The Sandberg Watch Collection

Hotel Richemond, Geneva, Mar 31, 2001

LOT 65

Theseus and the MinotaurTambour watch, German, circa 1570.Extremely rare and important gilt metal tambour-shaped, single hand, hour-striking clock watch with iron movement, stackfreed, foliot and hog's bristle regulator.

CHF 20,000 - 30,000

USD 12,000 - 18,000

Sold: CHF 27,600

C. Drum-shaped, 'fermée' type, hinged top and fixed bottom, the front pierced with 12 openings to see the hours with Minotaur's masks between them, the centre with a very well-executed bas-relief of a knight on horseback, pierced band and bottom cover, the band with scrolls and tendrils, the back with masks and figures in the 'grotesque' manner typical of the German Renaissance. D. Gilt metal, hinged to the case, twelve tactile knob markers for night reading, outer Roman 1 to 12-hour chapter rin, engraved inner quarter-hour divisions and innermost chapter with Arabic 13 to 24-hour numerals in the German style, pin-hole for setting the striking, the centre with Mauresque pattern. Blued-steel hand. M. 40.9 mm o, polished iron, full plate, four rectangular pillars, C-shaped stackfreed and going barrel, verge escapement, brass escape wheel, foliot and hog's bristle mounted on a pivoted, adjustable lever, small iron S-shaped cock secured by a screw, five-wheel iron striking train driven byn open spring fixed to a post mounted on the inside of the back plate, count wheel on the back plate, striking on a bell fixed to the inside of the case.Diam. 54 mm, height 23 mm. Published in the Sandberg book, page 28-29.


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Grading System
Grade: AAA

Excellent

Case: 3 - 7 - 8 - 15
Movement: 4 - 8 - 9 - 22*
Dial: 3 - 7 - 8 - 04

Notes

The symbolism of the case is quite unusual and seems to focus on fire; the horseman dressed as a Roman commander jumping into the fire, the band, in typical Renaissance fashion (see for instance Spitzenbuch und rnamentzeichnungen, Germany, 16th century) pierced with torches. A torch symbolises life itself, life which was made possible by the knight's sacrifice. The dial cover, between the hour openings, has Minotaur figures, which, again, probably refers symbolically to the knight's bravery.Among the few known surviving watches of this type, four are similar to the present lot: Louvre ('Les montres et horloges de table du museé de Louvre' by Catherine Cardinal, Vol. 2, No. 21). Kunstgewerbemuseum (inv. Nr. K 4704) One sold by Herve Chayette, Paris, on July 4, 1989 (lot 156) One from the Mallet collection illustrated, among others, in Baillie's Watches.Only the watch from the Louvre is marked; it is stamped 'HK'. Its movement, although modified, shows a number of characteristics very much like the present lot. The band is pierced and engraved in a manner that is also strikingly similar to a watch from the Soltykoff collection (Plate XIV in the Soltykoff catalogue), which strongly suggests that the two watches came from the same casemaker's workshop. By the mid-sixteenth century, pattern books for engravers, including patterns for watches, alredy existed, and different casemaking artists therefore had access to the same pattern sources. This is made evident by the existence of at least four surviving tambour watches with an allegorical scene representing Astronomy.