AN IMPORTANT LOUIS XVI ENAMELLED THREE-COLOUR GOLD SNUFF-BOX SET WITH AN ENAMEL PLAQUE
PROPERTY OF A NOBLE FAMILY
AN IMPORTANT LOUIS XVI ENAMELLED THREE-COLOUR GOLD SNUFF-BOX SET WITH AN ENAMEL PLAQUE

BY CHARLES LE BASTIER (FL. 1754-1783), MARKED, PARIS, 1776/1777, WITH THE CHARGE AND DISCHARGE MARKS OF JEAN-BAPTISTE FOUACHE 1774-1780, THE INTERIOR STRUCK WITH INVENTORY NO. 826

Details
AN IMPORTANT LOUIS XVI ENAMELLED THREE-COLOUR GOLD SNUFF-BOX SET WITH AN ENAMEL PLAQUE
BY CHARLES LE BASTIER (FL. 1754-1783), MARKED, PARIS, 1776/1777, WITH THE CHARGE AND DISCHARGE MARKS OF JEAN-BAPTISTE FOUACHE 1774-1780, THE INTERIOR STRUCK WITH INVENTORY NO. 826
oval box, the cover, base and four side panels enamelled in translucent golden-yellow on an engine-turned peaked ground, within reeded gold and opaque white enamel borders, the cover centred with an oval enamel miniature of a classical scene depicting Venus, Cupid and Diana the Huntress, within a bright-cut and a laurel wreath border, the outer borders with gold bands of husks alternating with flowers, the side rim of cover and side pilasters applied with gold roundels of varying size on a sablé ground, in hinged green shagreen case lined with red plush
3 1/8 in. (80 mm.) wide (2)
Provenance
Presented by the Dutch States-General in 1784 to an ancestor of the present owner as a gift to thank him for his assistance in preserving Dutch Geldern and Zutphen from inundation after the breaching of a dam on the Rhine.
Thence by family descent to the present owner.

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Lot Essay

Charles Le Bastier was renowned for his lavish boxes and was one of the principal goldsmiths of both the Louis XV and Louis XVI periods. Le Bastier attained the maîtrise in 1754, when he was sponsored by Jean Moynat. He worked for Garand and Granchez of the Petit Dunkerque and established his own shop on the rue Thévenot where he worked until his death in 1783. By 1774 Le Bastier had risen to the prominent rank of ninth in his guild (S. Grandjean et al., Gold Boxes and Miniatures of the Eighteenth Century, The James A. de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor, London, 1975, p. 330).

The international appeal of Le Bastier's work is evinced by his trade card which was printed in both French and English with the words 'Le Bastier "Makes and Sells Alls [sic] sorts of Golden Boxes and others - toys in the Newest fashion"' (H. and S. Berry-Hill, Antique Gold Boxes: Their Lore and Their Lure, London, 1960, p. 202).
For a discussion on Le Bastier's mark, see S. Grandjean et al., op. cit., pp. 146-147. The Louvre owns thirteen boxes by this maker (see S. Grandjean, Les tabatières du musée du Louvre, Paris, 1981, pp. 121-128, nos. 138-150). Further examples of his work can be found in The Gilbert Collection on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum and The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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