View full screen - View 1 of Lot 213. TWO MATCHING GEORGE II SILVER CRUET STANDS, GEORGE WICKES, LONDON, 1742.

Property from an Important Southern Collection

TWO MATCHING GEORGE II SILVER CRUET STANDS, GEORGE WICKES, LONDON, 1742

Lot Closed

April 22, 03:51 PM GMT

Estimate

10,000 - 15,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from an Important Southern Collection

TWO MATCHING GEORGE II SILVER CRUET STANDS, GEORGE WICKES, LONDON, 1742


the octagonal bottle-holders pierced with interlaced foliage, with acanthus-capped scalework handles, the silver mounts of the cut-glass bottles engraved with shells, acanthus, and flowers, one pair with later lion crest below coronet, the other pair with later Moor-head crest below coronet

stands marked on bases and numbered and with scratch weights No 1 / 21=5 and No 2 / 21=5, the bottle mounts unmarked

42 oz excluding bottles

1306 g

length 6⅝ in.

Garrard & Co., Ltd., London, May and July 1980

Elaine Bair, George Wickes, Royal Goldsmith 1698-1761, p. 74, pl. 37 (one of the two), where she notes that a similar cruet stand was made by Paul de Lamerie in 1727, adding that “Wickes’s version is far more delicate: the piercing is exceptionally fine.”

The Moor head crest is that of the Earls of Annesley or the Earls of Mordaunt.