Lot 59
Lot 59
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE INDIVIDUAL
A SET OF FOUR WILLIAM AND MARY SILVER CANDLESTICKS

POSSIBLY MARK OF DAVID WILLAUME I, LONDON, 1701

Price Realised USD 10,710
Estimate
USD 7,000 - USD 10,000
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A SET OF FOUR WILLIAM AND MARY SILVER CANDLESTICKS

POSSIBLY MARK OF DAVID WILLAUME I, LONDON, 1701

Price Realised USD 10,710
Price Realised USD 10,710
Details
Each with circular bases cast with leaf tips and darts, the wells rising to fluted tapering cylindrical stems with lobed shoulders, topped by banded cylindrical sconces cast with leaf tips, the undersides with scratch weights 14 - 1, 14 - 3, and 13 - 4 1/2, marked on undersides
612 in. (16.5 cm.) high
52 oz. 14 dwt. (1,639 gr.)
Provenance
William Bateman (1695-1744), later created in 1st Viscount Bateman in 1725, to his son,
John, 2nd Viscount Bateman (1721-1802) to his cousin,
William Hanbury (d.1807), of Kelmarsh, co, Northampton and Shobdon Court, Shropshire, to his son,
William, Bateman-Hanbury, 1st Baron Bateman of Shobdon (1780-1845), by descent to,
William, 3rd Baron Bateman of Shobdon (1856-1931).
Part of the Bateman-Hanbury Heirlooms, sold by direction of the Rt. Hon. Lord Bateman; Christie's, London, 7 July 1926, lot 79, a set of ten (£418 to Harman).
A Lady of Title [Lady Bateman]; Christie's, London, 22 June 1937, lot 102.
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Lot Essay

William Bateman's father Sir James Bateman had been Lord Mayor of London 1716-17 and Sub-Governor of the South Sea Company. Bateman travelled extensively on the Continent buying paintings and sculptures. He visited Venice, Padua and Rome in 1718. Alexander Gordon acted as agent for him in Naples, where he acquired a statue of Mercury. Bateman was raised to the Peerage of Ireland in 1725 as Baron Culmore and Viscount Bateman. He ordered quantities of silver while in Paris. On his return to England he married in 1720 as recorded by the arms engraved on these candlesticks. Conceived in the French style, they possibly copy originals by the Paris silversmith Nicholas Besnier. In 1731 he was made a Knight of the Bath. On his death the title passed to his eldest son John, 2nd Viscount Bateman (d.1802) who married Elizabeth, daughter and co-heir of John Sambroke. They had no children and the title became extinct, the estate passing to a cousin.

A pair of candlesticks by Besnier, Paris, 1724, also engraved with the arms of Bateman and Spencer were sold Christie's, New York, 15 October 1985, lot 51. The set of six candlesticks dated 1720 from the set of ten first sold in 1926 entered the collection of Walter P. Chrysler Jr. (1875-1940), and were sold from the Chrysler Collection at Parke Bernet in New York on 18 October 1956, lot 108. They were sold again at Christie’s London on 26 November 2014, lot 510.

Arthur Grimwade states 'There can be no doubt, on evidence of his surviving work, that Willaume enjoyed the patronage of the wealthiest clients in England from the latter part of the reign of William III to the end of George I's reign' (London Goldsmiths 1697-1837: Their Marks and Lives, London, 1982, p. 704). David Willaume I (1658 - 1741) was born in Metz, France to goldsmith Adam Willaume, from whom he likely learned his trade. Willaume is recorded as being in London by 1687, with his first mark as a largeworker entered in 1697. His work continued until about 1728 at which point he was succeeded by his son David Willaume II.

Comparative Image: Carle van Loo, Portrait of a Gentleman Traditionally Identified as 1st Viscount Bateman, oil on canvas, circa 1740. Sold Christie's, South Kensington, 8 July 2011, lot 47.
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