AN IMPORTANT SET OF FOUR GEORGE II SILVER TWO-LIGHT CANDELABRA
Property from the Estate of Benjamin F. Edwards III
AN IMPORTANT SET OF FOUR GEORGE II SILVER TWO-LIGHT CANDELABRA

MARK OF GEORGE WICKES, LONDON, 1733

Details
AN IMPORTANT SET OF FOUR GEORGE II SILVER TWO-LIGHT CANDELABRA
MARK OF GEORGE WICKES, LONDON, 1733
Each on a square base with incurved corners, cast and chased with shells and foliage, the octagonal baluster stems chased with panels of strapwork and masks, with detachable vase-shaped sockets, each with a pair of two-light branches of scroll form with female masks supporting the sockets, the central standard with a pinecone finial, the sockets removable to receive screw-in branches, the base engraved with a crest and an Earl's coronet, marked under bases and numbered 1-4 under bases and numbered 1-4 on stems of branches
14½ in. (36.8 cm.) high; 307 oz. (9,548 gr.) (4)
Provenance
St. Osyth's Priory, Mr. Somerset and Lady Juliet de Chair and the Trustees of the Fitzwilliam Settlement, sold
Christie's, London, 5 June 1984, lot 611
His Excellency Mohammed Al-Tajir, sold Christie's, New York, 19 October 2004, lot 1004
Literature
Christie's Review of the Season, 1984, p. 334
The Glory of the Goldsmith: Magnificent Gold and Silver from the Al-Tajir Collection, Christie's, 1989, p. 97, no. 67
Michael Clayton, Christie's Pictorial History of English and American Silver, 1985, p. 143, no. 4

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Lot Essay

The crest and coronet are those of the Earls Fitzwilliam, probably for William, 3rd Earl Fitzwilliam (1719-1756).

George Wickes was appointed Royal Goldsmith to Frederick, Prince of Wales in 1735. According to Elaine Barr, Wickes may have owed this royal warrant to Francis, Lord North (1704-1790), a long-time Wickes patron and Lord of the Bedchamber for the Prince. North is significant as he commissioned a pair of two-light candelabra of 1731 identical to the present lot.

North's candelabra are discussed and illustrated in Elaine Barr, George Wickes: Royal Goldsmith, 1698-1761, 1980, (fig. 90 and opp. p.1). They are engraved with the crest and motto of the Prince of Wales and likely were ordered to commemorate Lord North's appointment as Lord of the Bedchamber in 1730. Of exceptional quality, North's candlesticks and the present examples are also distinguished by their unusual construction. Barr notes "the whole of the upper part of the candlestick above the masks unscrews and is replaced by the branches which are so designed that they appear to be integral with the base." Like the present lot, North's candelabra also have unmarked branches.

This exceptional set of four candelabra presumably descended within the Fitzwilliam family until they were sold at auction by Lady Juliet de Chair, the only child of the 8th Earl Fitzwilliam. Indeed, William, 3rd Earl Fitzwilliam commissioned other pieces of silver from Wickes, including a pair of oval soup tureens and a pair of candlesticks of 1737. Like Lord North, he was connected within Court circles, serving as one of the pall bearers at the funeral of Frederick, Prince of Wales in 1751.

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