| 中文版 English

具体要求

其它要求

-
关闭
A PAIR OF REGENCY ORMOLU ICE PAILS BY BENJAMIN VULLIAMY, CIRCA 1810
纽约
2022年10月22日 开拍 / 2022年10月20日 截止委托
拍品描述
A PAIR OF REGENCY ORMOLU ICE PAILS
BY BENJAMIN VULLIAMY, CIRCA 1810
Each with applied grapevines within engraved laurel leaf banded borders punctuated by fully sculpted Bacchic masks, the oval bodies raised on spread-winged eagles on a stepped circular base, the central recess engraved with the arms of Thomas Anson, 1st Viscount Anson, the pail rims engraved 2 and 6, respectively, lacking wheatsheaf rims and liners, with printed and inscribed Ann and Gordon Getty Collection inventory label
10 in. (25.6 cm.) high, 7 3/4 in. (27.3 cm.) diameter

A PAIR OF REGENCY ORMOLU ICE PAILS BY BENJAMIN VULLIAMY, CIRCA 1810 Each with applied grapevines within engraved laurel leaf banded borders punctuated by fully sculpted Bacchic masks, the oval bodies raised on spread-winged eagles on a stepped circular base, the central recess engraved with the arms of Thomas Anson, 1st Viscount Anson, the pail rims engraved 2 and 6, respectively, lacking wheatsheaf rims and liners, with printed and inscribed Ann and Gordon Getty Collection inventory label 10 in. (25.6 cm.) high, 7 3/4 in. (27.3 cm.) diameter Two from a set of six pails originally commissioned by Thomas Anson, 1st Viscount Anson of Shugborough and Orgave from Benjamin Vulliamy in 1811 at a cost of £438 5s. 2d. for the six. Possibly sold by the 4th Earl of Lichfield, Shugborough; Christie's, London, 27 November 1941, lot 124 (a set of four described as Empire). Acquired from Partridge, London, by Ann and Gordon Getty in 1981. Vulliamy and Son, Shop ledger 34, Commencing 17 May 1809 and ending August 1814, p. 89. N. Goodison and R. Kern, Hotspur: Eighty Years of Antiques Dealing, London, 2004, pp. 256-7.
Lot Essay These impressive ormolu ice pails were part of a set of six supplied by Benjamin Vulliamy (1747-1811) in 1811 to Thomas, 1st Viscount Anson (1767-1818), for his principal seat, Shugborough, Staffordshire. They epitomize Vulliamy’s technical brilliance and commercial eye for designing coveted objects de luxe in the latest fashions to the British aristocracy. A late 17th century mansion, Shugborough was first significantly enlarged and remodeled in the 1740s but it was utterly transformed by Lord Anson as he realized his passion for the neoclassical aesthetic. He engaged the architect Samuel Wyatt to redesign the house which was soon filled with ancient sculpture, paintings, books and objects. Anson’s commission of the ice pails coincides with an expected visit by the Prince of Wales, which precipitated the redecoration of Shugborough’s dining-room into an Athenian banqueting saloon. The ice pails are designed in the French ‘antique’ taste promoted by the Prince of Wales and would have almost certainly been designed by Vulliamy himself. A skilled draftsman, Vulliamy created the designs in their entirety to show to prospective clients and would then supply detailed sketches to his network of craftsmen to execute. The entry for the ice pails in Vulliamy’s ledger no. 34 (preserved at the Public Record Office at Kew) reflects this aesthetic as it states: For making six very Magnificent Ice pails to correspond with the silver [illegible] Stand, The necks of the Ice Pails are ornamented with chased water Leaves and the bodies with a rich border of Vine Leaves and grapes and three highly chased Masks of Silenus taken from the Antique, the bodies of the pails are supported with three Eagles with their wings extended highly chased sitting on blockings placed on circular Base. The whole executed in the very best manner from original designs and Models amended and altered according to Lord Anson's directions and very strongly Gilt in chased burnished Gold at 500 gs per agreement Lord Anson’s son, the 2nd Viscount, was created 1st Earl of Lichfield in 1831 but his extravagant lifestyle and a weakness for gambling led to his financial ruin. The contents of Shugborough were put up for auction in 1842 and many of the furnishings were sold. However, the ice pails are noticeably missing from two Shugborough inventories of December 1841 and 12 February 1842 (D1798/H.M. Anson/44) before they mysteriously reappeared in a 1918 inventory of Shugborough. This gap could indicate they had been sent to another house or had perhaps been sold in a separate financial retrenchment and reclaimed by the 2nd Earl (d. 1892) in his endeavor to return the contents to the mansion. They were certainly back at the house by 1918 when they appear in the inventory (see Literature above). The set remained at Shugborough until four of them, which may include the present pair, were sold by The 4th Earl of Lichfield, removed from Shugborough, at Christie's, London, 27 November 1941, lot 124 (as ‘Empire ice pails…probably by Thomiere [sic]’) to ‘Staal’ for a substantial £231. A Christie’s valuation in 1958 indicates that all six had left the collection based on their appearance on a list of items extracted from the 1918 inventory ‘which are found to have been sold prior to December 1958 or which have been donated or stolen’. Further pairs with the Anson arms but including the wheatsheaf element were sold anonymously at Sotheby’s, London, 23 November 1979, lot 26, and from the collection of Jay Altmayer, Palmetto Hall; Christie's, New York, 19 January 2017, lot 59, subsequently with Ronald Phillips, London.

本场其它拍品

  • 竞价阶梯
  • 快递物流
  • 拍卖规则
  • 支付方式
竞价区间 加价幅度
0
10
100
50
500
100
1,000
200
2,000
250
5,000
500
10,000
1,000
20,000
2,000
50,000
5,000
100,000
10,000
+

价格信息

拍品估价:50,000 - 80,000 美元 起拍价格:50,000 美元  买家佣金:
落槌价 佣金比率
0 - 1,000,000 26.00% + VAT
1,000,000 - 6,000,000 20.00% + VAT
6,000,000 - 以上 14.50% + VAT

拍卖公司

Christie's
地址: 20 Rockefeller Plaza New York
电话: +1 212 636 2000
邮编: NY 10020
向卖家提问