Lot Essay
Designed in the Louis XV pittoresque style popularized by Juste-Aurèle Meissonier and Nicolas Pineau, these wall-lights can be attributed to the sculpteur, fondeur et ciseleur du roi Jacques Caffiéri (1678-1755, mâitre in 1715). With their distinctive pierced branches and dense, flower-embellished backplates, they display close similarities with the suite of four supplied to Madame Infante, Louise-Elizabeth of France, duchesse de Parma for the Palazzo di Colorno. Now in the J. Paul Getty Museum (C. Bremer-David, Decorative Arts, An Illustrated Summary Catalogue of the Collections of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu, 1993, no. 168, p. 103), these latter wall-lights were almost certainly amongst the thirty-four wagons of furnishings and fineries brought back to Colorno from the duchesse's second trip to Paris between September 1752 and September 1753.
While Madame Infante is known to have purchased much directly from the marchand-mercier Lazare Duvaux, as well as from the ciseleur, doreur sur métaux du Roy Antoine Lelièvre, it was Caffiéri who was most extensively patronized on this commision. As Peter Hughes has argued in The Wallace Collection Catalogue of Furniture III, London, 1996, no. 266, pp. 1310-1315, however, some of the gilt-bronze objects may actually originally have been commissioned by Louis XV for his own use a few years before and given by him to his eldest daughter; this hypothesis is based particularly upon the ormolu chandelier, also from Colorno, now in the Wallace, which is signed and dated CAFFIERI A PARIS 1751 and was, therefore, commissioned before their arrival in Paris.
Comparable wall-lights include a pair with similar pierced branches sold Christie’s, New York, 2 November, 2000, lot 7 and a less complex pair struck with Colorno inventory marks, sold Christie’s, London, 29 October 2025, lot 138.
While Madame Infante is known to have purchased much directly from the marchand-mercier Lazare Duvaux, as well as from the ciseleur, doreur sur métaux du Roy Antoine Lelièvre, it was Caffiéri who was most extensively patronized on this commision. As Peter Hughes has argued in The Wallace Collection Catalogue of Furniture III, London, 1996, no. 266, pp. 1310-1315, however, some of the gilt-bronze objects may actually originally have been commissioned by Louis XV for his own use a few years before and given by him to his eldest daughter; this hypothesis is based particularly upon the ormolu chandelier, also from Colorno, now in the Wallace, which is signed and dated CAFFIERI A PARIS 1751 and was, therefore, commissioned before their arrival in Paris.
Comparable wall-lights include a pair with similar pierced branches sold Christie’s, New York, 2 November, 2000, lot 7 and a less complex pair struck with Colorno inventory marks, sold Christie’s, London, 29 October 2025, lot 138.
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