Important Collectors’ Wristwatches, P...

Geneva, Hotel Du Rhone, Apr 02, 2006

LOT 403

?Skull and Cross Bones? Nicolaus Schmidt der Junger, (Augsburg), circa 1620. Extremely fine and almost certainly unique gilt bronze automaton pre balance-spring table watch designed as a skull, which opens and closes its jaws automatically while automaton snakes come in and out of the eye sockets.

CHF 130,000 - 180,000

108 85,000 - 115,000

Sold: CHF 120,300

C. Designed as a skull set on two crossed shinbones and mounted on a gilt brass tripod, the hinged skull cap (restored) disclosing the dial. Later hexagonal ebony molded base. D. Silver champlevé enameled dial with floral decoration. Gilt brass single hand. M. Hinged oval gilt brass full plate with urn pillars, fusee with chain, verge escapement, plain steel two-arm balance without spring, gilt brass pierced and engraved irregular cock secured by a screw, with matching click for the ratchet wheel set-up. The movements of the automaton jaw and the snakes in the eyes are controlled by two six-spoke cams driven by the fusee and revolving twenty times an hour, so that the jaws take three minutes to open and then close suddenly while the snakes alternately pop out of, then return back into, each eye socket, twice a minute. Height 14 cm, including the base. Back plate signed.


LOADING IMAGES
Click to full view
Image

Grading System
Grade:
Case: 3

Good

Movement: 4*

Fair

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3-01

Good

HANDS Original

Notes

The present watch was sold by Antiquorum Geneva in April 1999, lot 620. The movements of these automata are far slower than usual, being driven by the fusee of the going train. They are highly impressive because they deeply alter the expression on the skull?s ?face?. During the first minute, the skull seems to smile; during the second minute it seems to laugh; it then appears to yawn; and finally, the jaws snap shut, as if the skull were trying to bite something. At the same time, one of the snakes slowly sinks back down into one of the eye sockets, while the other slowly comes out of the other eye, before retracting suddenly, as the first snake again springs out from its eye-socket. Provenance: Previously in the collection of Charles Georgi, one of the commissioners in charge of the Musée Rétrospectif de la classe 96 (horlogerie) at the 1900 Paris Universal Exhibition, this watch was exhibited there in a showcase dedicated to this famous collection. According to Mathieu Planchon, the author of the catalogue, in addition to his collection of early watches and table clocks, Charles Georgi at one time owned on of the best ?Cabinets de Curiosité?, upon which the organizers drew heavily, to fill most of the gaps in the various classes of the Musée Rétrospectif. M. Georgi was, in fact, the main source of material for the Musée Rétrospectif exhibition.