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Results: Summer Fine Sale

19th July 2021.

The first day of Tennants Auctioneers’ Summer Fine Sale on 16th and 17th July opened to a strong start with a good selection of antique drinking glasses, including a small Private Collection of 18th century examples. Confident bidding resulted in top prices for a circa 1710 Large Wine Glass and a circa 1730 Glass Goblet, which sold for £3,000 plus buyer’s premium apiece. Glass was followed up with British and European Ceramics, highlights of which included a circa 1720 English Delft Posset Pot and Cover made in either London or Bristol, which sold for £1,500, and an Early 20th Century Wemyss Pottery Pig decorated with pink roses, which sold for £1,900.

Asian Art sold well throughout, with a host of bidders joining in the sale online and on the telephones from around the world. With the majority of the section selling above estimate, standout results included a Japanese Cloisonne Enamel Koro and Cover made by Namikawa Yasuyuki circa 1880-1890 that sold for £12,000, a Chinese Porcelain Rouleau Vase bearing the Chenghua reign mark but probably of the Kangxi period that sold for £5,500, and a Chinese Porcelain Jar of the Kangzi period that sold for £3,900.

The top lot of the sale, however, came on the second day of the sale, when a Pair of French Ormolu-Mounted, White Marble and Porphyry Candelabra signed Joan F.R. Lorta, Sculp., 1788 sold for £68,000.  Classical, robe-clad female figures representing Summer and Autumn bear aloft incense burners and candle arms lavishly garlanded with fruit and flowers, and the pair stand on 19th century octagonal marble pedestals. The figures are inspired by the famed Four Seasons candelabra made by sculptor Jean- François Lorta in 1788 for two of Louis XV’s daughters, Adelaïde and Victoire, to decorate the grand salon of the Château de Bellevue on the outskirts of Paris. The set were removed from the Chateau following the Revolution, and firstly resided in Empress Josephine’s salon in the Tuileries before being split up and housed in Fontainebleau and Versailles. The set was later reunited at the Louvre in the late 20th century, where they remain today.

Further highlights included a Pair of George III Carved Giltwood Girandoles, made in the 3rd quarter of the 18th century, which sold for £7,200, a Pair of Victorian mahogany and Ebony Strung Cabinets, mid-19th century, which sold for £5,200, and a Mahogany Triple Pillar Dining Table, 2nd quarter 19th century, which sold for £9,500.  A Victorian Brown Oak and Parcel Gilt Console Table, in the manner of William Kent sold for £5,000, and a matched lot comprising Late George III Satinwood, Tulipwood and Polychromed Neo-Classical Card Tables and Chairs sold for £8,500.

Also of note in the sale were an Italian Ebony and Ivory Inlaid Chess Board by Ferdinando Pogliani, circa 1880 that sol for £8,500, a Rare and Early Brass Striking Lantern Clock signed Richard Beck at Ye French Church, Londini, circa 1655 that sold for £5,000, and a Walnut Marquetry Eight Day Longcase Clock, signed Jos Foster, London, circa 1799 that sold for £5,000.

The sale achieved a total hammer price of £403,540 with an 86% sold rate for 471 lots.

 

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