A PAIR OF EMPIRE ORMOLU AND PATINATED-BRONZE FOUR-LIGHT CANDELABRA
A PAIR OF EMPIRE ORMOLU AND PATINATED-BRONZE FOUR-LIGHT CANDELABRA

CIRCA 1805, ATTRIBUTED TO CLAUDE GALLE

Details
A PAIR OF EMPIRE ORMOLU AND PATINATED-BRONZE FOUR-LIGHT CANDELABRA
Circa 1805, attributed to Claude Galle
Each with spreading triangular shaft terminating at the angles with ram's-masks and mounted with floral wreaths and associated ram's-masks to the stem, surmounted by a sphere with three owls enclosing a stiff-leaf stem issuing three acanthus-wrapped scrolled branches terminating in duck's-heads with milled drip-pan's, the branches centred by a baluster-shaped nozzle applied with neoclassical winged maidens, on winged monopodiae standing on a concave-sided triangular plinth and bun feet, one lacking a floral wreath and ram's mask mount to one side of the stem, drilled for electricity, one drip-pan associated
25 1/4in. (64cm.) high; 10in. (25.5cm) wide (2)

Lot Essay

This unusual pair of candelabra, with three owls standing back to back, relate to a pair of candlesticks noted in an 1807 inventory at the château de Fontainebleau. Listed in the second salon of the Empress: 'une paire (flambeaux) en cuivre gaines rondes griffes et hiboux dorés or mat hauteur 29c', they are illustrated in J-P. Samoyault, Pendules at bronzes d'ameublement entrés sous le Premier Empire, Paris, 1989, p. 176, fig. 157.

The attribution to Claude Galle is based on a document from his atelier, dated August 1799 which notes 'une paire de flambeaux à hibou'. Claude Galle was one of the preeminent bronziers of the Empire period and when his workshop was in full force he is reported to have had over four hundred employees. He received countless commisions from the Garde-Meuble and is known to have supplied aristocrats such as Louis-Alexandre Berthier and the Prince de Wagram for the château de Grosbois.

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