98th Auction
2018/11/10
Lot 64
Attributed to Bovet à Fleurier, 56 mm, 107 g, circa 1830
An impressive and extremely rare gold enamel pocket watch with centre seconds, studded with half pearls for the Chinese market - "Bouquet of Summer Flowers"
Case: 18k gold, polychrome enamel, half pearls, glazed movement. Dial: enamel. Movm.: mirror-polished steel bridge movement with applied blued ornaments on a florally engraved gold plate, cylinder escapement, steel ring balance.
The exquisitely painted enamel medallion on the back is of supreme quality and shows a beautiful flower arrangement with roses, hibiscus, asters, poppy flowers and violets on an engine-turned and translucent cobalt blue enamelled ground. The case band, the pendant and the bow are decorated with Champlevé enamelling in a pattern of opaque light and dark blue panels.The bezels on both sides as well as the pendant and the bow are studded with half pearls - a timepiece of exceptional quality and intensity of colour.
Amongst the European makers of pocket watches who produced watches for the Chinese market, Ilbery in London and Bovet and Vaucher in Fleurier were the most renowned companies. They had branches in China and exported the movements and the wonderful enamelwork for the timepieces from Switzerland to China. The lavishly ornamented cases always had very distinctive decorations; the motifs were usually taken from nature and have lost nothing of their appeal 200 years later – they are still highly sought-after collector’s pieces.
Master Swiss watchmaker Edouard Bovet was one of the many who concentrated on the Chinese market. He arrived in Canton in 1830 carrying five top-quality watches, all of which he sold immediately, to mandarins who paid him in gold bars. Delighted, he wrote to his brother in Switzerland, enthusing about the market potential and asking him to send more watches, but only of the very best quality, since this was where the demand lay and there was no difficulty about payment. The 17th century Ching Dynasty Emperor K'ang-Hsi was a great admirer of the European sciences, especially that of horology, and he established several imperial workshops in which Chinese craftsmen made clocks and watches under the direction of imported European watchmakers, amongst whom were several masters. At K'ang-Hsi's invitation, the Zougeese master watchmaker François-Louis Stadlin became director of the imperial workshops, and the Emperor's favourite.
An impressive and extremely rare gold enamel pocket watch with centre seconds, studded with half pearls for the Chinese market - "Bouquet of Summer Flowers"
Case: 18k gold, polychrome enamel, half pearls, glazed movement. Dial: enamel. Movm.: mirror-polished steel bridge movement with applied blued ornaments on a florally engraved gold plate, cylinder escapement, steel ring balance.
The exquisitely painted enamel medallion on the back is of supreme quality and shows a beautiful flower arrangement with roses, hibiscus, asters, poppy flowers and violets on an engine-turned and translucent cobalt blue enamelled ground. The case band, the pendant and the bow are decorated with Champlevé enamelling in a pattern of opaque light and dark blue panels.The bezels on both sides as well as the pendant and the bow are studded with half pearls - a timepiece of exceptional quality and intensity of colour.
Amongst the European makers of pocket watches who produced watches for the Chinese market, Ilbery in London and Bovet and Vaucher in Fleurier were the most renowned companies. They had branches in China and exported the movements and the wonderful enamelwork for the timepieces from Switzerland to China. The lavishly ornamented cases always had very distinctive decorations; the motifs were usually taken from nature and have lost nothing of their appeal 200 years later – they are still highly sought-after collector’s pieces.
Master Swiss watchmaker Edouard Bovet was one of the many who concentrated on the Chinese market. He arrived in Canton in 1830 carrying five top-quality watches, all of which he sold immediately, to mandarins who paid him in gold bars. Delighted, he wrote to his brother in Switzerland, enthusing about the market potential and asking him to send more watches, but only of the very best quality, since this was where the demand lay and there was no difficulty about payment. The 17th century Ching Dynasty Emperor K'ang-Hsi was a great admirer of the European sciences, especially that of horology, and he established several imperial workshops in which Chinese craftsmen made clocks and watches under the direction of imported European watchmakers, amongst whom were several masters. At K'ang-Hsi's invitation, the Zougeese master watchmaker François-Louis Stadlin became director of the imperial workshops, and the Emperor's favourite.
Sold
estimated
40.000—60.000 €
Price realized
24.500 €