A ROYAL LOUIS XVI ORMOLU AND BLEU TURQUIN MARBLE MANTEL CLOCK
THE PROPERTY OF A DISTINGUISHED COLLECTOR
A ROYAL LOUIS XVI ORMOLU AND BLEU TURQUIN MARBLE MANTEL CLOCK

CIRCA 1785, THE CASE ATTRIBUTED TO THE FONDEUR FRANÇOIS VION, AND CHASED AND GILT BY JEAN-CLAUDE-THOMAS DUPLESSIS, THE DIAL SIGNED ROBIN

Details
A ROYAL LOUIS XVI ORMOLU AND BLEU TURQUIN MARBLE MANTEL CLOCK
Circa 1785, the case attributed to the fondeur François Vion, and chased and gilt by Jean-Claude-Thomas Duplessis, the dial signed Robin
In two-tone gilding, the circular glazed white-enamelled dial with Roman and Arabic chapters, alternating with fleur de Lys, signed Robin, within a foliate-cast surround, the rectangular case surmounted by cooing doves and laurel wreathes representing Love's triumph, flanked by volute uprights draped with floral and laurel swags and mounted with fruit and flower-filled cornucopiae, on a breakfront rectangular base edged with beading mounted with acanthus and berried foliage centered by a panel of scrolling grape vines and a sunflower, on bun feet, the case stamped with Palais de Tuileries inventory numbers 5547.TH, 8776 and a fleur-de-lys with a crown and the letter 'T..', the dial with Horloger du Roi effaced, the movement with anchor escapement, thread suspension to pendulum striking the hour and half-hour by means of crossed-out count wheel, the hands cast with an R
14½in. (37cm.) high, 13in. (33cm.) wide, 5in. (13cm.) deep
Provenance
Delivered by Robin for the Comte de Provence at the Palais de Luxembourg circa 1782-3.
Confiscated by the Revolutionary Government in 1792 and recorded at the Palais du Luxembourg in the 1793 Inventory.
Recorded at the Palais de Tuileries in 1807 in the bedroom of the Grand Maréchal's apartment (Maréchal Duroc).
Last recorded at the Tuileries in the 1855 inventory.
Sir Edward Baron.
Stavros Niarchos.
Anonymous sale, Christie's New York, 18 November 1978, lot 136
Mr. & Mrs. Franklin N. Groves, sold Christie's New York, 16 November 1988, lot 28.
With French & Company, sold Christie's New York, 24 November 1998, lot 14 ($79,500.).
Literature
The Royal Cabinet Makers of France, London, July 1951, no. 20 W. Edey, French Clocks in North American Collections, the Frick Collection, New York, 1982, No. 80
J-D. Augarde, Les Ouvriers du Temps, Geneva, 1996, p.262, fig.206
P. Kjellberg, La Pendule Française, Paris, 1997, p. 169
Exhibited
French Clocks in North American Collections, the Frick Collection, New York, 1982, no. 80

Lot Essay

THE PALAIS DU LUXEMBOURG AND THE TUILERIES

This clock is first mentioned in the April 1793 inventory of the comte de Provence's furniture in the Palais du Luxembourg, Paris. The comte de Provence was the brother of Louis XVI and the future Louis XVIII. The comte de Provence's papers, preserved in the French Archives (Rs 433), record payments of 13,264 livres made by the Prince's Garde-Meuble to Robin for clocks delivered between 1782 and 1783 to the Luxembourg.

The Palais du Luxembourg, which had been given to the comte de Provence and where he lived exclusively between October 1789 and June 1791, was confiscated along with its furnishings in September 1792. The building now houses the French assembly or Senat.

This clock was listed in the aforementioned 1793 inventory with the remark à la commission du Commerce, indicating that it was considered a precious object reserved by the French government to be exchanged against arms, food and other necessities. It was not sold, however and appears again for the first time in the 1807 inventory of the Palais des Tuileries in the Grand Maréchal's bedroom.
une pendule à pilastre, socle en marbre bleu turquin, posé sur le piedouche, guirlandes, consoles renversées, rosastres, cornets d'abondance en cuivre ciselé doré d'or mat. Elle est terminée par deux tortereaux sur branche de laurier. Son cadran porte le nom de Robin
hauteur 36
longeur du socle 33
profondeur 13
.

Further recorded at the Tuileries in 1826 under the numbers 6643 and 9364, The clock is last described there in 1855, when it is listed in the Pavillion de Marsan under no 5547, a number which is stamped on the case.
Une pendule bronze ciselé et doré, style Louis XVI, socle en marbre bleu turquin, pieds a boules meplates, frise a rinceaux et branches de lierre, piedestal a console orne de branches de laurier etguirlande de fleurs et fruits, corniche a oves surmontee d'un groupe de tourtereaux movement a sonnerie de robin
ht 0,56 largeur 0,32
prisee 400 francs.

The clock presumably remained in the Tuileries until the Palace was burned in 1871.

THE DESIGN FOR THE CLOCK

The design for this clock, attributed to Vion and composed by Duplessis, is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. The principal difference may be seen in the urn which replaces the doves on this clock. Another clock, identical but with its original Bacchic mask to the frieze, almost certainly acquired by Baron Mayer Amschel de Rothschild, was sold from the collection of the 7th Earl of Rosebery, Mentmore Towers, Buckinghamshire, Sotheby's House Sale, 18 May 1977, lot 67.

Interestingly, this ormolu case is attributed to the fondeur Lemoyne by J-D. Augarde in Les Ouvriers du Temps (op.cit.). Jean-Jacques Lemoyne was elected maître-fondeur-ciseleur on 28th March 1772. He lived in the rue Princesse and worked most notably for the Comte de Montmorency-Laval. Augarde (op. cit.) also states that Louis XVI, Marie-Antoinette and Mesdames Victoire and Adélaïde owned similar clocks.

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