A French Empire mid-19th century marble and gilt brass mounted clock garniture having an eight-day duration movement striking the hours and half-hours on a bell, the cream enamel dial with Arabic numerals with engraved & pierced gilt-brass hands, the case of architectural pagoda form, surmounted by a floral spray and applied frieze decoration, within four marble columns and square plinth base, all standing on gilt-brass feet, together with a pair of matching vases with gilt metal floral spray decoration, standing on square bases. H40, W19, D11cm. (3) With pendulum and key.
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J. Bernard, Montlucon, a 19th century French cream variegated marble and ormolu clock garniture, the white enamel dial with floral garland and Arabic numerals, raised on six columns, sunburst pendulum, the movement by C.H., Paris, striking the hours and half on a bell, together with a matching pair of urns, clock 42 x 28cm.
A 19th century French gilt brass mantel clock, the white enamel dial with a floral garland, with a winged cherub playing harp, 23cm. The glass is missing from the bezel.The movement winds, sets and is ticking. No visible damage or repairs, showing only age related wear & tear including tarnishing and rubbing to the surfaces
A German Art Nouveau silver and enamel sinuous pendant, stamped 950 and M.B.C. 33 x 29mm, a silver and enamel floral brooch, by A H Darby & Sons, Birmingham 1944, a silver and enamel dragonfly brooch, by Charles Horner, Chester 1910 and a sterling silver and enamel ring, size K 1/2. Slight loss of enamel to the tip of one of the dragonfly’s wings (see picture)Tiny loss of enamel to one edge of the ring.No other damage or repairsWould benefit from a good clean
A Jaeger LeCoultre Atmos clock, the glass and brass case with green enamel highlights and corner columns, enclosing the gilt brass movement and white enamelled dial with Roman numerals and large balance wheel with spirit level below, raised on a green veined marble base, the 13-jewel movement numbered 540, with original instructions booklet 24cm high x 21cm wide.
After William Strutt - Edwardian large printed engraving depicting two hooded Benedictine monks on a see-saw with a crowd of monks behind laughing with them. Produced by Louis Wolff & Co. dated 1902, hand coloured with watercolour and signed to lower left hand corner William Strutt. Presented in a hammered / planished copper framed with blue / teal enamel painted ceramic insets to the corner in the style of Archibald Knox & Co., repousse text to the bottom of frame reading 'Religion Never Was Designed to Make Our Pleasures Less', featuring the lyrics from hymn 'Marching to Zion' by Isaac Watts. Measures 84cm x 61cm with frame, 66cm X 49.5cm approx.
A late 19th century Russian enamel Khodynka cup made for the coronation of Tsar Nicholas II & Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna, 1896, bearing Imperial Romanov eagle and cyphers of both Nicholas and Alexandra. Some rusting to base & few chips to enamel. Wear commensurate with age. Measures approx. 10cm tall x 9cm in diameter.
A 19th century French ormolu gilt metal mantel clock having an detailed moulded gilt figure of countryman with horse and bird alongside a a barn shaped cylinder clock face. Raised on an intricate foliate shaped base. White enamel clock face with Roman numeral chapter ring having an an 8-day movement. With two pendulums. Measures approximately 35 x 45cm.
A Cased Set of Six Danish Silver-Gilt and Enamel Coffee-Spoons, by Georg Jensen, Copenhagen, After 1945, the handles with vari-colour enamel, in fitted case, the case 18cm wide; Together With a cased set of six Norwegian silver-gilt and enamel coffee-spoons, by David Andersen and a cased set of six Elizabeth II silver and enamel coffee-spoons (qty)
A First World War Period Military Black Enamel Dial Wristwatch, nickel plated case with an engraved back cover Broad Arrow and numbered 96366M, together with A Silver Cushion Shaped Wristwatch, case with London import silver hallmark for 1916, and with A ATP Military Wristwatch, case back engraved with Broad Arrow and ATP, (3)
A Small Quantity of Jewellery, comprising of a pair of garnet drop earrings, with post fittings; a pair of enamel drop earrings, with hook fittings; an enamel brooch; and a turquoise pendant (a.f.)Garnet earrings- 1.6 grams. Enamel earrings - 9.8 grams. Brooch - 10.7 grams. Pendant - 1.1 grams
Nikos Engonopoulos (Greek, 1907-1985)Trois philosophes signé en grec et daté '37' (en bas à droite)huile sur toile106 x 93cm (41 3/4 x 36 5/8in).Peint en 1937.signed in Greek and dated (lower right) oil on canvasFootnotes:ProvenanceThe Artist's Estate.Private collection, Athens.ExpositionsAthens, Nicolas Calas residence, Exhibition of Paintings by Nikos Engonopoulos, 1939 (possibly).Venice, XXVII Esposizione Biennale Internationale d'Arte, Greek Pavilion, Nikos Engonopoulos, June 19 - October 17, 1954, no. 2 (listed in the exhibition catalogue, p. 294).Sao Paolo, Brazil, III Bienal de Sao Paolo, Museum de Arte Moderna, July-October 1955 (listed in the general exhibition catalogue, p. 161, no. 1).LittératureFiche Descriptive des Oeuvres Pavillon Grec, Venice Biennale, 1954, handwritten list, p.5, no. 40.K. Perpinioti-Agazir, Nikos Engonopoulos, Son Univers Pictural, exhibition catalogue and catalogue raisonée, Benaki Museum, Athens 2007, no. 204, p. 76 (shown in a 1954 photograph with the artist), p. 241 (illustrated), p. 409 (catalogued and illustrated).Nikos Engonopoulos, Painter and Poet, conference minutes, Benaki Museum, Athens 2010, p. 177, fn.18 (mentioned).Nikos Engonopoulos, exhibition catalogue, Andros, Museum of Contemporary Art - Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation, 