most successful productions. They remained a popular form of decoration, used in vases, clocks and most often lighting fixtures. A similar clock at Waddesdon Manor is illustrated in G. De Bellaigue, the James A. De Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor: Furniture, Clocks and Bronzes, London, 1974, vol, I, p. 98. Benoist Gerard Benoist II Gerard and his son, Jean-Benoist, collaborated under the same signature form 1743 until the former's death in 1758. By 1748, they were located on the Rue Dauphine and in 1753, they moved to the Quai Conti. Another, very similar clock also with movement by Gerard, was sold anonymously, Christie's, New York, 11 February 2000, lot 151.

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