PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF FERDINAND AND ADELE BLOCH-BAUER This Viennese 18th Century porcelain clock comes from the renowned collection of the Austrian couple, Ferdinand and Adele Bloch-Bauer. The Bloch-Bauers were great patrons of the arts and they owned an extensive collection of Viennese classical porcelain, including a considerable number of rococo porcelain sculptures. A catalogue of the porcelain collection, consisting of about 230 items at the time, was published by Richard Ernst in 1925 under the title Wiener Porzellan des Klassizismus. Die Sammlung Bloch-Bauer. The Bloch-Bauers owned a castle, "Schlos-Jungfer", in Brezan (outside of Prague) and a palais on the Schillerplatz in Vienna. Ferdinand was a very prominent industrialist and longtime President of the "Friends of the Museum" in Austria, a prestigious function in the art world. Ferdinand and Adele Bloch-Bauer kept a 'salon' in their Vienna palais, frequented by politicians, intellectuals and artists. They were best known for their patronage of the artist Gustav Klimt and they owned seven of his most important paintings, which were all prominently hung as a Memorial Room following Adele's death to form a "Klimt gallery". Klimt painted two large portraits of Adele, and presumably used her as a model in his famous "Judith and Holofernes" pictures. In addition to the most important collection ever of classicistic Viennese porcelain of the Sorgenthal period, they also collected works by most other important Austrian artists of the 19th and early 20th century, including Peter Fendi, Ferdinand Georg Waldmueller, Josef Danhauser, and Jakob Schindler. Adele Bloch-Bauer died tragically young in 1925 of meningitis. Ferdinand fled Vienna immediately after the occupation of Austria through Germany in March, 1938: first he went to Brezan, Czechoslovakia and then found refuge in Zurich, Switzerland where he survived the war years and died in exile in November, 1945.
AN AUSTRIAN EARLY NEOCLASSIC PORCELAIN MANTEL CLOCK

VIENNA MANUFACTORY, MARKED TWICE WITH THE UNDERGLAZE BLUE FACTORY MARK OF A BEEHIVE AND TWICE WITH THE PAINTER'S MARK OF THREE DOTS, CIRCA 1770

成交价 美元 16,450
估价
美元 12,000 – 美元 18,000
估价不包括买家酬金。成交总额为下锤价加以买家酬金及扣除可适用之费用。
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AN AUSTRIAN EARLY NEOCLASSIC PORCELAIN MANTEL CLOCK

VIENNA MANUFACTORY, MARKED TWICE WITH THE UNDERGLAZE BLUE FACTORY MARK OF A BEEHIVE AND TWICE WITH THE PAINTER'S MARK OF THREE DOTS, CIRCA 1770

成交价 美元 16,450
 
成交价 美元 16,450
 
细节
AN AUSTRIAN EARLY NEOCLASSIC PORCELAIN MANTEL CLOCK
Vienna Manufactory, marked twice with the underglaze blue factory mark of a beehive and twice with the painter's mark of three dots, Circa 1770
The white enamelled dial with Arabic and Roman chapter rings and pierced hands signed Chles. Bertrand/A PARIS, behind a glazed door, within a ribbon-tied laurel and berry bezel, within a rectangular case on acanthus-sheathed scrolled feet surmounted by a panelled egg-and-leaf frieze set with a rosette at the center and a bucranium at each corner hung with laurel and berry swags, below a fluted column base with a ribbon-tied oak torus foot, the whole draped with a magenta cloth, the winged and bearded figure of Chronos seated on the left, a putto with an hour glass on the right, and two putti, one with a sun dial, the other with a plomb line on the grassy and rocky base, the back of the clock with trailing branches, on a rectangular base with laurel-filled pierced Vitruvian scroll decorated sides, each corner set with an oval seeded acanthus, on fluted and acanthus-sheathed capital feet, inscribed twice in blue grease pencil Ke. 7814/29.514, and bearing a paper label with the same inscription, the base apparently contemporary (see below)
66½in. (26.5cm.) high, 15¾in. (40cm.) wide, 12¼in. (31cm.) deep
来源
The Collection of Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer, either in Schloss Jungfer, Prague, or the Palais on the Schillerplatz, Vienna by 1938.
Purchased by the Museum für Angewändte Künst, Vienna, June 1941. Restituted to the heirs of Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer by the Republic of Austria in November 1999.
出版
Born, Wolfgang. 'Imperial Vienna Porcelain. The Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer Collection', The Connoisseur March 1936, pp. 130-31, fig. IV.
拍场告示
Please note the correct height for this piece should read 25½in. (64.8cm.).

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