Est. June 12th 2009 / Desde 12 de Junho de 2009

A daily stopover, where Time is written. A blog of Todo o Tempo do Mundo © / All a World on Time © universe. Apeadeiro onde o Tempo se escreve, diariamente. Um blog do universo Todo o Tempo do Mundo © All a World on Time ©)

quarta-feira, 13 de junho de 2012

Raro relógio de carruagem francês vai a leilão em Londres


Na próxima quarta-feira, 20 de Junho, a Bonhams leva a leilão, na sua sede, em Londres, um exemplar raro de relógio de carruagem, peça do século XIX, francesa, com escape de detent, indicação de dia, data e alarme, grande et petit sonnerie, assinado Berrolla Ainé.

As informações da leiloeira:

Jun 2012 2 p.m. London, New Bond Street Fine Clocks Auction 20100 132

A rare mid 19th century French 'Bubble' top grande sonnerie giant carriage clock with detent escapement Berrolla Ainé, Rue de la Tour 2 The gilt bronze case of rectangular section, surmounted by the glass dome and a spherical finial to each corner, over tapered freestanding columns, raised on a plinth base and four knurled feet, almost all surfaces engraved with profuse foliate scrolls and flowers, the signed 3.25 inch enamel Roman dial over a rectangular enamel subsidiary panel showing day, date and alarm, within the foliate engraved gilt bronze mask with three winding holes, the two train spring barrel movement with visible detent escapement housed beneath the glass dome displaying the engraved bridge with central jewel over the blued steel helical spring to a cut and compensated bimetallic balance with keystone shaped weights and timing screws, engraved barrels, strike/silent and grande/petite sonnerie selection levers striking the hours and quarters on two bells mounted on the foliate engraved backplate; together with the original leather covered travelling case with domed cover, tooled borders, brass hasps and handles (one lacking). 28cm (11in) high.

Estimate: £30,000 - 50,000 €38,000 - 63,000 US$ 47,000 - 78,000

Footnotes The Berrolla family are recorded as living in Paris' Rue de la Tour between 1850-1860. They showed their carriage clocks in the Paris Exposition of 1839 and the 'Rapport du Jury Central' noted that once again Berolla offered his own peculiar type of escapement. The Berollas exhibited carriage clocks at the London 1851 Exhibition and in 1857, the firm took out a fifteen year patent for a detent escapement for clocks.

Comparative literature: A similar example is illustrated in Derek Roberts' 'Carriage and other Travelling Clocks', (Schiffer 1993), pages 210-211, figures 13-5 a,b,c and d.

Provenance: This lot was bought from a London household that suffered bomb damage during the Second World War. The carrying case, stored in the attic was hit by schrapnel, thankfully the clock remained unscathed in a downstairs room.

A fine robust clock that is still ticking despite a bomb strike on the house in which it once stood will be sold in Bonhams Fine Clock sale on June 20th. Valued at £30,000 to £50,000, this trooper of a timekeeper has a story to tell. The clock survived the London Blitz in WWII despite an exploding bomb striking the top of the house. Shrapnel hit the clock's carrying case, stored in the attic, but thankfully this magnificent clock remained unscathed in a downstairs room. This rare mid 19th century French 'Bubble' top grande sonnerie giant carriage clock, built in gilt bronze with a glass dome, stands 11 inches tall.

The clock-making Berrolla family who lived in Paris' Rue de la Tour between 1850-1860 made and retailed this exquisite timepiece. They showed their carriage clocks in the Paris Exposition of 1839 and exhibited carriage clocks at the London Exhibition in 1851 and 1857.

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