A RUSSIAN ORMOLU TWELVE-LIGHT CHANDELIER
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A RUSSIAN ORMOLU TWELVE-LIGHT CHANDELIER

CIRCA 1815

Details
A RUSSIAN ORMOLU TWELVE-LIGHT CHANDELIER
CIRCA 1815
The circular dish suspended by chains from a rosette with a later central scrolling snake pendant, issuing scrolling snake branches and decorated with fruiting vine, terminating in an acorn boss
41 in. (104 cm.) high; 27 in. (69 cm.) diameter
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

This chandelier is designed in the Grecian or antique fashion popularised by C. Percier and P. Fontaine's, Recueil de decorations interieures, 1801. Its palm-leaf tazza frieze is flowered with Apollo sunflowers and its hollowed bowl evokes the festive harvest deities, Bacchus and Ceres, with a wreath of vine-entwined corn. The sunflowered frieze also features on a chandelier-tazza, surmounted by a dancing bacchante, illustrated in G. Henriot, Le Luminaire de la Renaissance au XIXème siècle, Paris, 1933, pl. 219 no. 20. Another of the latter model was sold at Christie's, London, 11-12 June 2003, lot 52.

The present chandelier relates to various examples at Pavlovsk, and typifies the ardent fashion for opulent chandeliers in Russia in the late 18th and early 19th Century. Some of these were executed by Johann Zech, who, together with another Jonas Fischer, was responsible for many of the chandeliers in the Imperial palaces in St. Petersburg. A closely related example, with similar applied maiden figures to the glass bowl, is in the corner sitting room at Pavlovsk and is illustrated in A. Gaydamak, Russian Empire, Moscow, 2000, pp. 126-128.

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