A LOUIS PHILIPPE ORMOLU-MOUNTED BLACK MARBLE MONTH-GOING TABLE REGULATOR
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 1… 顯示更多 THE PROPERTY OF A COLLECTOR (LOTS 338-340)
A LOUIS PHILIPPE ORMOLU-MOUNTED BLACK MARBLE MONTH-GOING TABLE REGULATOR

PAUL GARNIER, PARIS, NO. 1917. MID 19TH CENTURY

細節
A LOUIS PHILIPPE ORMOLU-MOUNTED BLACK MARBLE MONTH-GOING TABLE REGULATOR
PAUL GARNIER, PARIS, NO. 1917. MID 19TH CENTURY
CASE: polished black marble with ormolu mouldings, on rosewood plinth under glass dome DIAL: white enamel regulator dial with subsidiary hours and minutes, signed 'PAUL GARNIER/HER DU ROI PARIS', blued steel hands MOVEMENT: arched plates with five pillars, single going barrel, pinwheel escapement to back plate with repeat signature, front plate and dial plate numbered '1917'; Mahler-type pendulum
19¾ in. (50 cm.) high, excluding plinth and dome; 6½ in. (16.5 cm.) wide; 4¾ in. (12 cm.) deep
來源
Sotheby's London, 2 June 1995, lot 387, when acquired by the present owner.
出版
D. Roberts, Precision Pendulum Clocks: France, Germany, America and Recent Advancements, Atglen, 2004,, p. 103, figs. 31-21A-31-22.
注意事項
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 17.5% on the buyer's premium.

榮譽呈獻

Giles Forster
Giles Forster

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拍品專文

A Garnier regulator of related design (with standard dial format), No. 8539, sold anonymously, Christie's London, 14 June 2000, lot 58 (£17,625) and again, 2 July 2004, lot 121 (£14,340).
Paul Garnier (1801-1869) was apprenticed to Antide Janvier (1751-1835). He set up his own business in rue Taitbout in 1825 and made a major contribution to the creation of a French carriage clock industry.
In the 1838 Paris Exhibition he exhibited a table regulator similar to the present example, an engraving of which was published in the exhibition brochure (reproduced by C. Allix, 'Paul Garnier Revisited', Antiquarian Horology, Spring, 1993, p. 418, fig. 8.). the pendulum design was patented in 1819 by Franz Joseph Mahler (1795-1845). In 1839 Garnier sold a maximum-minimum thermometer to the Duke of Orléans and in 1844 he is known to have made a clock for Versailles (Allix, p. 423).