A FINE SET OF FOUR GEORGE IV SILVER-GILT CANDLESTICKS
THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A FINE SET OF FOUR GEORGE IV SILVER-GILT CANDLESTICKS

MARK OF JOHN BRIDGE, LONDON, 1828

Details
A FINE SET OF FOUR GEORGE IV SILVER-GILT CANDLESTICKS
Mark of John Bridge, London, 1828
Each on shaped circular base cast and chased with female masks amid dense scrolling foliage, flowers and rocaille, the baluster stem cast and chased with spiralling acanthus, the knop with rocaille and foliage, surmounted by a shell and acanthus-clad socket with entwined serpent, with everted leafy rim, the removable nozzles with similar rims, the rim of base and nozzle engraved with a crest and motto, each marked on base and nozzle, the base also stamped RUNDELL BRIDGE ET RUNDELL AURIFICES REGIS LONDINI
12¼in. (31cm.) high; 230oz. 10dwt. (7183gr.) (4)
Provenance
Joseph Neeld Jr. (1789-1856), great nephew of Philip Rundell, then by descent to
L. W. Neeld, of Grittleton, Wiltshire, sold Sotheby's, London, February 11, 1943, lot 53 (set of 8) (£150 to Kaye)
B. P. Blount, sold Sotheby's, London, October 24, 1985, lot 456
Literature
The Glory of the Goldsmith: Magnificent Gold and Silver from the Al-Tajir Collection, 1989, no. 160, p. 208
Exhibited
"The Glory of the Goldsmith: Magnificent Gold and Silver from the Al-Tajir Collection," Christie's, London, 1989, no. 160
Further details
[EX LOT 9290/180 SUPP IMAGE]
Joseph Neeld, Jr. (1789-1856) by Henry Pierce Bone, after Sir Martin Archer Shee

Lot Essay

The crest is that of Neeld, Grittleton House, Wiltshire.

This set of four candlesticks, originally from a set of eight, was made for Joseph Neeld, great-nephew and heir to the Royal goldsmith, Philip Rundell. Upon Rundell's death in 1827, some £900,000 was left to Neeld, who in taking care of his cantankerous relation had "quitted, for his uncle's sake, a lucrative profession, in which his realizing a fortune was certain ... and devoted himself wholly and absolutely to the care of Mr. Rundell for the last thirteen years of his life" (see J. Culme, "A Devoted Attention to Business: An Obituary of Philip Rundell," Silver Society Journal, Winter 1991, pp. 91-102).

Following Rundell's death, Neeld promptly purchased and enlarged an estate at Grittleton and indulged in his passion for sculpture. He commissioned numerous pieces from Edward Hodges Baily, who had served as a silver designer for his uncle's firm. Neeld acquired a large quantity of plate, including a pair of soup tureens; one, now gilt, is in the Campbell Museum, Camden, New Jersey, the other sold in these Rooms, October 27, 1992, lot 222. The original set of eight candlesticks was divided following the 1943 Neeld family estate sale. The other four sold from the Collection of Alan and Simone Hartman, Christie's, New York, October 20, 1999, lot 192.

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