Pair of covered bowls in agate and chased,... - Lot 54 - Coutau-Bégarie

Lot 54
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10000 - 15000 EUR
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Result : 21 840EUR
Pair of covered bowls in agate and chased,... - Lot 54 - Coutau-Bégarie
Pair of covered bowls in agate and chased, gilded and openwork bronze. The bowls are held on a tripod base, the uprights of which are topped with puffing putti in foliage ending in ram's paws. The bases of the bowls are adorned with a rosette of leaves, flowering and grained branches, connected by a central shaft, around which a snake twists, to a convex base. Porphyry counter base. The handles of the lids in pomegranate bursts and foliage. French work, late 18th century Height 25 cm - Diam. 12 cm (element to be reattached; trace of glue) The composition of our covered bowls is freely inspired by certain models of antique tripods that came back into fashion during the reign of Louis XVI, then during the first quarter of the 19th century. As early as 1765, an engraving of an antique tripod, also known as an Athenian, was published in France by Flippart under the name "La vertueuse athénienne". The tripod's legs end in ram's paws, and a snake twists between the base. Our pair of covered bowls can be compared with the work of Parisian bronze-maker Pierre Gouthière, who favored this type of "Etruscan-style" mounting for some of the pieces he created, in association with Joseph Bellanger, for the Duc d'Aumont, a famous Parisian collector. The Wallace Collection in London holds a tripod vase mounted by Gouthière that passed from the Duc d'Aumont's collection to that of Marie-Antoinette (N° F292; see F.J.B. Watson, The Wallace Collection, 1956, plate 56). Finally, a tripod vase attributed to Gouthière is preserved in English royal collections; it was delivered by the marchand-mercier Dominique Daguerre to George IV for Carlton House in the late 1780s or early in the following decade.
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