A Pair of Rare Blackamoor Candelabra

Ref: 2313

A Pair of Rare Blackamoor Candelabra

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PRINT

Ref: 2313

A Pair of Rare Blackamoor Candelabra

Circa 1790 - 1800
Patinated Bronze Gilded Bronze
47.5 x 0 cm (18³/₄ x 0 inches)
Paris, France
Literature:
Jonathan Bourne/Vanessa Brett, Lighting in the Domestic Interior - Renaissance to Art Nouveau, London 1991, p. 158 Fig. 536
Exhibition:
An identical pair is located in the Musée François Duesberg, Mons/Belgium
Description: Model by Jean Simon Deverberie (Paris 1764–1824)

Patinated and gilded bronze, each with enameled eyes

Each figure holds two candlestick arms, both resting on a round, profiled plinth, each with paw-shaped feet.

Deverberie was an immensely successful designer, bronze artist, and dealer of furniture and furnishings of all kinds. Records show that he worked in Rue Barbette until 1800; four years later, he worked on Boulevard du Temple, and from 1812 to 1824, his firm, Deverberie & Compagnie, was located on Rue des Fosses-du-Temple. Deverberie was the most important bronze artist of his time and almost certainly the first to use the theme of the "noble savage" for a clock case, also called the "L'Afrique" or "au bon sauvage" pendulum clock. Literary works such as Daniel Defoe's "Robinson Crusoe" and the novel "Paul and Virginie" by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre were the source of inspiration for these pendulum clocks between 1795 and 1815.

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