2017, p. 257 (shown in a 1954 photograph with the artist).A significant missing piece of 20th c. Greek art, discovered recently by Bonhams and returned to public view after nearly 70 years,1 this pioneering work—Engonopoulos's first surrealist oil—was shown in the 1954 Venice Biennale,2 where for the first time, Greece was represented by one artist alone.In Venice, Engonopoulos showed alongside such towering figures of modern art as Arp, Ernst, Miro, Klee, Bacon and Magritte, since the exhibition had requested participating countries to adhere to the theme of Surrealism. Prefacing the exhibition catalogue, Biennale's Secretary General R. Palluchini noted: 'Greece devotes its entire pavilion to Engonopoulos, whose work certainly is a surprise to everybody.'Here, the artist subverts—in a typical surrealist fashion—the conventional ways with which rational thought perceives the world by replacing the heads of the three philosophers with archetypal geometric forms. Paying homage to the great Cézanne who exhorted painters to depict reality in terms of simple geometric shapes and volumes, he finds in the cube, the sphere, and the triangle the underlying, basic structure of the world, the all-encompassing essential force that binds the universe. These archetypal forms echo the ideal world of Plato who considered them pure beauty and fundamental elements for building the world. Elemental and three-dimensional, these forms also seem like stemming from a Bauhaus workshop in the 1920s, forming an imaginary cultural bridge that spans the millennia. As noted by Walter Gropius, the great German architect and founder of the Bauhaus School, these original geometric shapes are purely abstract entities that dash through time and all countries, ensuring validity in all human creations.The visual act, set against the schematised and unmistakably Engonopoulian formations of travelling clouds, takes place in a shallow stage-like space that heightens the overall sense of theatricality. Engonopoulos, who never hesitated to explore the correlations between theatrical and pictorial space and introduce the theatrical into his painting,3 has once said that 'under the stage lights, with the most harmonious moves, in a coordinated whole, amidst colours and music, every human dream comes alive, flooding the soul with guileless joy, far from the obligations and obstacles of grim reality.'4 Conceived on a human scale, this kind of contained setting that both frames and accentuates human activity, seems like a faithful emulation of Greece's natural environment. The lack of vast open spaces and supernatural landscapes whose sheer size nullifies the human scale, is a typically Greek element.5 Navigating the viewer to a magical world of poetic metaphor, a host of details trigger various associations ranging from Medieval and Renaissance times (the chequered tilework echoes similar motifs by Mantegna and Giovanni Antonio Fasolo) to Giorgio de Chirico's pittura metafisica (highlighted by the triangular shape used in constructing the philosopher's head). In the left middleground, the red figure carrying a heavy bag possibly alludes to the myth of Sisyphus and the philosophical theory that existence is absurd, while in the upper right corner, the tall buildings perched on a steep hill are reminiscent of similar structures in works by Parthenis and de Chirico. Although the unexpected staging of dream-like scenes is a fascinating feature of Engonopoulos's art, no less impressive is his handling of colour. The shimmering yellow, green and orange tunics worn by the three standing figures and the enamel-like blues and reds applied without tonal gradations, sparkle like rubies and emeralds, making the entire pictorial surface shine like a stained-glass window in a Gothic cathedral.1 The painting remained accessible to scholarly research only though a black and while archival photograph published in the artist's catalogue raisonée (see Littérature).2 Up until the mid-20th century the famous Venice Biennale was the only major artistic event worldwide. Especially for outlying countries like Greece, showing in Venice was extremely important on a national level and highly enviable on a personal one.3 P. Rigopoulou, 'Nikos Engonopoulos' in D. Tsouchlou-A.Bacharian, Stage-Setting in Modern Greek Theatre [in Greek], Athens 1985, p. 141.4 Written in 1961 and reprinted in N. Engonopoulos, Works in Prose [in Greek], Ypsilon editions, Athens 1987, p. 30.5 See S. Boulakian, 'The Work of Nikos Engonopoulos' in Greek Painters - 20th Century[in Greek], Melissa editions, Athens 1974, p. 261.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ARAR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Attractive cloisonne easel clock timepiece, the 5" brass dial plate with Arabic cartouche enamel numerals, within a decorative surround inlaid with flowering prunus blossom beneath a bird of paradise with outstretched wings to the arch above the dial, with Mougin movement with platform escapement, 16.75" high
French ormolu and green veined marble drumhead two train mantel clock, the 3.75" white enamel dial signed Le Roy á Paris, the movement striking on a bell, within a drumhead casing surmounted by a cockerel with outstretched wings and supported upon a stepped scrolling base, 15.75" high (pendulum and key)
Looping eight day small travelling alarm clock with 15 jewel movement, the 1.75" cream dial signed Tollard Freres, Geneve, within a red enamel and brass casing, with outer travelling leather case; also another eight day travelling clock in a folding faux snakeskin case and two other large watches in need of restoration (4)

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