Important tripartite regulator in violet wood veneer, violon - Lot 69

Lot 69
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Estimation :
20000 - 30000 EUR
Important tripartite regulator in violet wood veneer, violon - Lot 69
Important tripartite regulator in violet wood veneer, violonné form, rich rocaille trim in finely chased and gilded bronze. It stands on a plinth. The movement features triple gongs for the quarter and half hours. The ormolu skeleton dial features enameled hour markers with Roman numerals for the hours and Arabic numerals for the minutes. (missing index 40) the openwork center showing a serrated wheel engraved with indications of the days of the month, only the odd days numbered in Arabic numerals, and signed Alexandre Robert. Louis XV period, circa 1765/70 Height : 237 cm - Width : 71.5 cm - Depth : 40 cm Alexandre Robert, clockmaker Maitre 1767, rue Saint Honoré. Provenance: Former Roig Chenel collection, purchased December 27, 1998. A similar case in ebony veneer, reproduced in Pierre Kjellberg. Encyclopédie de la pendule française. p. 157. Fig B. Appearing from the end of the 17th century, this type of large parquet clock is usually referred to as a regulator because of the precision of its pendulum, designed to control the effects of expansion due to temperature variations. The cases of these monumental clocks are made by cabinetmakers, and several Régence-style models are attributed to Charles Cressent. The Louis XV regulators are stamped with famous names such as Nicolas Jean Marchand, Balthazar Lieutaud, Antoine Foullet and François Duhamel. François Duhamel, who seem to have made them their specialties.
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