A PAIR OF VICTORIAN SILVER-GILT TWO-LIGHT WALL-SCONCES
A PAIR OF VICTORIAN SILVER-GILT TWO-LIGHT WALL-SCONCES

MARK OF HARRY BRASTED, LONDON, 1898

Details
A PAIR OF VICTORIAN SILVER-GILT TWO-LIGHT WALL-SCONCES
MARK OF HARRY BRASTED, LONDON, 1898
Each wall-plate repoussé and chased with foliate scrolls and rocaille on a matted ground, the central oval cartouche engraved with a coat-of-arms, the candle arms with foliate socket, marked border
14 in. (36 cm.) high.
59 oz. 17 dwt. (1,861 gr.)

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Alasdair Young
Alasdair Young

Lot Essay

The arms are those of La Fontaine quartering Cart for Alfred Cart de la Fontaine. An antiquarian, he acquired Athelhampton House in Dorset in 1891. The house had originally been built for Sir William Martyn in about 1493 and went through various alterations and ownerships over the centuries, including a spell owned by Sir William’s son Nicholas who was to marry Margaret, sister to and a co-heiress of Nicholas Wadham, co-founder with his wife Dorothy of Wadham College, Oxford.

While owner of Athelhampton, de Lafontaine was to undertake a program of restoration as well as creating a dramatic garden inspired by the Renaissance. Thomas Hardy was known to be a regular visitor to the house as it is believed his father, a stonemason, spent time working there. It can be assumed that the present wall-sconces were commissioned as part of the internal works.

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