Important Collector's Watches, Pocket...

Geneva, Nov 11, 2007

LOT 182

Palemon and Lavinia LeRoy, Swiss, No. 2115, movement attributed to Piguet & Meylan. Made for the Chinese market, circa 1825. Very fine and rare, musical and quarter-repeating, 18K gold, polychrome enamel and pearl-set, centerseconds pocket watch playing music on the hour or at will.

CHF 50,000 - 60,000

EUR 30,000 - 35,000 / USD 42,000 - 50,000

Sold: CHF 88,500

C. Four-body, bassine, the back with a finely painted on enamel scene depicting Lavinia receiving the letter, the bezels with two waves of azure and translucent red enamel set with graduated pearls, pearl-set pendant and bow, bolt on the band for start/stop of the music. Hinged gold cuvette decorated with blue and white champlevé enamel foliage, apertures for hand-setting, winding the music and going train. D. White enamel, radial Roman numerals, outer minute and seconds divisions with fifteen-minute Arabic numerals. Gilt fleur de lis hands. M. 50 mm., frosted gilt, standing barrels, cylinder escapement, three-arm gold balance, flat balance spring, polished steel endplate, index regulator, music with double-pinned disk and 20 blued steel tuned teeth playing on both sides, music/silence lever protruding from under the cuvette, repeating on gongs activated by depressing the pendant. Dial signed, movement numbered. Diam. 57 mm.


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Grading System
Grade: AA

Very good

Case: 3-51

Good

Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3-01

Good

HANDS Original

Notes

This painting illustrates a story from James Thomson?s popular poems "The Seasons" dating from 1726?30. The rural lovers Palemon and Lavinia appear in Thomson?s "Autumn"; they are adapted from the Biblical story of Ruth and Boaz. Palemon, a gentleman, professes his love for the country girl Lavinia, in a harvest-time setting. Thomson?s sentimental fantasy of rural romance was particularly attractive to a generation brought up on the ideals of Sensibility. The poem that accompanies this scene is as follows:
And are thou then Acastos' dear remains? She whom my restless Gratitude has sought// So long in vain, O Heav'ns! the very frame The soften'd Image of my Noble Friend.