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RICHARD REDDING ANTIQUES

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An important Louis XVI gilt bronze mounted Sèvres beau bleu porcelain lyre clock of eight day duration with extremely fine enamel work by Joseph Coteau and movement by Dieudonné Kinable, signed on the white enamel dial Kinable à Paris and also signed Coteau below 6 o'clock and also signed and dated on the dial reverse Coteau 1796, the dial with a Roman chapter ring and inner Arabic numerals for the 31 days of the month with outer calendar ring with the names and numbers of the days in each month surrounded by exquisite polychrome painted vignettes representing the twelve signs of the zodiac set within gilded lozenges with delicately jewelled designs between, with a very fine pair of pierced gilt brass hands for the hours and minutes and blued steel pointers for the calendar indications. The movement with pin wheel escapement, striking on the hour and half hour, with outside count wheel. The beautiful lyre-shaped case with beaded gilt bronze borders and an applied gilded laurel wreath, surmounted by a fine gilt bronze Apollo mask within a sunburst above a pair of rosettes from which suspend fruiting swags, with a five rod gridiron pendulum with a free-swinging gilt beaded and paste brilliants ring surrounding the dial, on an stepped elliptical pedestal hung with floral garlands and mounted with rope-twist and beaded borders on bun feet Paris, dated 1796 Height 62 cm, width 27 cm, depth 16 cm. Provenance: Christie's New York, 17th December 1986, lot 507. Lily and Edmond J. Safra. Literature: Cedric Jagger, 'Royal Clocks' 1983, p. 130, pl. 176, illustrating a very similar Sèvres beau bleu lyre clock with movement by Kinable and dial by Dubuisson; and p. 131, pl. 178, illustrating another almost identical clock with movement by Jean-Antoine Garrigues, both in the British al Collection. Pierre Verlet, 'Les Bronzes Doré Français du XVIIIe Siècle' 1987, p. 41, illustrating a Sèvres beau bleu lyre clock of 1787 with enamel work by Joseph Coteau, originally at Versailles and now in the Musée du Louvre. Tardy, 'Les Plus Belles Pendules Françaises', 1994, p. 81, illustrating a very similar Sèvres lyre clock with mounts by Duplessis, movement by Kinable and dial by Coteau in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Jean-Dominique Augarde, 'Les Ouvriers du Temps', 1996, p. 258, pl. 203, illustrating a very similar beau bleu Sèvres lyre clock with movement by Garrigues and dial attributed to Coteau probably made for the duc d'Orléans. Pierre Kjellberg, 'Encyclopédie de la Pendule Française du Moyen Age au XXe Siècle'97, p. 230, pl. A, illustrating a similar bleu turquoise Sères porcelain lyre clock with movement by Kinable and pl. B, illustrating another very similar beau bleu Sèvres lyre clock with movement by Garrigues and equally beautiful Coteau dial, in the Musé de Sères. Elke Niehäer, 'ie Französische Bronzeuhr' 1997, p. 261, pls. 1256-1259, illustrating variations of the present model. The Sèvres Royal Porcelain Factory began producing lyre clocks from about 1785 although the case shape dates much earlier when in 1724 Jacques Thuret supplied a clock with a carved gilt wood lyre-shaped case to the Académie Française. However, it was not until the later part of the century that such clocks became really fashionable, as one of a number of decorative cases inspired by antiquity. Sèvres produced these models in a variety of colours, from green and pink but those in bleu turquoise and bleu bleu (formerly known as bleu nouveau) proved the most popular. In 1786 Louis XVI purchased a pair of blue-ground lyre clocks for 384 livres. One of them may have been the same as the clock described in an 1787 inventory, which fitted with a movement by Courieult and dial by Joseph Coteau is now in the Musée du Louvre. It was valued at 192 livres (exactly half the price paid for the pair the previous year) and was thus slightly more expensive than others that sold at this period, the higher value most probably being on account of the richly enamelled dial for which Joseph Coteau was renowned. The Parisian clockmaker Dieudonné Kinable (fl. 1780-1825) was one of the more important makers to be associated with such clocks and was in fact the largest buyer of Sèvres lyre cases to the extent that between 1795 and 1797 he purchased 13 such models and by 1806 had purchased 14 other cases from the factory. Based at Palais Royal no 131, Kinable also specialised in skeleton clocks, many of which were also housed in elaborate enamelled cases and boasted dials supplied by the two leading enamellists Etienne Gobin, known as Dubuisson (b. 1731 d. after 1815) and Joseph Coteau (1740-1801). Coteau originated from Geneva but worked primarily in Paris, where he was established in rue Poupé, St. André des Arts and was received as a mâitre in 1778. In 1780 he was appointed Peintre-Emailleur du roi et de la Manufacture Royale de Sèvres Porcelain and for the next four years did piece-work there while also working independently in Paris as a flower painter, specializing in enamelling watchcases and clock dials. By 1784 he had fallen out with Sèvres and thereafter worked as an independent enamellist supplying the very finest dials, plaques and even fully decorated enamel cases to other leading Parisian clockmakers. Of particular interest is the date 1796 on the back of the dial, denoting the year that Coteau completed it although the case itself was probably made a decade before. Such clocks took many years to finish; in this instance Kinable would have bought the case from Sèvres several years before but not necessarily have assembled all the parts until later on, most probably when he had found a suitable client. By 1796 the Revolution was still in full force and although many dials made at this period showed the new decimal Republican time system it is interesting that Coteau's dial features the Gregorian calendar with its 31 days as opposed to 30 days of the month.
 

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RICHARD REDDING ANTIQUES
Dorfstrasse 30
8322 Gündisau, Switzerland,

tel +41 44 212 00 14
mobile + 41 79 333 40 19
fax +41 44 212 14 10

redding@reddingantiques.ch
Exhibitor at TEFAF, Maastricht
Member of the Swiss Antique Association
Founding Member of the Horological Foundation

Art Research: 
Alice Munro Faure, B.Ed. (Cantab),
Kent/GB, alice@munro-faure.co.uk

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