A PAIR OF EMPIRE ORMOLU AND PATINATED-BRONZE VASES
A PAIR OF EMPIRE ORMOLU AND PATINATED-BRONZE VASES

ATTRIBUTED TO CLAUDE GALLE, EARLY 19TH CENTURY

细节
A PAIR OF EMPIRE ORMOLU AND PATINATED-BRONZE VASES
ATTRIBUTED TO CLAUDE GALLE, EARLY 19TH CENTURY
Each stiff-leaf neck above an ovoid tapering body flanked by scrolled handles terminating in Bacchic masks and palmettes, on a spreading socle and white-veined black marble and ormolu base
14 ½ in. (37 cm.) high; 4 ¼ in. (11 cm.) wide

拍品专文

These vases' characteristic slender elongated shape is typical for the oeuvre of Claude Galle (1759-1815). Apprenticed to Pierre Foy during the later years of the reign of Louis XVI, Galle became a master in 1786. He flourished during the Empire, when he supplied bronzes to Compiègne, Versailles and the Grand Trianon, but also to various other courts in Europe. These present vases are related to Galle's 'maiden' vases and his popular series of ewers, examples of which remain at Pavlovsk, and which are illustrated in H. Ottomeyer & P. Pörschel, Vergoldete Bronzen, Münich, 1986, vol. I, figs. 5.12.6 and 5.12.9, pp. 364-365 and A. de Gourcuff (ed.), Pavlovsk: The Palace and the Park, Paris, 1993, p. 121.

更多来自 藏家尚品:欧洲家具、工艺精品及瓷器

查看全部
查看全部