SOTHEBY’S. Londra, 4 luglio 2012
La Evening Sale della vendita “Treasures, Princely Taste” da Sotheby’s a Londra ha totalizzato £9,507,800 ($14,909,181). Collezionisti provenienti da tutto il mondo si sono contesi molti oggetti e mobili. Molti dei lotti in asta sono stati aggiudicati molto al di sopra delle stime I 39 lotti offerti in asta hanno realizzato £9,507,800 ( $14,909,181 / €11,837,193)
Mario Tavella, vicepresidente di Sotheby’s Europa ha commentato: “I brillanti risultati della serata rappresentano la conferma che la ricerca per la rarità e l’altissima qualità nel capo delle arti decorative non ha confini. Collezionisti europei, asiatici e mediorientali si sono dati battaglia per acquistare opere uniche e di antico lignaggio. Mi fa piacere sottolineare in particolar modo la vendita dei Vasi Medici, realizzati a Sèvres in un raro azzurro cielo studiato appositamente per Luigi XVI e Maria Antonietta per la decorazione della residenza di Rambouillet. (venduti a £ 1.777.250, € 1.929.747 triplicando la stima iniziale di £ 600.000). Sono lieto dell’ ottimo esito di quest’asta Treasures che è alla sua terza edizione”.
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SALE:
- The Sèvres vases, referenced above: the vases’ rare sky-blue colour was developed by Sèvres specifically for Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette for the decoration of the royal Rambouillet estate. The gilt-bronze mounts can be almost certainly attributed to Pierre-Philippe Thomire, who made pieces for Louis XVI’s bedchamber at Compiègne and for Marie-Antoinette’s apartments at Versailles.
- The “Elephant” Clock, referenced above: the magnificent automaton clock of a rare and impressive scale was most probably acquired by Naser al-Din Shah of Persia (1831–96) in London in the 1890s, and typifies the intriguing and inventive objects produced in London in the late 18th century for the Chinese market.
- Five exceptionally rare masterpieces of 16th and 17th century silver from a European princely family, which originally formed part of the collection of Fernando II, King of Portugal, realised a combined total of £1,053,850. The top lot of the group was a magnificent silver gilt flagon from the first half of the 16th century, which realised £565,250 – seven times its pre-sale estimate of £80,000.
- A pair of Chinese celadon Vases aux Tritons circa 1770 sold for a remarkable £577,250, nearly quadrupling its pre-sale low estimate of £150,000. The elegant pair of celadon vases with exquisite gilt-bronze mounts is extremely rare and highly desirable amongst collectors, and was acquired by the Rothschild family in the second half of the 19th century.
- A Swiss parcel-gilt silver drinking cup in the form of a lark, Nicholas Matthey, Neuchâtel, late 17th century, achieved £433,250, soaring above its estimates of £200,000-250,000. This ancestral drinking cup of the von Lerber family is in the form of a skylark, a charge of the family coat-of-arms and intended to be drunk from at guild festivities.
- A gilt-bronze and patinated-bronze ink stand by Juste-Aurèle Meissonnier, Louis XV, circa 1735, realised £361,250 against estimates of £200,000-300,000. This superb encrier is a perfect early example of the 18th century Rococo vogue, of which Meissonnier was a pioneering and influential figure.
- A chessboard with pagoda figurines and chess pieces in mother-of-pearl and aventurine glass circa 1720-30, realised £445,250, well in excess of its estimates of £200,000-300,000. The chessboard comes by repute from Frederick Augustus III (1750-1827), Elector of Saxony, who according to family tradition presented it as a gift to Comte Louis Gabriel du Buat-Nançay in 1772. The king and queen figures, in the form of seated Chinese men and made of white Meissen porcelain, reflect the enthusiasm for Chinoiseries and the exoticism of the East.