A PAIR OF ROYAL LOUIS-PHILIPPE ORMOLU SEVEN-BRANCH CANDELABRA
A PAIR OF ROYAL LOUIS-PHILIPPE ORMOLU SEVEN-BRANCH CANDELABRA

CIRCA 1830

细节
A PAIR OF ROYAL LOUIS-PHILIPPE ORMOLU SEVEN-BRANCH CANDELABRA
CIRCA 1830
Each with a foliate-cast spreading shaft issuing scrolled branches with circular drip-pans and nozzles and a central foliate-wrapped stem, above a stepped square plinth base centred with musical and martial attributes set within foliate wreaths, each stamped 'L.P.' beneath a crown and 'N' and respectively with inventory numbers '11068' and '11069'
37¼ in. (94.5 cm.) high (2)
来源
Supplied to Louis-Philippe circa 1830 for the château de Neuilly.

荣誉呈献

Shari Kashani
Shari Kashani

查阅状况报告或联络我们查询更多拍品资料

登入
浏览状况报告

拍品专文

These candelabra were most probably commissioned soon after Louis-Philippe's ascent to the throne in 1830, possibly after designs by the architect Pierre François Léonard Fontaine.

The château de Neuilly was originally built for Marc Pierre de Voyer d'Argenson. Early in the 19th century it belonged to Joachim Murat, one of Napoleon's most distinguished generals who married Napoleon's youngest sister Caroline. When Murat was made the King of Naples in 1808, the château de Neuilly, together with its contents, passed on to his sister-in-law Pauline, Princesse Borghese.

In 1818 the duc d'Orléans, later Louis-Phillipe of France (1773-1850), bought the château and commissioned the architect Fontaine to refurbish it. The château was eventually destroyed in 1848.

Related models with inventory numbers from the château de Neuilly sold at auction, include a pair with a crowned 'LP' stamp with inventory numbers 23492 and 23488, sold Christie's, New York, 21 May 1996, lot 252 and a similarly stamped pair with inventory number 23498, sold Sotheby's, New York, 24 May 2007, lot 21 ($57,000 including premium).