Late 19th Century Gilt Bronze and Jeweled Sèvres Style Mantel Clock
Item # 8793
Late 19th Century Gilt Bronze and Jeweled Sèvres Style Mantel Clock
Surmounted by a gilt-decorated vase with twin mermaid-cast handles, the vase painted with a figure of Venus and her attendant, raised on a rectangular pedestal centred on the front with a circular dial painted with cloud-borne sides each with a porcelain plaque painted with tropies within a swagged encadrement, on porcelain toupie feet.
In late 1739 – early 1740 the Sèvres Porcelain Factory opened in the Royal Château of Vincennes, Sixteen years later in 1756 the factory moved to the village of Sèvres located outside of Paris and in route to Louis XV’s Palace of Versailles where it became the preeminent porcelain manufacturer in Europe. When the company ran into financial difficulties, the King who had become an avid client bought out the shareholders and became the sole owner. The factory remained in the royal family until it was nationalized following the French Revolution.
The range of objects produced in the first half of the nineteenth century was enormous, as were the types of decoration that they employed. The Sèvres factory produced ninety-two new designs for vases. The factory is still in production today.
Details:
Height – 22 inches / 56cm
Width – 11 inches / 28cm
Depth – 8 inches / 20cm