A LOUIS XV ORMOLU, MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN TWO-BRANCH CANDELABRUM
A LOUIS XV ORMOLU, MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN TWO-BRANCH CANDELABRUM

CIRCA 1750

Details
A LOUIS XV ORMOLU, MEISSEN AND FRENCH PORCELAIN TWO-BRANCH CANDELABRUM
Circa 1750
In the form of a pheasant with three chicks after the model by J.J. Kndler, with naturalistically-cast candlearms issuing flowers, on a scrolling rockwork base
5in. (14cm.) high
Provenance
Probably purchased in Paris by the comte and comtesse de Flauhaut de la Billarderie, circa 1830
Thence by descent with the Marquesses of Lansdowne at Meikleour, Perthshire, Scotland, until sold by the Meikleour Estate Trust, Christie's London, 11 June 1992, lot 33

Lot Essay

This candleabrum formed part of the celebrated collection of French furniture and objets d'art acquired by Margaret, Baroness Keith and Nairne (1788-1867) and her husband Auguste-Charles-Joseph, comte de Flahaut de la Billarderie (1785-1870), natural son of Talleyrand (1754-1838), and nephew of the comte d'Angiviller, who himself was the Marquis de Marigny's nephew and successor as directeur-gnral des btiments du Roi. The Flahauts married in 1817 and spent fifty years together, during which time they maintained houses of considerable grandeur in Paris, London, Vienna and Scotland. Amongst the highest echelons of cultivated society, the Flahauts purchased the former Htel de Massa in the mid-1830s, and this latter drew immense praise when it was finally furnished in 1831. It is thought that most of their important purchases were made at that time. The greater part of the collection became concentrated at Meikleour in Perthshire at the very end of the nineteenth century. Their elder daughter Emily Jame Mercer Elphinstone de Flahaut (1819-1895) married the 4th Marquess of Lansdowne and it was through this marriage that much of the collection came into the Landsdowne family.