A PAIR OF GEORGE II SILVER-GILT CANDLESTICKS
A PAIR OF GEORGE II SILVER-GILT CANDLESTICKS

MARK OF PAUL DE LAMERIE, LONDON, 1739

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE II SILVER-GILT CANDLESTICKS
MARK OF PAUL DE LAMERIE, LONDON, 1739
Each on square base with canted corners and cast with foliage, flowers, scrolls and rocaille, the conforming knopped baluster stem applied with floral garlands and with shell shoulder, with vase-shaped socket, the detachable nozzle with cast reed and shell border, each marked under foot, the nozzles each further numbered and engraved with a scratchweight 'No 3 25"15' and 'No 4 25=5'
8½ in. (21.6 cm.) high
49 oz. 9 dwt. (1,538 gr.)
Provenance
The Right Honourable The Earl of Harewood; Christie's, London, 30 June 1965, lot 112.
Subsequently returned to Harewood House, Yorkshire and by descent.

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Lot Essay

Paul de Lamerie (1688-1751)

Paul de Lamerie was born in the Netherlands in April 1688. He was the only child of Paul Souchay de la Merie, an officer in the army of William III, and his wife, Constance le Roux. They moved to London in 1689, settling in Berwick Street in Soho.

Lamerie began his journey to become one of the greatest goldsmiths working in London in the 18th century in August 1703 with his apprenticeship with Pierre Platel, another member of the growing community of Huguenots living in London at the time. Platel, who was born in Lille, arrived in London by 1688 and was made a freeman of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths' by redemption by order of the Court of Aldermen in June 1699. Platel's work shows great skill, for example a set of four candlesticks formerly in the collection of Lord Harris of Peckham (Christie's, London, 25 November 2008, lot 44) and as such would have proven a very worthy teacher for Lamerie.

Having finished his apprenticeship Lamerie registered his first mark as a largeworker on 5 February 1713 and opened a workshop in Windmill Street, near Haymarket. Within a short period of time he was producing silver and gold to the highest standards, for example the Sutherland Wine-Cistern, hallmarked in 1719, sold from the collection of the Duke of Sutherland (Christie's, London, 29 November 1961, lot 144) and now in the collection of the Minneapolis Museum of Art.

Though specifically describing the Sutherland cistern P. A. S. Phillips says '... is the earliest piece which I know of de Lamerie's highly decorative plate, showing exceptional imagination in form and ornaments, and exhibiting unexpected power in his early work' (P. A. S. Phillips, Paul de Lamerie His Life and Work, London, 1935, p. 76) but this imagination continued to be the distinguishing feature of his output, culminating in his production of plate designed in the latest Rococo fashion, for example this pair of highly accomplished candlesticks and another set of four in the same model made for Algernon Coote, 6th Earl of Mountrath (Christie's, London, 10 June 2010, lot 335).

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