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A CHELSEA PORCELAIN GILT-METAL MOUNTED STRIKING MUSICAL TABLE CLOCK

CIRCA 1756-58

Details
A CHELSEA PORCELAIN GILT-METAL MOUNTED STRIKING MUSICAL TABLE CLOCK
CIRCA 1756-58
The front of the scroll-moulded case painted with birds in flight around the dial, with contemporary pierced blued steel hands and a replacement card dial signed Rimbault/London, above a moulded cartouche with sheep grazing by a river, with elaborate pierced sides and scroll feet, the domed top painted with vignettes of exotic birds, flowers and fruit, surmounted by allegorical figures of Time discovering Truth, the reverse with a square aperture with a gilt-metal frame cast with scroll ornament with a hinged glazed door, the triple chain fusees movement with six ringed pillars, verge escapement and foliate engraved back plate, rack strike on rear-mounted bells, playing a selection of seven tunes on 10 bells via 21 hammers and 11 cm. long pinned cylinder, the tune selection cam signed Stpn: Rimbault London (minor damages and losses to finial, corner finials lacking, minor stress cracks to body, light rubbing to gilding)
20¾ in. (52.8 cm.) high
Provenance
Professor Cossio, Madrid
Madame Cossio de Jimenez
Thence by descent to the present owners
Literature
Dr. Bellamy Gardner, 'Chelsea Porcelain Clocks', The Connoisseur, Christmas, No. 1935, p. 314, figs. 5 and 6.
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.

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Lot Essay

This clock came into the possession of the family of the current owners after being seen by Professor Cossio's father whilst travelling in the northern province of Soria, in Spain in around 1855. He discovered it in the house of a priest, who had removed the group surmounting the clock and the four corner elements on account of their partial nudity. The clock was purchased on the condition that the group should be included, however the four figures from the corners were never recovered. Family legend of how the clock came to be in Spain tells of a possible ducal gift from the House of Alba (the Dukes of Alba had direct ties to the Dukes of Berwick) to Carlos III in around 1768. There it was said to have remained in the royal collection until the turbulent times of the Peninsular War when, possibly in order to protect the clock from French troops, it was given to a priest. If this story is to be believed, the clock came into the Spanish Royal collection at about the time that Carlos III founded his porcelain manufactory at Buen Retiro. This supposed provenance is tempting when one compares the present example to clocks of similar form made at Buen Retiro, see Carmen Manueco Santurtún et al., Manufacturia Del Buen Retiro 1760-1808 Exhibition Catalogue (Madrid, 1999), pp. 278-279, no. 85 and the example sold by Sotheby's on 21 May 1957, lot 39.

The same model appears in the Earl of Cromer Collection, illustrated by Reginald Blunt (ed.), The Cheyne Book of Chelsea China and Pottery, (London, 1925), pl. 12, cat. No. 103, p. 40 and there are a further three published related clocks in both public and private collections.
John Stephen Rimbault is recorded in Great St Andrews Street, London (1744-1785) and appears to have specialised in musical and automaton clocks. The movement of the present clock is unusually small for a musical clock and was specially designed or adapted to fit the Chelsea porcelain case. The layout of the music train is also unusual, being inverted and having the pinwheel, hammer work and nest of bells positioned across the back plate instead of above the plates, as is more usual. This was clearly necessary as there is insufficient space in the top of the case.

A similar example surmounted by putti musicians with urns at each corner is illustrated by Dr. Bellamy Gardner in his article and was then in the collection of Her Grace, the Duchess of Northumberland, at Albury Park, Guildford. There are two varying models in the Lady Ludlow Collection in the Bowes Museum, no. 2004, 90/CER, see Anne McNair, et al., Catalogue of the Lady Ludlow Collection at the Bowes Museum, (London, 2007), p. 107, cat. no. 92 and p. 105, cat. no. 91. The latter is of similar form and is surmounted by a nymph and putti with further putti at each corner.

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