Details
Circular box of tortoiseshell, inlaid all over in vari-colour gold and mother-of-pearl piqué-posé in a peacock feather and star pattern, the cover set with a watercolour miniature on card or vellum of a landscape after Joseph Vernet
3 1/8 in. (80 mm.) diameter
Provenance
The Hon. William Frederick Barton Massey-Mainwaring (1845-1907),
Massey-Mainwaring Collection; Christie's, London, 14 March 1907, lot 468.
with Frank Partridge, London, 15th July 1943,
Albert Marber (1900-1960), then by descent.
The Late Albert Marber; Christie's, London, 8-22 September 2022.
Brought to you by
Benjamin BerryHead of Sale, Associate Specialist
A Christie's specialist may contact you to discuss this lot or to notify you if the condition changes prior to the sale.

Lot Essay

The miniature set on the cover is a view of Tivoli after one of Joseph Vernet (1714-1789) most celebrated paintings for François de Régny (1706-1779), French Consul in Genoa. This painting was later engraved by Pietro Martini (1738-1797) in the 1770s (see L. Lagrange, Joseph Vernet et la peinture au XVIIIème siècle, with the texts from the Livres de raison and some other unpublished documents, Paris 1864, p. 475) and given the imagined title: View of Spoleto.
Vernet became the reference point throughout Europe for landscape and marine paintings sought after by wealthy European collectors. This View of Tivoli was without question one of the most striking examples of his mature work and was painted when he was at the peak of his career, in 1753.
Tivoli became one of the most depicted sites favoured by 18th century painters and by visitors on the Grand Tour.

View of Spoleto, engraving after Joseph Vernet (French, Avignon 1714–1789 Paris) by Pietro Antonio Martini (Italian, Trescali 1738-1797 Parma) circa 1770 © The Metropolitan Museum, New York.

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