A GEORGE II GOLD SNUFF-BOX
A GEORGE II GOLD SNUFF-BOX

BY FRANCIS HARACHE (FL. (1738-1754), MARKED, LONDON, 1753

细节
A GEORGE II GOLD SNUFF-BOX
BY FRANCIS HARACHE (FL. (1738-1754), MARKED, LONDON, 1753
cartouche-shaped box, the cover boldly chased with Venus restraining Aeneas from killing Helen of Troy within an elaborately chased rococo surround, the bombé sides applied and chased with hounds and cranes within scrolling foliage and hung with flower garlands all on a sablé ground, the base chased with two geese in a farmyard defending their goslings from an approaching hound, reeded gold borders with slightly raised scroll thumbpiece
3 in. (72 mm.) wide
5 oz. (156 gr.)
The scene on the base is after the etching by Francis Barlow 1626-1704 from Various Birds and Beasts Drawn from the Life, Wilde Goose; Goose; Gosling; Magpye

来源
Sotheby's, London, 9 December 1963, lot 133.
Sotheby's, London, 10 June 1974, lot 47.
出版
Richard Edgcumbe, The Art of the Gold Chaser in 18th Century London, Oxford, 2000, p.56, discusses a box with a very similar scene in the Rijksmuseum (RBK 1968-64), and discusses the present box (footnote 13) stating that the chasing is probably by Hamond or Burges.
C. Le Corbeiller, European and American Snuff-boxes 1730-1830, London, 1966, pl. 280.
拍场告示
Lots 242-244 are property from a private collection.

荣誉呈献

Matilda Burn
Matilda Burn

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拍品专文

Francis Harrache is known to have entered a smallworker's mark as 'Silversmith att ye Seven Dyals in great St. Andrew Street att ye Blackmoors head St. Gilses' on February 16, 1737/1738 (Goldsmiths' Hall Registers Vol. A1 Smallworkers, p. 26) and is recorded at that address by Heal as 'silversmith and toyman' from 1732-1758 (The London Goldsmiths 1200-1800 A Record of the Names and Addresses of the Craftsmen their Shop-signs and Trade-cards, Newton Abbot, 1972, p. 164). The Poor Rate Books for the parish St Giles record Francis Harrache as a ratepayer in Great St Andrew Street from 1741/42-1753 when the house was taken over by the watchcase maker James Freshfield. Harrache is then recorded as a ratepayer in the neighbouring Little Earl Street from 1754 until his death in 1757. Harrache was one of the most prolific manufactures of chased snuff-boxes in silver, silver-gilt and gold during the middle decades of the century. His workshop also specialised in cast foliate teaspoons and sugar-nips, of which a set in gold can be seen in the Gilbert Collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum. He was buried, alongside nine of his children, in Paddington Churchyard on 23 August, 1757.
The present box is illustrated in C. Le Corbeiller, European and American Snuff-Boxes 1730-1830, London, 1966, pl. 280.

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