A GEORGE IV SILVER-GILT CASKET

MARK OF WILLIAM ELLIOTT, LONDON, 1820

Details
A GEORGE IV SILVER-GILT CASKET
MARK OF WILLIAM ELLIOTT, LONDON, 1820
Rectangular, the side panels with putti amidst foliage, the hinged cover set with a 17th century repoussé plaque after an engraving, engraved under base with an inscription, marked under base and cover and interior cover
11¼ in. (28.6 cm.) long; 88 oz. (2,750 gr.)
Provenance
Christie's, New York, 17 October 1996, lot 249
Partridge & Sons, sold Christie's, New York, 17 May 2006, lot 98
With Alastair Dickenson, London
Engraved
The inscription reads "April 18th 1821. This Box weighing 82oz, 14dwt has been made to receive a chas'd Medallion of Scripture History of unknown Assay weighing 5oz 5dwt which is to be added without Solder"

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Becky MacGuire
Becky MacGuire

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Lot Essay

This plaque is based on an engraving by Paul Pontius after Anthony Van Dyck's painting of the Blessed Hermann Joseph kneeling before an apparition of the Virgin Mary, 1630, now in the Künsthistorisches Museum, Vienna.

Charles II style toilet services and silver-gilt caskets enjoyed a renaissance in the 1820s. Possibly inspired by the famous Calverley Service of 1683 (now in the Victoria and Albert Museum), they are set with antique plaques depicting stories from classical mythology or religious scenes, as on the present example.

A similar William Elliott casket with inscription dated 3 April 1821 is illustrated in Vanessa Brett, The Sotheby's Directory of Silver, 1600-1940, no. 1252, pp. 272-73. Other related 19th century caskets and boxes include those sold at Christie's, London, 26 November 1975, lots 170-171, Christie's, New York, 29 April 1987, lot 271, and Sotheby's, London, 20 June 1974, lot 125.

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