A SOUTH ITALIAN MOTHER-OF-PEARL, GOLD AND SILVER-INLAID TORTOISESHELL 'PIQUE' DRESSING MIRROR
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A SOUTH ITALIAN MOTHER-OF-PEARL, GOLD AND SILVER-INLAID TORTOISESHELL 'PIQUE' DRESSING MIRROR

NAPLES, FIRST HALF-18TH CENTURY

細節
A SOUTH ITALIAN MOTHER-OF-PEARL, GOLD AND SILVER-INLAID TORTOISESHELL 'PIQUE' DRESSING MIRROR
NAPLES, FIRST HALF-18TH CENTURY
The oval mirror plate within an arched rectangular frame decorated with figures within scrolling foliate tendrils, decorated to the reverse with pastoral scenes possibly depicting Queen Maria Carolina of Naples, the base conformingly inlaid to all sides and fitted with a tortoiseshell-lined drawer on turned bun feet
25 in. (63.5 cm.) high; 19 in. (48 cm.) wide; 13 ½ in. (34.5 cm.) deep
注意事項
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer's premium.
拍場告示
Lot 422 is offered for sale without having been on view at Christie's King Street. Lot 422 is currently with Christie's New York awaiting a CITES licence for importation into the UK. A CITES export licence from the USA has already been granted, and the CITES import licence has been applied for.

拍品專文

This exquisite dressing-mirror is embellished with the finest inlays of gold, silver and mother-of-pearl. The courtly couple on the top immediately beneath the mirror probably depicts King Ferdinand IV and Queen Maria-Carolina of Naples, sister of Queen Marie Antoinette of France, both daughters of Maria Theresia of Austria. Married to Ferdinand IV, King of Naples and Sicily in 1768, Maria Carolina played and important role on the political stage, and together with her husband, was a great supporter of Reformist ideals.

The technique of inlaying tortoiseshell with mother-of-pearl, gold and silver probably originated in Naples towards the end of the 16th Century. Judging by the number of contemporary references to the Neapolitan piqué work and the surviving pieces which bear the signatures of Neapolitan craftsmen, Naples would seem to have been the centre of production, certainly for those pieces made in the 18th Century. Many references to piqué work can also be found in advertisements and sale catalogues of the 17th and 18th Centuries. In his catalogue The James A. de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor: Furniture, Clocks and Gilt Bronzes, London, 1974, II, p. 838, Sir Geoffrey de Bellaigue refers to the collection of 'picay' work formed by Queen Charlotte, consort of King George III, which included an inkstand and two snuffboxes, all later sold at Christie's London, 18 May 1819, lot 30; 25 May 1819, lot 67 and 26 May 1819, lot 17.
Sir Robert Adam is recorded as having bought three 'very handsome snuff-boxes of yellow and black tortoise-shell studded with gold' on a visit to Naples in 1755 (see J. Fleming, Robert Adam and his Circle, London, 1962, p. 157) and in a letter dated 1771 Lady Anne Miller refers to a comb bought while in Naples (Lady Anne Miller, Letters from Italy, London, 1776, III, p. 243-244, see de Bellaigue, op. cit. p. 838):
'... this city (Naples) is famous for a manufacture in tortoiseshell, which they inlay curiously with gold, and are very ingenious at representing any object you choose. I have had a comb made for my chignon incrusted with gold, to imitate an Etruscan border, copied from an antique vase, which is so well done, that we have bespoke several other articles..'.

Dressing mirrors in piqué are exceptionally rare, one other example reputedly surviving in the Danish Royal Collections at Rosenborg Castle.