A GERMAN SILVERED, ORMOLU AND CUT-GLASS EIGHT-LIGHT CHANDELIER
PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT BRITISH COLLECTION
A GERMAN SILVERED, ORMOLU AND CUT-GLASS EIGHT-LIGHT CHANDELIER

LATE 18TH CENTURY

Details
A GERMAN SILVERED, ORMOLU AND CUT-GLASS EIGHT-LIGHT CHANDELIER
LATE 18TH CENTURY
Overall hung with facetted drops and beads, the pierced-scrolling corona above a chain-suspended ring issuing foliate-cast scrolled branches, minor losses to the glass ornaments

51 in. (130 cm.) high; 38 in. (97 cm.) diam.

Brought to you by

Sophie Mckinney
Sophie Mckinney

Lot Essay

An advertisement of the ‘Churfürstlich Sächsische Spiegelfabrik’ illustrating a slightly smaller, though constructionally closely related chandelier in the Leipzig ‘Journal des Luxus und der Moden’ in December 1797 allows an attribution of this spectacular example to the Dresden workshops.

Despite protectionist measures of many German courts at the time, particularly by the Prussian authorities, dictating the use of indigenous materials, this chandelier is fitted with Bohemian glass, which was widely considered to be of the highest quality. The chandeliers made around 1800 in specialized factories in Berlin (Werner & Mieth) and Dresden (Dresdner Spiegelmanufaktur) represent the pinnacle of the development of luxury goods in gilt bronze in Germany.

See K. Klappenbach, Kronleuchter, Berlin 2001, pp. 49, 74 (ill. 71), 102 and 359.

More from Noble & Private Collections Part I

View All
View All