A FRENCH GILT-BRONZE EQUESTRIAN PORTRAIT OF LOUIS XIV, after François Girardon, the King shown wearing armour with a cloak around his shoulders, holding the reigns in his left hand, his right arm directing his troops, on an integral rectangular base with a shield and sword being trodden under foot by his mount, the base bearing the signature Girardon, 19th Century

Details
A FRENCH GILT-BRONZE EQUESTRIAN PORTRAIT OF LOUIS XIV, after François Girardon, the King shown wearing armour with a cloak around his shoulders, holding the reigns in his left hand, his right arm directing his troops, on an integral rectangular base with a shield and sword being trodden under foot by his mount, the base bearing the signature Girardon, 19th Century
19½in. (49.5cm.) wide, 25in. (65cm.) high

Lot Essay


COMPARATIVE LITERATURE

M. Martin, Les Monuments Equestres de Louis XIV, Paris, 1989
F. Souchal, French Sculptors of the 17th and 18th Centuries, Vol II, Oxford, 1981, no. 65

The present group is a reduction of the monumental bronze by François Girardon (1628-1715), which was unveiled in 1699 in the Place Vendôme, Paris. Although the original was destroyed during the Revolution, the composition is known through numerous engravings and bronze reductions.

A related reduction was sold by the Executors of the late Dr. Daniel McLean McDonald in these Rooms, 7 July 1992, lot 127

More from House Sale - Salisbury, Wilts

View All
View All