Lot 81
Lot 81
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer....
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PROPERTY OF A NOBLEMAN
A GEORGE II SILVER COFFEE-POT

MARK OF PAUL DE LAMERIE, LONDON, 1744

Price Realised GBP 25,200
Estimate
GBP 30,000 - GBP 50,000
Estimates do not reflect the final hammer price and do not include buyer's premium, any applicable taxes or artist's resale right. Please see the Conditions of Sale for full details.
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A GEORGE II SILVER COFFEE-POT

MARK OF PAUL DE LAMERIE, LONDON, 1744

Price Realised GBP 25,200
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Price Realised GBP 25,200
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  • Lot Essay
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Details
Tapering cylindrical and on spreading foot, the body chased at the rim with flower and foliage swags on a textured ground and below rocaille, the lower body chased with flower and foliage scrolls, the curved spout capped with a shell and with applied flower and foliage motifs and a lizard, the top handle junction applied with a lion's mask, the hinged cover with pinecone finial, engraved with a coat-of-arms, marked near handle, under base and on cover bezel, the base further engraved with a scratchweight '29*9'
8 7/8 in. (22.4 cm.) high
30 oz. 3 dwt. (938 gr.) gross
The arms are those of Leighton impaling Pinfold for Lt. General Francis Leighton (1696-1773), and his wife Renea, daughter of Colonel Charles Pinfold, Governor of Barbados. Francis was the fourth son of Sir Edward Leighton 1st Bt. (d.1711).
Provenance
Francis Leighton (1696-1773).
A European Collector; Christie's, London, 12 July 1983, lot 176.
with Spink and Sons, Ltd., London, 1985.
A Private Collection; Sotheby's, New York, 7 April, 1987, lot 160.
Literature
Country Life, 'Spink and Son Ltd. advertisement', vol. 178, issue 4595, 12 September 1985, p. 89.
M. Clayton, Christie's Pictorial History of English and American Silver, Oxford, 1985, pp. 150-151, fig. 1.
Special notice
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
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Lot Essay

Paul de Lamerie
Paul de Lamerie is rightly seen as the greatest silversmith working in Britain in the 18th century; his works have been prized above all others for the last two hundred and fifty years. His obituary published in the London Evening Post following his death in 1751 celebrated him for being 'famous in making fine ornamental plate'. When the names of other silversmiths were forgotten his lived on, his work inspiring the silversmiths of the rococo revival in the early 19th century and being widely coveted by leading silver collectors since the 19th century. When Christie's sold the magnificent silver collection of the late Duke of Sussex (1773-1843), sixth son of King George III, in 1843, the description of a tea urn was ornamented with the note that it was 'in the beautiful taste of Paul L'Emery'.

His work was the subject of a monograph by P. A. S. Phillips published in 1935 and a ground-breaking exhibition dedicated to his work at the Goldsmiths' Hall, London in 1990. The research for the 1990 exhibition catalogue and subsequent work by Ellenor Alcorn, late of the Metropolitan Museum, New York and now Chair and Curator of European Decorative Arts at the Art Institute of Chicago, the art historian and silversmith Ubaldo Vitali and the author and art historian Maureen Cassidy-Geiger for the Cahn Collection catalogue, and many others has resulted in a wealth of information and analysis of the master and his work.

In common with a number of the greatest and most inventive silversmiths working in London in the 18th century Lamerie was of French Huguenot parentage. He was apprenticed to the fellow Huguenot, Pierre Platel, of Pall Mall in 1703, becoming free of his master in 1711. Within six years he was being described as 'the King's Silversmith'. He was admitted into the Livery of the Company in 1717. During his long career Lamerie supplied many of the powerful aristocrats of the time but the international nature of London and the wealth of its merchant class is attested by the many commissions he received from rich London based traders.

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