A PAIR OF FINE GEORGE II SILVER SAUCEBOATS

Details
A PAIR OF FINE GEORGE II SILVER SAUCEBOATS
MAKER'S MARK OF FREDERICK KANDLER, LONDON, 1743

Shaped-oval and on spreading foot cast and chased with shells, scrolls, fruit and foliage, the bodies with shaped rim and winged dragon handle, cast and chased with shells, scrolls and floral garlands and with two-shaped oval cartouches chased with rural landscapes, engraved with crest and Earl's coronet, marked under bases
8½in. (21.5cm.) long
53ozs. (1,670grs.)

The crests are those of Talbot for George 14th Earl of Shrewsbury, (1719-1787), son of The Hon. George Talbot (d.1733). The 14th Earl succeeded to the title in 1743 on the death of his uncle, Gilbert, 13th Earl of Shrewsbury. He married Elizabeth, daughter of The Hon. John Dormer of Peterly, Co. Buckingham in 1753 (2)
Provenance
The Earl of Shrewsbury, The Alton Towers Sale, 6-8 July 1857, lot 1748 (£50.13.6 to Griffin)
Anonymous sale, Christie's, 24 March 1909, (£168 to Comyns)

Lot Essay

These remarkable sauceboats show a close similarity, in both form and decoration, to examples in the Ashmolean Musuem, Oxford, one pair of which is also by Kandler, made in 1742. (see A.G. Grimwade, Rococo Silver, London, 1974, pl.346 and 35a)

The Kandler family of silversmiths are one of the most interesting but at the same time least understood of those making in London during the middle years of the 18th century. Much of their work, particularly that produced in the 1740's reflect closely products of the Meissen porcelain factory of the same era. Such pieces reinforce the suggestion the family of silversmiths were closely related to Johann Joachim Kandler, the Meissen factory's most famous modeller.

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