A LOUIS XV ORMOLU AND BRONZE MANTEL CLOCK
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A LOUIS XV ORMOLU AND BRONZE MANTEL CLOCK

CIRCA 1745, THE MOVEMENT AND DIAL BY DE LA CHAUX, THE CASE ATTRIBUTED TO JEAN-JOSEPH DE SAINT-GERMAIN

Details
A LOUIS XV ORMOLU AND BRONZE MANTEL CLOCK
CIRCA 1745, THE MOVEMENT AND DIAL BY DE LA CHAUX, THE CASE ATTRIBUTED TO JEAN-JOSEPH DE SAINT-GERMAIN
The circular white enamel dial with pierced and chased ormolu hands, the twin barrel movement with circular plates joined by back-pinned pillars, signed on the backplate 'De La Chaux A PARIS No.1775', with silk suspension to anchor escapement, calibrated countwheel strike on bell, the case surmounted by a chinaman holding an umbrella, supported by an elephant with raised trunk, on a foliate and rock-work cast base, on a later green-velvet plinth
19 in. (48.5 cm.) high; 13 in. (33 cm.) wide without the velvet plinth
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

It is very probable that this movement is by a maker called David La Chaux, or De la Chaux, master in 1776, then in the rue Dauphine, who is cited in 1778 in the Quai des Grands Augustins and rue St Honoré in 1780-81.

Clocks of this model are frequently signed by Jean-Joseph de Saint-Germain. Elected as a maître-fondeur on 15 July 1748, Saint-Germain enjoyed the privilege of an ouvrier libre - enabling him to act both as an ébéniste and bronzier. He frequently supplied cases cast with animal forms and allegorical figures to the leading clockmakers of Paris, including the le Roy workshops, Etienne Lenoir and Jean-Philippe Gosselin. The quality of chasing and modelling in Saint-Germain's animal and foliate decorated cases also suggests close study of the natural world. A man of his times, Saint-Germain probably received a rudimentary education in rhetoric, the Classics and calculus in addition to a formal study of sculpture and draughtsmanship, reflecting the social and economic status of his family. Evidence for this early education is seen in the substantial library and finely organized cabinet of curiosities he amassed. This collection, in turn, sheds light upon his interests in the natural sciences, particularly botany and mineralogy, and the quality of his bronze casts (J.-D. Augarde, "Jean-Joseph de Saint-Germain: Bronzier (1719-1791)", L'Estampille/l'Objet d'Art, December, 1996, pp. 63-82).

Inspired by Kakiemon porcelain models of elephants, such as that at Burghley House, Lincolnshire ('Porcelain from Palaces', Exhibition Catalogue, British Museum, 6 July-4 November 1990, p.178, no.160), which were subsequently copied at the St. Cloud manufactory, St. Germain's design enjoyed enduring popularity in the mid-18th century. Thus, while clocks of this form are known to have been in existence by 1745-9, testified to by the 'pendule au singe' stamped with the C couronné poinçon sold anonymously at Christie's, London, 10 June 1993, lot 9, (£80,700), as late as 15 December 1757, Madame de Montmartel acquired a clock of this identical model from the marchand-mercier Lazare Duvaux. Described as Une pendule en bronze doré d'ormoulu, dont le mouvement à sonnerie, de Moisy, est porté sur un éléphant, it cost 660 livres. A related clock of this model also sold Christie's London, 21 April 2005, lot 29.

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